French actor Gérard Depardieu will stand trial on Monday, October 28, for sexually assaulting two women, and faces separate charges of rape and numerous further criminal complaints. The names of the two women have not been made public.
Depardieu, 75, is the highest-profile figure to face accusations in French cinema’s version of the #MeToo movement, triggered in 2017 by allegations against US producer Harvey Weinstein.
Depardieu’s lawyer Jérémie Assous told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the actor “plans to appear before the court” on Monday to be tried over alleged sexual violence during a 2021 film shoot.
Assous said that Depardieu’s defense would offer “witnesses and evidence that will show he has simply been targeted by false accusations.” He accused a plaintiff of attempting to “make money” by claiming €30,000 ($32,500) in compensation.
One of Depardieu’s two accusers, a set dresser, now aged 55, reported in February that she had suffered sexual assault, sexual harassment and sexist insults while filming director Jean Becker’s Les Volet Verts (“The Green Shutters”) in a private house in Paris.
“I expect the justice system to be the same for everybody and for Mr. Depardieu not to receive special treatment just because he’s an artist,” the plaintiff’s lawyer Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, told AFP.
The plaintiff told the investigative website Mediapart that Depardieu had started loudly calling for a cooling fan during the shoot because he “couldn’t even get it up” in the heat. He went on to say that he could “give women an orgasm without touching them,” she claimed.
The plaintiff alleged that an hour later she was “violently grabbed” by Depardieu as she was walking off the set. The actor “pinned” her by “closing his legs” around her before “groping” her waist and her stomach, continuing up to her breasts, she added.
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Depardieu made “obscene remarks” during the incident, she said, including: “Come and touch my big umbrella, I’ll shove it up your pussy.” She described the actor’s bodyguards dragging him away as he shouted: “We’ll see each other again, darling.”
“My client expects that the justice system will find Gérard Depardieu to be a serial sexual assaulter,” Durrieu-Diebolt said.
‘Hiring an assaulter’
The second plaintiff in Monday’s case, an assistant director on the same film, also alleges sexual violence. Anouk Grinberg, an actor who appeared in “The Green Shutters,” told AFP that Depardieu had used “salacious words (…) from morning to night.”
“When producers hired Depardieu to work on a film, they knew they were hiring an assaulter,” she added. Grinberg said that in her experience, Depardieu had “always used sexual, smutty language” – but that his behavior had become “much, much worse, with permission from his profession, that pays him for it and covers up his offenses.”
Around 20 women have now accused Depardieu of various sexual offenses. Actor Charlotte Arnould was the first to file a criminal complaint. A judge has yet to rule on prosecutors’ request, in August, for Depardieu to stand trial for raping and sexually assaulting her.
An investigation is also underway in Paris after a former production assistant accused Depardieu of a 2014 sexual assault. Additionally, actor Hélène Darras filed a sexual assault complaint that ran afoul of the statute of limitations.
Spanish writer and journalist Ruth Baza has accused Depardieu of raping her in 1995.
French cinema’s #MeToo movement
“Never, but never, have I abused a woman,” Depardieu wrote in an open letter published in the conservative daily newspaper Le Figaro, in October last year.
Weeks later, President Emmanuel Macron shocked feminists by complaining of a “manhunt” targeting Depardieu, who he called an “immense actor” who “makes France proud.”
Macron’s remarks followed the broadcast by an investigative TV show of a recording of Depardieu making repeated misogynist and insulting remarks about women.
Depardieu is the most famous figure to face accusations in French cinema’s #MeToo movement. Directors Jacques Doillon and Benoît Jacquot are among other major figures accused of sexual violence.
The Depardieu case: A six-part series