Ashley Judd says a 'deal' helped her flee from Weinstein
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Actress Ashley Judd says she escaped Harvey Weinstein's sexual advances by making a deal.
She was a rising young actress two decades ago who had arrived at the hotel suite of this powerful film mogul for what she thought would be a business meeting.
It wasn't, she says. Weinstein first offered to give her a massage, then, when she demurred, asked her to give him one. She says she refused to sit down and surveyed the floor plan of the suite to plot her escape.
"I thought 'no' meant no," she says. "I fought with this volley of no's."
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Then she made a "deal." She says she agreed to submit to him, but only "when I win an Oscar in one of your movies — OK?"
"When you get NOMINATED," Weinstein counter-offered.
"And I said, 'No. When I WIN an Oscar.' And then I just fled."
Appearing on ABC's "Good Morning America" Thursday, Judd said she remains of two minds about how she handled the shocking situation. "Am I proud of that?. The part that shames myself says, 'No.' The part of me that understands the way shame works says, 'That was absolutely brilliant. Good job, kid, you got out of there. Well done!'"
Judd was among the first of what has become dozens of women alleging sexual harassment or assault by Weinstein, who has been fired from the company he co-founded with his brother and is now under criminal investigation for rape in London, New York and Los Angeles.
Judd says a couple of years after the hotel encounter she was seated across from Weinstein at a dinner. She says he brought up "that little agreement we made," and claimed he was "looking around for the material."
Then he looked at her and said, "You know, Ashley, I'm going to let you out of that little agreement that we made."
Judd says by then "I had come into my own, I had come into my power, I had found my voice. And I said, 'You do that, Harvey. You DO that.' "
"And he has spat my name at me ever since."