Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Rachel McGrath

Rebel Wilson calls claims she bullied women on film set ‘absolute nonsense’

Rebel Wilson labelled claims she bullied women on a film set “absolute nonsense” as she gave evidence for the first time in a defamation case against her in Sydney.

The legal war centres on Wilson’s directorial debut The Deb, a musical about two Australian teenagers attending a debutantes’ ball. Its lead actor, Charlotte MacInnes, is suing the Bridesmaids star for defamation after Wilson said in a social media post that MacInnes made and later withdrew a sexual harassment complaint against Amanda Ghost, a producer on the film, to further her career.

As she took to the stand on Tuesday, the 46-year-old star was asked by prosecutors if she sees herself as a “champion of women”, to which she responded “yes”.

“If you look over my 24-year career, you can see many evidences of me supporting women,” she said, according to The Guardian.

When Sue Chrysanthou SC, who was acting for MacInnes in court, accused Wilson of mistreating MacInnes, Ghost and a female writer, Wilson responded: “That’s absolute nonsense.”

She added: “Inappropriate behaviour from a person in power to an employee is a serious problem.”

Chrysanthou had previously told the court that Wilson was a “bully” for attacking MacInness in social media posts. “Ms Wilson was not a whistleblower who was seeking to protect a young actress,” she said last week.

It is also alleged that Wilson hired crisis PR team The Agency Group (TAG) – the same one used by Justin Baldoni in his alleged campaign against Blake Lively – to publish websites that attacked Ghost.

MacInnes’ case includes messages that emerged as part of Baldoni’s legal dispute with his It Ends With Us co-star, as well as a text from someone at the agency who describes Wilson as “f***ing nuts”.

Wilson has consistently and "unequivocally" denied any involvement in “conceiving, planning, registering, directing, creating, writing, or posting the content of the websites”.

Charlotte MacInnes outside court (Reuters)

MacInnes, who ‌has also been in court for the hearings, ‌is seeking aggravated damages and a court order preventing Wilson from repeating the allegations online or elsewhere.

The Deb, which premiered at the ​Toronto International Film Festival in September 2024, faced delays ‌in its Australian theatrical release earlier ⁠this month due to the legal issues.

Wilson said outside court last week: “I love ⁠The Deb, I mean, it’s so cute and amazing. Thank you to everyone who’s going to the ​cinemas.”

The hearing is expected to last nine days.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.