Chicago Sun-Times

New accuser details “wordless” sexual assault by Kevin Spacey.

- Maria Puente

For years, Andy Holtzman had been sharing only with close friends his “strange” story about a scary encounter, when Kevin Spacey groped him in the summer of 1981. For years he thought he was the only one with such a story. Not anymore.

“I had no idea Iwas far fromalone,” Holtzman told USA TODAY. “It’s a good feeling and a bad feeling at the same time. It felt better for me ( to finally talk about it) and not so good for so many others who had the same or similar experience­s.”

Friday, Holtzman became the 15th man to accuse Spacey of sexually assaulting him, in an exclusive interview with USA TODAY after he posted his story on his Facebook page.

His story is similar in key ways to alleged encounters described by other accusers, but Holtzman’s accusation is the earliest so far. It was July inNewYork, and Holtzmanwa­s 27, in his first major job out of college at the New York Shakespear­e Festival’s Public Theater, where he was running the fledgling film program. Hewas inhisoffic­eone day, phone in hand, when Spacey walked in and sat down at an empty desk.

Holtzman knew who he was. Then 22, Spacey was an up- andcoming actor, playing aminor role in

Henry IV, Part 1, according to records.

“Within minutes, wordlessly, he was up and all over me,” he says. “The aggression was certainly more than a grope. When Iwas finally able to push him off and scream ( at him), he theatrical­ly stepped back, incredibly angry, grabbed his coat and bag, stormed out and slammed the door.”

Holtzman says he was shocked, then freaked out. Would Spacey get him fired? He kept fretting: What did I do, what signal did I send? And, “what the hell just happened to me?”

“It’s never happened before or since, where somebody physically forces himself on you in a wordless way. In my office, with a phone in my hand, during the day! It was so out of place, so sudden. Itwas thewordles­sness of it — he never spoke to me throughout, not one word. I was saying things, he was saying nothing.”

( USA TODAY confirmed Holtzman was working at the festival’s theater that summer, with Spacey, via public records, biographie­s, news reports and other publicatio­ns.)

Holtzman said he was more stunned by the encounter than traumatize­d. He was young, he was gay, hewas comfortabl­e with his sexuality, but he wasn’t interested in Spacey, then in the closet. He couldn’t fathom why Spacey would do such a thing to him and then react the way he did.

“Itwas the look on his face thatwas really shocking and then scary,” Holtzman says. “The angerwas undeserved. If you ask for something and get a no, then I can understand the anger, but you ask for nothing and then try to take everything? Where is that anger coming from?”

As it happened, Spacey never retaliated against Holtzman, he says, and he avoided Spacey from then on. Holtzman, now64, went on to a flourishin­g career in marketing and is now a freelance marketing consultant.

But the memory of the encounter lingered; every time Spacey advanced in his career, such as winning two Oscars, Holtzman was reminded of it and would discuss it with friends. Memories flooded back after actor Anthony Rapp spoke out Oct. 29 aboutSpace­y, accusinghi­m of making sexual advances on him in 1986 when he was 14.

USA TODAY reached out to Spacey’s representa­tives for comment but didn’t get an immediate response.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? More than a dozen accusers, including at least five who were teens at the time, have accused actor Kevin Spacey of sexually harassing, groping or attempting to rape them.
NICHOLAS KAMM/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES More than a dozen accusers, including at least five who were teens at the time, have accused actor Kevin Spacey of sexually harassing, groping or attempting to rape them.

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