Daily Press

Documentar­ian still not sure she knows answer on who Maxwell is

- By Kate Feldman

Documentar­ian Katherine Haywood spent 18 months on “Who is Ghislaine Maxwell?”

She’s still not sure she knows the answer.

“She’s a multifacet­ed woman with lots of different sides to her, which is what humans are. No one is a total monster, and no one is a total saint,” Haywood said a day before Maxwell was recently sentenced in a New York federal court on sex traffickin­g charges.

“She falls on the former line unfortunat­ely, but who she is, is a real myth. She’s a vulnerable woman but one that also has such power and such control. There’s a lot of contradict­ions in her. ... She could be absolutely charming and absolutely terrifying. You can see her vulnerabil­ities, but then she is so dominating and so powerful. She has so many abilities, but then used them for such terrible use.”

The three-part docuseries, the first episode of which recently debuted on Starz, paints the disgraced socialite through those who knew her at every stage of her life. Eventually, she will become Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirato­r who trafficked underage girls for him to sexually abuse. But before Jeffrey and Ghislaine, there was just Ghislaine.

College classmates and tutors, the family photograph­er, even the aunt of a former boyfriend tell their own versions of Maxwell: a smart student who didn’t do great on tests but aced the party scene. She knew who to cozy up to, who to schmooze, who to draw in with her charm and grace. She looked the part and played the part, even if she stood out as new money in the old money world of the English elite.

Maxwell had the prestige

even when she didn’t have the money to back it up when her world came crashing down in the early ’90s. In 1991, her father, media mogul Robert Maxwell, fell to his death off his yacht. After his death, the Maxwell finances fell apart as investigat­ions revealed that he had stolen millions of pounds from the pension funds of his companies.

“She didn’t really develop her own personalit­y because her father was so dominant, and she looked up to him so much. When he died, she was a bit of a shell and didn’t really know what she was, who she was, what she was going to do,” Haywood said.

“I don’t think she was looking to Epstein to be a father figure but just to be a presence to fill that gap that was suddenly gone. She didn’t have her own internal power and confidence to just live her own life.”

As the documentar­y goes on, Maxwell’s power grows. She makes friends in higher places and, with Epstein’s money and little black book, finds young women, often underage, who fall under their spell.

Some of the victims interviewe­d in “Who

is Ghislaine Maxwell?” include Maria Farmer, Gretchen Rhodes and Teresa Helm.

“People did quite like Epstein until he was totally horrible and abused them. He was really, really nice and charming and lovely. Ghislaine also was very charming but only to certain people,” Haywood said.

“When it was a victim or a survivor, she didn’t really bother. She thought she could get them without being nice.”

And for decades, it worked; Epstein’s 2006 arrest was barely a blip on his radar. In 2019, he was arrested again.

Maxwell went into hiding until her July 2020 arrest in New Hampshire. On Dec. 29, she was found guilty of five of the six sex traffickin­g-related counts, and she was acquitted on one count of enticing a minor to travel to engage in illegal sex acts. She was sentenced June 28 to 20 years in prison.

The first episode of “Who is Ghislaine Maxwell?” is available on the Starz app. The second episode hits the app July 1 and airs July 3 on Starz. The third episode will premiere July 8 on the app and July 10 on Starz.

 ?? LAURA CAVANAUGH/GETTY 2013 ?? Ghislaine Maxwell is the focus of “Who is Ghislaine Maxwell?,” a three-part documentar­y.
LAURA CAVANAUGH/GETTY 2013 Ghislaine Maxwell is the focus of “Who is Ghislaine Maxwell?,” a three-part documentar­y.

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