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Australian actor Geoffrey Rush is suing the Australian arm of News Corp for defamation. Photo: EPA

Co-star claims Geoffrey Rush humiliated her with sexual innuendo during theatre production

  • Oscar-winning actor is suing Australia’s biggest newspaper group for defamation over allegations of inappropriate behaviour during a 2015 production of “King Lear”
Australia

Oscar-winner Geoffrey Rush touched his co-star on the breast and humiliated her with sexual innuendo during a production of “King Lear”, the co-star told an Australian court on Tuesday, as News Corp defended publishing some details of her claims.

In Australia’s first defamation case of the #MeToo era, Rush is suing News Corp’s Australian arm over a series of articles saying he was the subject of a complaint to the Sydney Theatre Company regarding the 2015 Lear production.

Under the headline “KING LEER,” and in later articles, Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph newspaper said last year that the actor, in the title role, had been accused by a co-star of unspecified inappropriate conduct.

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The articles did not name the accuser nor detail the conduct, but the female actor, Eryn Jean Norvill, who played Lear’s daughter Cordelia, was called to give evidence by News Corp which stands by the stories.

Rush, 67, and a star of Australian theatre, who won the Best Actor Oscar in 1997 for “Shine” and has since appeared in the “Pirates of the Caribbean” films, has denied any improper conduct.

But Norvill, her voice at times breaking with emotion, said Rush constantly behaved inappropriately toward her and other women in the play, as she gave evidence at the Federal Court in Sydney.

“He would look at me and smile and cup his two hands, and lick his lips, raise his eyebrows, bulge out his eyes, sometimes he’d, like, growl,” Norvill said.

Actress Eryn Jean Norvill arrives the Federal Court before giving evidence in the Geoffrey Rush defamation case in Sydney, Australia. Photo: EPA

In one rehearsal, when she was playing dead in a climactic scene, Norvill said she opened her eyes to discover Rush simulating groping her breasts. In a performance of the scene, she said Rush stroked her right breast slowly with his fingers.

“It didn’t feel like an accident,” she said, adding that his behaviour made her feel humiliated, belittled and put her on “high alert” around Rush whom she had previously idolised.

She did not confront him at the time, she said, because she “was at the bottom of the rung in terms of hierarchy and Geoffrey was definitely at the top and that was in play”.

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Rush has previously told the court that The Telegraph’s stories implied he was a major pervert, or guilty of major depravity, and did not fit his recollection of the production.

A spokeswoman at Shanahan, Rush’s management firm in Sydney, declined to comment.

Earlier in court, Rush’s lawyer argued the story was only pursued because the Telegraph wanted an Australian angle on the accusations levelled at US film producer Harvey Weinstein that sparked the #MeToo movement.

Hundreds of women have since accused powerful men of sexual harassment and abuse. Rush’s lawyer said the articles destroyed his career and he would seek “very substantial” damages, though it is not clear how much he could claim if he wins.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Actor Rush would ‘look at me and lick his lips’
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