Actor Matt Damon says he knew Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, accused of sexual harassment by many actresses, was a womaniser, but was not aware that he was a predator.
“When people say like, ‘Everybody knew,’ Like, yeah, I knew he was an a**hole,” Damon told ABC News in a joint interview with actor George Clooney, reports variety.com.
“He was proud of that. That’s how he carried himself. I knew he was a womaniser. I wouldn’t want to be married to the guy. But this level of criminal sexual predation is not something that I ever thought was going on. Absolutely not,” Damon added.
Clooney said Weinstein talked to him about women he had affairs with though Clooney didn’t believe him.
“I didn’t really think that they were going to have affairs with Harvey, quite honestly. And clearly they didn’t. But the idea that this predator, this assaulter, was out there silencing women like that, it’s beyond infuriating,” Clooney said.
Damon worked with Weinstein on “Good Will Hunting”, the 1997 film that launched Damon’s career.
Damon said: “You had to spend about five minutes with him to know that he was a bully. He was intimidating. Miramax was the place, really the place, that was making great stuff in the 1990s. And it was like, ‘Could you survive Harvey?’”
Damon said Weinstein’s “darkness” was done in private and he never saw it take place, reports variety.com.
“What makes something like this so horrific is that these are women and actresses who are pursuing their dreams. They’re doing everything right. And suddenly they found themselves alone with a predator,” Damon said.
Weinstein paid money to assistant
to silence her
A British former assistant of Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein says she was paid $165,200 to keep quiet after accusing the movie mogul of sexual harassment.
Zelda Perkins told Financial Times that she signed a non-disclosure agreement in 1998 after making the accusations, reports bbc.com.
She said he asked her to give him massages and tried to pull her into bed, but she “was made to feel ashamed for disclosing his behaviour”.
Weinstein has denied any allegations of non-consensual sex “unequivocally”.
The former assistant said she reported her allegations after a female colleague told her she had also been sexually harassed by the film producer.
The two women subsequently sought damages and were awarded a sum of $330,500, split equally, but also signed a non-disclosure agreement, prohibiting them from discussing the allegations.
By breaking the agreement, Perkins could be liable to repay the settlement, and potentially pay damages and other legal fees stipulated in the contract.
“I want to publicly break my non-disclosure agreement. Unless somebody does this there won’t be a debate about how egregious these agreements are and the amount of duress that victims are put under,” she said.
IANS