Natalie Portman : Regard on petition signing in support of Roman Polanski.
Natalie Portman regrets signing petition in support of Roman Polanski
Actor Natalie Portman regrets signing a letter demanding the release of Roman Polanski when he was arrested in Switzerland in 2009. The actor sidestepped questions about Woody Allen.
Actor Natalie Portman regrets signing a letter demanding the release
of Roman Polanski when he was arrested in Switzerland in 2009. The
Oscar-winner was among the high profiled Hollywood personalities, which
also included Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen, and Emma Thompson, to sign
the petition calling Polanski’s release following his arrest and
detention while in Switzerland at the request of US authorities in a
case related to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor in 1977.
“I very much regret it. I take responsibility for not thinking about
it enough. Someone I respected gave it to me, and said, ‘I signed this.
Will you too?’ And I was like, sure. It was a mistake,” Portman told
Buzzfeed. “The thing I feel like I gained from it is empathy towards
people who have made mistakes. We lived in a different world, and that
doesn’t excuse anything. But you can have your eyes opened and
completely change the way you want to live. My eyes were not open,” she
added.
The “Annihilation” actor, however, sidestepped questions about Woody
Allen, who has been accused of sexual abuse by his step-daughter Dylan
Farrow. When asked whether the multiple Oscar-winning director’s career
is over in the wake of massive sexual harassment scandal, Portman said,
“I don’t think that’s what the conversation should be about. I think it
should be about: Why didn’t Elaine May make a movie every year? Why
didn’t Nora Ephron make a movie every year? Where’s the female version
of Bill Cosby? Why don’t we see any Asian women in films? There’s so
much art that’s being lost by not giving opportunities to women and
people of colour.”
“Let’s not talk about what man’s career is over. Let’s talk about the
vast art trove we’ve lost by not giving women, people of colour, people
with disabilities, and the LGBTQ+ community opportunities — let’s
talk about that loss for all of us in art. Let’s talk about that huge
hole in our culture. I don’t want talk about ‘Isn’t it sad that this
person who’s made 500 movies can’t make movies anymore?’ That’s not for
me to decide. And it’s also not what I’m upset about,” she added.
Via: www.indianexpress.com
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