When asked about the first time she felt disrespected in the industry, Jolie said, “Erm… well, no surprise, Harvey Weinstein. I worked with him when I was young.” Jolie was only 21 when she made the 1998 Miramax romantic comedy “Playing by Heart,” on which Weinstein served as an executive producer. She said that she managed to escape Weinstein, but that women often downplay their assaults if they managed to get away.
“If you get yourself out of the room, you think he attempted but didn’t, right? The truth is that the attempt and the experience of the attempt is an assault,” she said. As for what happened in that room, Jolie said, “I really don’t want to derail the book into stories about Harvey,” adding that it was absolutely an abuse of rights. “It was. It was beyond a pass, it was something I had to escape. I stayed away and warned people about him. I remember telling Jonny [Lee Miller], my first husband, who was great about it, to spread the word to other guys — don’t let girls go alone with him.” Jolie said she turned down a major role in Martin Scorsese’s 2004 Howard Hughes biopic “The Aviator,” which Miramax produced and on which Weinstein served as an executive producer. “I was asked to do ‘The Aviator,’ but I said no because he was involved. I never associated or worked with him again. It was hard for me when Brad did.” Jolie said she tussled with then-partner Pitt in 2009 when he took on a role in Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglorious Basterds,” co-produced by the Weinstein Company. She also said that in 2012, she was upset with Pitt when he approached Weinstein to serve as a producer on Andrew Dominik’s noir thriller “Killing Them Softly,” another TWC production. “We fought about it. Of course it hurt,” said Jolie, who added that she avoided attending promotional events for the film. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.