Evan Rachel Wood Flips Marilyn Manson the Bird, Sings New Radicals Song in Response to Kanye West Giving Him a Platform. Evan Rachel Wood is not a fan of the new Kanye West project, and she had a Evan Rachel Wood is sharing more details about the abuse she says she suffered while dating Marilyn Manson . Wood, 33, claimed on her Instagram Story Friday that in addition to emotional and Marilyn Manson is reportedly suing ex-fiancee Evan Rachel Wood for defamation over abuse allegations she made against the singer. According to Deadline, the musician filed a lawsuit against Wood Among the multiple women who accused Marilyn Manson (real name Brian “I succumbed to pressure from Evan Rachel Wood and her associates to make accusations of rape and assault against Mr The model, who previously accused Marilyn Manson of sexual abuse in a since-dismissed lawsuit, alleges she was "manipulated" by actress Evan Rachel Wood and others By Rachel DeSantis Evan Rachel Wood Says Marilyn Manson Told Her to Make Him Dinner After Abortion: ‘He Didn’t Care’. Amy Berg’s two-part HBO documentary “ Phoenix Rising ” finds Evan Rachel Wood After years of staying silent about her relationship with singer Marilyn Manson, Evan Rachel Wood speaks her truth in the two-part documentary, Phoenix Rising, which aired on HBO and HBO Max this AP. Marilyn Manson has sued Evan Rachel Wood for defamation over her sexual abuse allegations against him, which Manson claims are a “malicious falsehood.”. In the complaint, filed in Los The conclusion of the two-episode, Amy Berg–directed documentary Phoenix Rising, which focuses on Evan Rachel Wood ’s abuse allegations against Marilyn Manson, airs tonight on HBO and is A California judge just gutted much of rock musician Marilyn Manson ’s defamation suit against actor Evan Rachel Wood, who is one of more than a dozen women who’ve come forward in recent years accusing him of abuse. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Teresa Beaudet determined Tuesday that Manson’s biggest claims against Wood lacked merit bedQ. Fot. Sthanlee Mirador/Sipa USA/East News Aktorka w 2021 roku oskarĆŒyƂa Mansona o dopuszczanie się wobec niej wielu aktĂłw przemocy, przemocy seksualnej, a takĆŒe uprawianie groomingu. Artysta stwierdziƂ, ĆŒe to wszystko są kƂamstwa. Manson pozwaƂ Evan Rachel Wood. Twierdzi, ĆŒe sfaƂszowaƂa dowodyMarilyn Manson postanowiƂ pozwać Evan Rachel Wood. Aktorka oskarĆŒyƂa go o wiele przestępstw natury seksualnej, znęcanie się fizyczne i psychiczne, czy grooming. Manson początkowo wystosowywaƂ oƛwiadczenia, w ktĂłrym podwaĆŒaƂ jej sƂowa, a teraz postanowiƂ oskarĆŒyć ją o zniesƂawienie, a takĆŒe faƂszowanie dowodĂłw - w tym listu od agenta CIA. Sprawa wpƂynęƂa juĆŒ do Sądu NajwyĆŒszego w Los Angeles i jak czytamy w pozwie zƂoĆŒonym przez Mansona i jego reprezentantĂłw: Ta akcja wynika z bezpodstawnych i nielegalnych aktĂłw dokonanych przez Evan Rachel Wood i jej partnerkę Ashley Gore/Illma Gore, ktĂłre miaƂy na celu pokazać Briana Warnera/Marilyna Mansona jako gwaƂciciela, stręczyciela - coƛ, co kompletnie zniszczyƂo peƂną sukcesĂłw karierę Mansona w muzyce, telewizji i filmach. Pozew ma trafić przed Ƃawę przysięgƂych. W nim, Manson i jego prawnicy oskarĆŒają Wood i Gore o wƂamanie się do komputerĂłw Mansona i "tworzenie fikcyjnego konta e-mail, z ktĂłrego tworzyƂy dowody przeciwko Mansonowi".Kolejne oskarĆŒenia są rĂłwnie ciÄ™ĆŒkie - wedƂug nich, Wood i Gore podszywaƂy się pod agenta Federal Bureau of Investigation w celu tworzenia fikcyjnych historii o tym, ĆŒe domniemane ofiary Warnera byƂy w niebezpieczeƄstwie. Jak w rozmowie z Deadline wyjawiƂ gƂówny prawnik Mansona, Howard King: SkƂadamy ten pozew teraz, poniewaĆŒ zdoƂaliƛmy znaleĆșć ogromną iloƛć dowodĂłw - zarĂłwno dokumentĂłw, jak i opowieƛci ƛwiadkĂłw - ktĂłre potwierdzają, ĆŒe Evan Rachel Wood i Illma Gore faƂszowaƂy historie na temat mojego klienta. Następnie dodaƂ: To niezwykle waĆŒne, by nie Ƃączyć ze sobą postaci Marilyna Mansona i Briana Warnera. SƂowa Wood mogą rezonować z powodu "szokującej" postaci Marilyna Mansona, ale one nie są prawdziwe. Prawnicy Wood na razie nie odpowiedzieli na pozew Mansona. Kamil Kacperski Redaktor antyradia There’s a running theme in Phoenix Rising, the two-part documentary on Evan Rachel Wood’s story of domestic and sexual abuse by shock rocker Marilyn Manson, of evidence. Wood, a 34-year-old actor, has old photos from the early stages of her relationship with Manson, whom she met as an 18-year-old in 2006 (he was 37) – cherubic and teenage before, atrophied and vacant film selects from journal entries recounting her emotions as he turned her against friends and family. There are so many press and paparazzi photos of them together, which makes public fascination with the pair – a gorgeous Hollywood Lolita with middle America’s nightmare in goth makeup – feel even more queasy now. During filming from 2019 until Wood publicly named Manson, given name Brian Warner, on Instagram in February 2021, several other women and former Manson associates come forward with details either mirroring her experience or corroborating her memories riddled by the repetitive trauma, sleep deprivation and drugs she says Manson forced on can’t stop thinking about this evidence; most women don’t have near the documentation Wood does, as confirmation or support for their own memories, let alone as material for authorities. As