Reese Witherspoon once shared a mind-wrenching truth
about her early Hollywood days. At just 16, she was assaulted by a film
director. But that’s not all; she felt “anger… at the agents and producers” who
made silence a condition of her work.
Witherspoon alluded to this in a powerful speech at the
Elle Women in Hollywood event, opening up about a chapter she’d long kept under
wraps.
“I wish I could tell you that that was an isolated incident in my
career, but sadly, it wasn’t,” she admitted. Her words hit hard, especially as
Hollywood reckoned with its dark underbelly during the Harvey Weinstein
fallout.
The Oscar-winning actress didn’t dive into specifics about
her teenage experience, but she confessed to enduring “multiple other
experiences of harassment and sexual assault” throughout her career. Despite
years of silence, something about this moment, the stories from other women,
the shared pain, pushed her to speak.
“I’ve felt less alone this week than I’ve
ever felt in my entire career,” she said.
For Witherspoon, the turning point was listening to
other women bravely share their truths. “You can only heal by telling the
truth,” she explained, adding that she’d talked to countless actresses,
writers, and industry professionals who’d experienced similar horrors. Many of
them, she said, were just as bold in going public.
Her speech wasn’t without its emotional weight.
Witherspoon admitted she hadn’t slept the night before.
The anxiety of being honest and the guilt of staying
quiet for so long were overwhelming. “The feelings I’ve been having about
anxiety, about being honest, the guilt for not speaking up earlier or taking
action,” she said, weighed heavy.