Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Uma Thurman says Harvey Weinstein assaulted her and director Quentin Tarantino coerced her to do an unsafe stunt.

Also alleges Tarantino put her in unsafe stunt

- By Jocelyn Noveck

NEW YORK — Actress Uma Thurman, in long-awaited remarks, has accused embattled Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein of forcing himself upon her sexually and accused “Kill Bill” director Quentin Tarantino of making her perform a dangerous car stunt that injured her.

Thurman’s allegation­s against Weinstein had been widely anticipate­d since she hinted late last year that she had a story to tell about the beleaguere­d movie mogul, who has been accused of sexual misconduct against many women, but wanted to wait until she was less angry. Her story came in an interview with New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd.

“I used the word ‘anger,’ but I was more worried about crying, to tell you the truth,” Thurman said in the Times article. “I was not a groundbrea­ker on a story I knew to be true. So what you really saw was a person buying time.”

Thurman told Dowd that an early encounter with Weinstein in a Paris hotel room in the 1990s ended with him suddenly appearing in a bathrobe and leading her to a steam room but that the first “attack” — the word appears in quotes — happened later in London.

“He pushed me down,” she said. “He tried to shove himself on me. He tried to expose himself. He did all kinds of unpleasant things. But he didn’t actually put his back into it and force me. You’re like an animal wriggling away, like a lizard.”

Later, she alleged, she arranged a meeting with Weinstein and warned him: “If you do what you did to me to other people you will lose your career, your reputation and your family, I promise you.”

The Times article says Thurman’s memory of the Weinstein encounter stops there, but it quotes a friend who was waiting downstairs as saying Thurman emerged from an elevator disheveled and shaking.

Weinstein, the executive producer of award-winning movies including Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction,” acknowledg­ed making an “awkward pass” at Thurman but denied physical assault and emphasized a long-standing profession­al relationsh­ip with her.

Thurman, one of the stars of “Pulp Fiction,” also was quoted as saying that just before shooting began on Tarantino’s “Kill Bill: Vol. 1,” which came out in 2003, she told Tarantino about Weinstein and he confronted the mogul, leading him to apologize.

Thurman also described an onset episode on location in Mexico in which Tarantino ignored her expressed fears of driving a car that she had been warned might be faulty.

Tarantino persuaded her to do it, the article said, quoting him as saying, “Hit 40 miles per hour or your hair won’t blow the right way and I’ll make you do it again.”

Video accompanyi­ng the article online shows Thurman struggling to control the car and crashing into a tree.

She said that after the crash she left a hospital in a neck brace with damaged knees and a concussion.

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Uma Thurman

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