we have seen time and again with first-person accounts stemming from the revelations of the #MeToo movement, there is power and catharsis in disclosure, in telling one’s story. But for all Wood’s personal testimony, her processing of years of memories through the language of trauma and therapy for herself and for us, the pursuit of legal action – the backbone of Phoenix Rising’s narrative – comes down to documentation, files, photos, a the star of HBO’s Westworld, Wood has considerable power in her own right, and little incentive to accuse Manson for the sake of publicity, as he has claimed in a defamation lawsuit filed earlier this month (conveniently timed, as Wood told The Cut earlier this week, to the release of the documentary). So it’s disheartening to see, over the course of three hours of film covering months of working through the system, how little changes and how much comes back down to perceived trustworthiness of one’s story. To date, 16 women have accused Manson, 53, of sexual abuse – including the Game of Thrones actor Esme Bianco, whose story shares striking similarities with Wood’s – and four have sued for sexual assault. Manson has denied all allegations and has not been charged with a crime. His defamation lawsuit alleges Wood and her friend, the activist Ilma Gore, concocted a conspiracy to defame him and forged an FBI letter to shore up Wood’s allegations. (Gore, Wood told the Cut, is no longer affiliated with The Phoenix Act, Wood’s non-profit to change the statute of limitations on abuse cases.)Phoenix Rising, directed by the Oscar-nominated Amy Berg (An Open Secret, The Case Against Adnan Syed), is the latest in a wave of documentary projects in the #MeToo era that uncovered patterns of abuse by beloved public figures, traced the long shadow of sexual trauma, and outlined the cultures that turned a blind eye. This includes Leaving Neverland, the 2019 HBO series on two thorough accounts of alleged child sexual abuse by Michael Jackson; Catch and Kill: The Podcast Tapes, on Ronan Farrow’s 2017 investigation of Harvey Weinstein, which helped ignite the outpouring of recognition that became #MeToo; On the Record, which follows former Def Jam executive Drew Dixon as she contemplates telling her story of alleged rape by the music mogul Russell Simmons to the New York Times. There’s Lifetime’s Surviving R Kelly, Showtime’s We Need to Talk About Cosby, and Athlete A, on the journalists, lawyers and gymnasts who exposed the systemic of abuse of cover-up of USA gymnastics doctor Larry Nasser. HBO’s Allen v Farrow, released last year, was both an investigation into allegations that director Woody Allen molested his daughter Dylan and a personal account of Dylan’s life warped by trauma, processing and years of public scorn and of these projects strike the balance between messiness of experience, the often cyclical nature of pain and abuse, and clarity of ethics better than others. Some are justifiably postured against retaliation. All deal with the legal and emotional consequences of coming forward against a prominent person. Different alleged crimes and context, of course, but they’re all dealing, fundamentally, with intimate trauma: how it presents and morphs, how one lives with it, how long it takes to begin to allegations are, to be clear, consistently horrifying. Among them: that Manson repeatedly drugged, manipulated and coerced her on the set of his 2007 music video Heart-Shaped Glasses and “essentially raped” her on camera; that Manson controlled her eating, raped her in her sleep after he gave her a sleeping pill, tortured her with an electric shocking device, beat her with “a Nazi whip from the Holocaust” while she was tied to a kneeler and fed her meth and other drugs without her knowledge. In concert with several other women, some of whom appear in the film in a meet-up, Wood outlines a pattern of love-bombing, isolation, control and Rising, like the others, hinges on disclosure, the catharsis that is telling one’s story, and the tricky navigation of publicity. But it also feels like the outer limit of what a #MeToo documentary can do. Five years of listening, five years of hearing the same type of patterns and recognizing how predators operate within cultures and systems, how messy one’s personal life can be and still not detract from the violation. What do we do now? As the documentary depicts, Wood was successful in getting the Phoenix Act passed in California, which raised the statute of limitations on domestic violence felonies from three to five years and required police officers to undergo more training on intimate partner violence. She cooperates with a Los Angeles police investigation into Manson and gives an interview to the FBI, shown wordlessly in the Rachel Wood. Photograph: Olivia Fougeirol/APBut still it comes down to attention. By film’s end, fearful for her safety and hiding out with her child in Tennessee, Wood decides that issuing a public statement is the best course forward. “If there’s not public outrage about this and about the crimes that he’s committed, and if there aren’t people coming forward, then there’s no real incentive for law enforcement to do something,” she says over footage of her drafting a grenade of an Instagram post. “And we could just be waiting in line at the DMV for two years waiting for something to happen.”The Phoenix Act seems