Head of Amazon Studios resigns
NEW YORK — The head of Amazon Studios, Roy Price, resigned Tuesday, just days after a producer publicly accused him of sexual harassment, a spokesman for the company said.
Price, who was in charge of Amazon’s efforts to create original movies and television shows, had been suspended last week.
Last week, in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Isa Dick Hackett, an executive producer of the popular Amazon show “The Man in the High Castle,” said Price had lewdly and repeatedly propositioned her in 2015.
Just hours after the article was published, Amazon announced that Price had been suspended. Representatives for Amazon did not immediately answer inquiries on whether or not a broader investigation of Price has been conducted in the days since.
The author of The Hollywood Reporter article, Kim Masters, previously reported for the publication The Information that an investigation had been conducted a few weeks after the alleged incident two years ago.
Price, who could not be reached for comment, made no secret of his departure from Amazon. Shortly before 5 p.m. Tuesday, he updated his Facebook page to say he had left his job.
The move followed the firing and Hollywood-wide denunciation of mogul Harvey Weinstein, which resulted from the many accusations of sexual harassment and assault against him. (Weinstein, through his spokeswoman, has denied engaging in nonconsensual sex.)
Price became a bit player in the Weinstein story when Rose McGowan, an actress who had reached a settlement with Weinstein in 1997 after an episode at a film festival, posted a series of tweets directed at Jeff Bezos, the chief executive of Amazon. In them, McGowan said she had told the head of Amazon Studios that Weinstein had raped her. (McGowan did not mention Price by name and did not respond to a message on Twitter asking for clarification.)
Before that series of tweets, McGowan had directed a Twitter message at Price concerning Weinstein, asking, “Remember when I told you not to do a deal with him and why?”
Price, a Harvard alumnus who once worked at the consulting firm McKinsey & Co., had been an executive at Amazon for the last 13 years. He oversaw several TV shows, including “Transparent” and “The Man in the High Castle.”
Amazon’s original programming has not gotten the same buzz as Netflix shows like “Stranger Things” or Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” which won an Emmy last month in the best drama category.