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LIAM RULES OUT RACE IN OLD PURSUIT
After confessing that he once set out to attack a random black man after a friend of his told him she had been raped, actor Liam Neeson insisted that he was not racist, on Tuesday.
“I’m not a racist,” Neeson said on ABC News, while admitting he had felt a “primal urge to lash out” about 40 years ago after hearing from his close friend that she had been attacked by a black man.
The 66-year-old star of Schindler’s List (1993) triggered international backlash by sharing his story in an interview with The Independent. And in damage control mode on ABC’s Good Morning America, the Northern Irish actor expanded on the incident, which he said left him shocked at himself.
“I went out deliberately into black areas in the city, looking to be set upon so that I could unleash physical violence,” Neeson recalled. “I did it four — maybe four or five — times until I caught myself and it really shocked me, this primal urge,” he had revealed.
While Neeson says no violence ultimately occurred, the actor said he sought help from a Catholic priest, spoke to friends, and walked for hours to rid himself of the episode. In the bombshell interview, he spoke of “hoping some black b ***** d would come out of a pub and have a go at me about something, you know? So that I could... kill him.”
But he also insisted race was not the driving factor behind his actions. “If she had said an Irish or a Scot or a Brit or a Lithuanian, I know it would have had the same effect,” he said. “I was trying to show honour and stand up for my dear friend in this terrible medieval fashion.” By way of explanation, he also pointed to his experience growing up in Northern Ireland, at the time locked in a deadly cycle of sectarian violence pitting Catholics against Protestants.
Neeson first revealed the incident to The Independent in an interview to promote his new thriller Cold Pursuit, about a father seeking revenge after his son is murdered by a drug gang.
Neeson’s acting career spans five decades, including a star turn in the 2008 hit Taken — about a former CIA agent trying to track down his kidnapped daughter.
With his own revelations now threatening to derail his career, Neeson pleaded for his story to be taken as part of a broader, honest debate on race relations. “We all pretend we’re all politically correct,” he said. “Sometimes you scratch the surface and discover this racism and bigotry, and it’s there,” he added.