New York Post

Waiting for Huffman

Actress’ arrest tarnishes role in Netflix Central Park Five series

- Robert Rorke

W E all know how things went south last week for actress Lori Loughlin after her arrest for her alleged involvemen­t in the college admissions bribery scandal. She was fired from by Hallmark Channel parent Crown Media, losing all her gigs on the network (“When

Calls the Heart,” “Garage Sale Mys

tery”) as well as her role on the Netflix series “Fuller House.”

But what of Felicity Huffman, the other television actress who was arrested for her alleged role in the admissions bribery scandal? Netflix faces a thorny problem when it debuts its Central Park Five limited series “When They See Us,” scheduled to air May 31. Huffman, an Emmy winner for “Desperate Housewives” and frequent nominee for the socially conscious ABC series “American Crime,” is playing Linda Fairstein, the former head of the sex crimes unit of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office from 1976-2002.

Fairstein’s office supervised the prosecutio­n of the five young men arrested for assaulting and committing rape against the Central Park jogger in 1989. They were exonerated in 2002. Does anybody else see a disconnect here? Is Netflix prepared to withstand the avalanche of chortling on social media that will no doubt greet this performanc­e? Seeing Huffman on screen now in anything — except a reality series about celebritie­s who allegedly broke the law — will take viewers interested in Ava DuVernay’s take on the controvers­ial trial out of the moment. Netflix has chosen not to comment on the matter, merely saying production has wrapped. But we know how the streaming giant reacted when Kevin Spacey faced sexual assault allegation­s in 2017: he was fired from “House of Cards” and the company shelved his film “Gore” about writer and historian Gore Vidal. Additional­ly, Spacey’s scenes in Ridley Scott’s 2017 film “All the Money in the World,” in which he played tycoon J. Paul Getty, were reshot with 88-yearold Christophe­r Plummer assuming the role. While the charges against Huffman — conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud — are not as sensationa­l as those levelled against Spacey, she was arrested as part of a yearlong investigat­ion involving 33 parents and is scheduled to appear March 29 in a Boston court for a preliminar­y hearing. Her timing could not have been worse, coming when American parents are up in arms about the rising costs of college education. She (and her husband, “Shameless” star William H. Macy, who was not arrested) send a clear message of Hollywood entitlemen­t to those who have admired her for her participat­ion in the Women’s March and other causes. Hollywood hypocrites are nothing new, of course, but the culture suddenly has no time for them. It will be interestin­g to see how the trial impacts Huffman’s career, even if Netflix does not in some way alter her scenes in “When They See Us,” because her reputation has taken a beating. The Central Park Five show may be the last we see for a while of the one “Desperate Housewife” who allegedly lived up to the name.

 ??  ?? Felicity Huffman (top right). Above: Linda Fairstein outside the United States Courthouse in Manhattan in 1990.
Felicity Huffman (top right). Above: Linda Fairstein outside the United States Courthouse in Manhattan in 1990.
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