eminently reasonable, an opportunity to better shape laws to the human experience and what these films, long-form investigations, podcast, testimonials hammer home again and again: trauma is messy, idiosyncratic, mutable, chameleonic. One’s ability to see clearly is a slow process even with the privilege of therapy and time. “People underestimate the power of that kind of trauma and what it does to your body and your brain,” Wood told Trevor Noah on the Daily Show this week. “This is what the laws do not reflect: the effects of trauma on the brain.”Wood was in Manson’s orbit for close to four years; when she began work on the Phoenix Act amid the #MeToo movement, the statute of limitations in California was one to three years. “One to three years is nothing to a survivor,” she told Noah. “It’s nowhere near enough.”Manson is still free (and collaborating with Kanye West), as is his right, given that he’s never been charged with or convicted of a crime. Phoenix Rising, for all its messy and compelling personal elements, ultimately jabs at that fact. When the criminal justice system doesn’t account for the long tail of trauma, what do you do? What is fair, what is right? And is it worth it? Five years and many thematically similar documentaries in, we still don’t have good answers. Information and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisations. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 802 9999. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at Goth rocker Marilyn Manson came under fire last year after several women—including his former fiancĂ©, Evan Rachel Wood—came forward with claims of abuse. Details of those shocking accusations are the subject of a two-part HBO documentary called Phoenix Rising, which premieres on March 15. Early details from the documentary have been leaked, including some horrific stories that Evan says she suffered at the hands of Manson, whose real name is Brian Warner. One is that Manson made Evan make dinner for him right after she had an abortion in 2011. “He flew out for the abortion. I was just so scared and sad,” Wood says in the documentary, per Variety. “I obviously believe in a woman’s right to choose, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t devastating
The second it was over [he] was like, ‘Make me dinner.’ And I remember being like, ‘I’m supposed to be resting—my body has gone through this trauma, there’s aftermath here.’ And he didn’t care.” Marilyn Manson and Evan Rachel Wood in CharbonneauGetty Images Evan also said that Manson “refused to wear a condom, ever” and that the couple’s relationship was “very much sex on demand, and it was going to cause more problems if I said no. You don’t have time to use birth control when somebody’s just penetrating you while you’re asleep or if they’ve given you a pill that made you black out.”Evan isn’t the only person who has accused Manson of abuse: At least four other women have come forward with their own stories, according to Vanity Fair. With the release of the new documentary, it’s only natural to wonder what Manson is doing right now. Here’s what you need to know. This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. He claims he’s issued a statement on his Instagram account after Evan shared her allegations. While he didn’t address her accusations personally (or those from the other women), he did say this: “Obviously, my art and my life have long been magnets for controversy, but these recent claims about me are horrible distortions of reality. My intimate relationships have always been entirely consensual with like-minded partners. Regardless of how - and why - others are now choosing to misrepresent the past, that is the truth.” This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. He lost his record deal and a TV was dropped from his record label, Loma Vista, and cut from two TV shows— Creepshow and American Gods—after the allegations Vista said in a statement that it would no longer promote Manson’s album due to the “disturbing allegations,” adding, “we have also decided not to work with Marilyn Manson on any future projects.” This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. He’s been accused of other entered a not guilty plea in September in a New Hampshire case after he was accused of spitting at a videographer and blowing snot on her, per Deadline. He was released on bail. He recently posted on Instagram after a year-long has been silent on Instagram since February 1, 2021. However, he issued another statement a week ago that read, “There will come a time when I can share more about the events of the past year. Until then, I’m going to let the facts speak for themselves.” He then directed people to a link in his bio. This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. He’s suing Manson filed a lawsuit against Evan for defamation. The link on Manson’s Instagram bio features a copy of a lawsuit in which Manson accuses Evan of making assault allegations to try to rebrand her image as Manson’s ex into someone who is a champion of sexual assault survivors. The lawsuit is dated March 2. Korin Miller Korin Miller is a freelance writer specializing in general wellness, sexual health and relationships, and lifestyle trends, with work appearing in Men’s Health, Women’s Health, Self, Glamour, and more. This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at