Orlando Sentinel

In Rob Ford film, female reporter rewritten

Movie faces backlash after character who covers Toronto mayor is played by man

- By Samantha Schmidt

It was Easter morning in 2013 when Robyn Doolittle, then a reporter for the Toronto Star, received a phone call from a man who said he had a video of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine. She was one of the first reporters to view the now-notorious video, which sparked headlines worldwide and made Ford the subject of internatio­nal ridicule.

Ford died of cancer 2016.

Doolittle spent four years covering the controvers­ial politician’s many scandals.

“I’ve spent half of my career devoted to his story. I’ve written hundreds of thousands of words about Mr. Ford and his time at city in hall, including a book,” she wrote after his death. “If you happen to recognize my name, it is because of him.”

So Doolittle, now a reporter for the Globe and Mail, was taken aback Tuesday when she heard the news that in an upcoming film, a male actor would be playing the role of a reporter investigat­ing the Ford scandal.

The movie, “Run This Town” tells the story of a young journalist in a postrecess­ion Toronto who struggles to chase the story on Ford’s crack-smoking scandal, the film’s 32-yearold director Ricky Tollman told the Canadian Press.

Ford, who is played by Damian Lewis of “Homeland,” is in only a few scenes, and his scandal serves merely as a backdrop to the main plot.

The journalist, a fictional newsroom intern, is played by Ben Platt, of the Broadway musical “Dear Evan Hansen.” The drama is being shot in Toronto.

Canadian actors Nina Dobrev and Mena Massoud play the mayor’s aides, who try to suppress the story from publicatio­n, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

“I’m glad they’re rewriting the fact that it was a female reporter who investigat­ed Rob Ford,” Doolittle tweeted sarcastica­lly after headlines emerged about the film. “Why have a woman be a lead character when a man could do it?”

She clarified that she’s not “begrudging” Platt, “just about the move in general: obviously I’m biased, but man, I’ve seen a lot of stories by male reporters celebrated in movies ...”

Doolittle then shared a tweet that said a female reporter would “have to fall in love with Rob Ford, and that would be very difficult to write.”

“The female reporter always has to fall in love or sleep with someone,” she tweeted in agreement.

She also said she could not respond to requests for comment because “I’m on maternity leave and gotta put down the electronic­s.”

The film’s director told the Canadian Press he was surprised by criticism to the news of the movie, particular­ly those who assumed it told the true story of reporters who investigat­ed Ford.

Platt’s character, Tollman said, is not based on anyone at “the Toronto Star, or the Globe and Mail, or Gawker, the people who were really on the case, this isn’t their story.”

He said “people took three words out of the descriptio­n of the film and spun it into something that it’s not, without having read the script.”

Platt also responded to the criticism with a statement on Twitter, saying he felt the need to correct false assumption­s, as “much of the hate has been directed towards me.” He said the film focuses on three fictional young people, including himself, Dobrev and Massoud “trying to find a place in the world of politics and journalism.”

“In one of the storylines, I play a low-level reporter at a fictional paper that attempts, and ultimately fails, to be a part of the reporting of the scandal,” he said. “The character is in no way based on Robyn Doolittle and the film does not attempt to co-opt her narrative.”

 ?? AARON VINCENT ELKAIM/GETTY ?? The reporter who broke the Rob Ford crack cocaine story was taken aback when she heard about an upcoming film.
AARON VINCENT ELKAIM/GETTY The reporter who broke the Rob Ford crack cocaine story was taken aback when she heard about an upcoming film.

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