Home National Australia ‘Absolute nonsense’: Rebel Wilson denies bullying actor suing her for defamation

‘Absolute nonsense’: Rebel Wilson denies bullying actor suing her for defamation

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source : the age

Hollywood actor Rebel Wilson has rejected as “absolute nonsense” an allegation that she bullied a star of her directorial debut and denied orchestrating an anonymous smear campaign against one of her co-producers.

Wilson, 46, is being sued for defamation in the Federal Court by actor and singer Charlotte MacInnes, 27, over comments posted on Instagram.

Rebel Wilson arrives at court to give evidence in her defamation case.Janie Barrett

The Pitch Perfect and Bridesmaids actor started giving evidence in the Federal Court case in Sydney on Tuesday. She is set to be cross-examined by MacInnes’ barrister, Sue Chrysanthou, SC, for two days.

“As you sit here, truthfully, do you still say that you regard yourself as a champion of women?” Chrysanthou asked, in a reference to a statement Wilson made in her written evidence.

“Yes,” Wilson said.

Chrysanthou put to Wilson that she had “bullied and harassed” MacInnes “publicly and privately” rather than championing her.

“That’s absolute nonsense,” Wilson said.

MacInnes, a lead actor in Australian musical film The Deb, alleges Wilson defamed her by suggesting she was a “sellout” and a liar who recanted a complaint about one of the film’s producers, Amanda Ghost, in return for further career opportunities.

MacInnes told the court last week that she “never made a complaint” to Wilson and “didn’t walk back anything”.

Rebel Wilson is being sued for defamation by Charlotte MacInnes, a star of her directorial debut, The Deb.Janie Barrett

Wilson alleges MacInnes “changed her story” and is seeking to prove that this is true to the civil standard, on the balance of probabilities.

Wilson denies mistreating women

Chrysanthou put to Wilson on Tuesday that she had “mistreated a number of women” who worked on The Deb.

Wilson said she did not believe she had “ever mistreated a woman” and there were no complaints during the production of the film or “at any time in my 25-year career”.

Charlotte MacInnes launched defamation proceedings against Rebel Wilson last year.Sam Mooy

She said she would accept she was “not a fan” of Hannah Reilly, the writer of The Deb, after the pair fell out over the writing credits for the film. But she denied bullying Reilly and Ghost and denied that she hated Reilly.

“Do you remember sending a text message effectively saying she [Reilly] should go f— herself?” Chrysanthou asked. “No,” Wilson replied.

The Finding Nemo post

A post by Wilson’s wife on social media sparked controversy in court on Friday. Asked if her wife, Ramona Agruma-Wilson, had been watching the hearing remotely, Wilson said: “I don’t think so. She’s in America.”

Rebel Wilson (right) and wife Ramona Agruma-Wilson, whose post on Instagram was tendered in evidence in the Federal Court.Matt Willis, Instagram

The Instagram story included an image of a character from the animated film Finding Nemo, a forgetful fish called Dory, above the words “I suffer from short-term memory loss … or do I? I can’t remember.”

Chrysanthou put to Wilson that “your wife was mocking my client”, who had been giving evidence. Wilson said her wife was “literally about to give birth”.

“I just assumed it was about pregnancy brain,” Wilson said, adding that her wife posts “multiple things about being heavily pregnant”.

“It’s interesting that she [MacInnes] thought it referred to her.”

Alleged smear campaign

Asked by if she was aware of allegations made in court last week that she was involved in anonymous smear websites published about Ghost, Wilson said she had heard Chrysanthou “make a lot of grand statements about a lot of things, including the websites”.

In an apparent reference to MacInnes, the websites contained a claim that an unnamed actor had been rewarded “for remaining silent about the abuse she suffered at Ghost’s hands”.

Wilson has denied involvement in the alleged smear campaign.

Chrysanthou put to Wilson that “from a public relations perspective, it benefited you greatly”.

“If anything, I think it would have angered Ms Ghost and made her retaliation against me worse,” Wilson said.

According to documents filed by MacInnes’ lawyers in court, in August 2024 American publicist Melissa Nathan of The Agency Group PR texted Katie Case, who worked at the PR agency at the time, and said: “Rebel wants a one [sic] of those sites.”

Justin Baldoni, the actor at the centre of a long-running legal feud with Hollywood star Blake Lively, also engaged Nathan to work for him.

Wilson told the court her now former lawyer, Bryan Freedman, engaged Nathan and her agency “to work on my case”. This was a reference to a defamation lawsuit brought against her by Ghost and others in the US.

“She was doing crisis PR work for you,” Chrysanthou said.

“It was in relation to the lawsuit,” Wilson said.

She said she could “see how people might say I am somehow associated” in the sites but maintained she was not involved.

Chrysanthou alleged Wilson’s denials of any involvement in the websites were “all false”.

“No,” Wilson said.

The Instagram posts

Wilson made the comments at the centre of the lawsuit in Instagram stories between September 2024 and July last year.

She suggested MacInnes made “a complaint to me as director” that Ghost “asked her to have a bath and shower with her and it made her feel uncomfortable” before changing her story. MacInnes denies that conversation happened.

Neither woman was named in that Instagram story, but surrounding posts contained identifying information.

There is no dispute that MacInnes and Ghost did share a bath on September 5, 2023, while they were wearing their swimming costumes.

MacInnes and Ghost say it was in response to a medical episode in which Ghost had a reaction to cold water after swimming at Bondi Beach. At the time, the pair were staying at a rented Bondi apartment, along with Ghost’s assistant, during rehearsals for The Deb.

Text messages tendered in court reveal that Wilson and Ghost discussed MacInnes shortly after the incident.

“Charlotte says all good. She just meant ‘it was a bizarre situation’ not that she felt personally uncomfortable x,” Wilson texted Ghost on September 7, 2023.

Ghost texted back: “Oh thank f— for that!!” She added “OMG”, “that’s hilarious”, and “I nearly died” in a string of follow-up messages.

But Wilson raised the incident again some weeks later. Chrysanthou alleged in her opening address to the court that Wilson raised the allegation as leverage in a commercial dispute rather than out of concern for the young actor, which she denies.

Wilson is now involved in a welter of legal disputes with the film’s co-producers, including Ghost.

The Deb was released on April 9, less than a fortnight before the trial started.

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