The News-Times

Geoffrey Rush fights appeal in Australian defamation court

- Photos and text from wire services

Geoffrey Rush’s lawyer told an Australian appeals court on Tuesday that a judge was “well and truly justified” in concluding that the Oscarwinni­ng actor was unable to work after he was defamed in newspaper articles in 2017.

The actor’s lawyer Bret Walker rejected a publisher’s submission to the three Federal Court judges hearing an appeal that the trial judge heard no evidence that Rush was unable to work and had fewer job offers as a result of the articles.

News Corp.owned Nationwide News is appealing Judge Michael Wigney’s ruling in April that Rush was defamed by newspaper reports saying he had been accused of inappropri­ate behavior by actress Eryn Jean Norvill. She played the daughter of Rush’s starring character in a Sydney theater production of “King Lear” in 2015 and 2016.

The publisher is also appealing against the size of Rush’s 2.9 million Australian dollar ($2 million) payout, including a loss of future earnings, awarded in May for two articles published in Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph newspaper and a poster that the judge found portrayed him untruly as a pervert and a sexual predator.

The twoday appeal ended on Tuesday and the appeals court decision will be announced at a date yet to be decided.

The publisher’s lawyer Tom Blackburn told the court on Monday that Wigney “cobbled together” speculatio­n and inference to find Rush was unable to work because of his state of mind following the publicatio­ns and had fewer job offers since then.

Walker replied on Tuesday that Rush testified about the devastatin­g effects the publicatio­ns had on his mental state while other evidence heard during the trial supported conclusion­s that he was unable to work and had fewer job offers.

The publisher’s lawyers never accused Rush of pretending in crossexami­nation during the trial and Wigney accepted the actor’s sincerity, Walker said.

 ?? Joel Carrett / AP ?? Actor Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney, where Nationwide News is appealing a Federal Court judge's ruling that the 68yearold Australian actor had been defamed by newspaper reports.
Joel Carrett / AP Actor Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney, where Nationwide News is appealing a Federal Court judge's ruling that the 68yearold Australian actor had been defamed by newspaper reports.

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