James Franco lawsuit: Actor reaches settlement after sexual misconduct accusations

Actor and filmmaker had been accused of seeking to exploit a ‘pipeline of young women’

James Franco in 2019. Photograph: Taylor Hill/WireImage via Getty
James Franco in 2019. Photograph: Taylor Hill/WireImage via Getty

Two former students who filed a lawsuit in 2019 accusing the actor and film-maker James Franco of subjecting them to sexually exploitative auditions and film shoots at an acting and film school that he founded have agreed to drop their claims against him as part of a settlement reached earlier this month.

A joint status report that was filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on February 11th said that the two women who brought the suit, Sarah Tither-Kaplan and Toni Gaal, had agreed to drop their individual claims against Franco. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

Details of the filing were reported Saturday by the Associated Press. On Sunday, lawyers for the plaintiffs confirmed the settlement, which they said would be formalised in a court filing at a later date. They did not provide further details.

Tither-Kaplan and Gaal said in a 2019 filing that Franco had intimidated them into performing gratuitous sex scenes while denying them the protections of nudity riders when they were students in a master class on sex scenes at his school, Studio 4, which operated from 2014 to 2017 and had branches in Los Angeles and New York.

READ MORE

According to the suit, Franco "sought to create a pipeline of young women who were subjected to his personal and professional sexual exploitation in the name of education." The two women said those who co-operated were led to believe that doing so would land them roles in Franco's films.

Lawyers for Franco did not respond to an email seeking comment Sunday. Franco has previously denied the allegations. Franco's production company, Rabbit Bandini, and his partners, who include Vince Jolivette and Jay Davis, are also named as defendants. The two parties had been discussing a settlement for several months, according to the filing, and the lawsuit's progress had been paused while they did so. Lawyers for Jolivette did not respond to an email seeking comment.

The claims of other plaintiffs in the class-action filing will be dismissed without prejudice under the terms of the settlement, according to the report, which means they could be refiled at a later date. Before she filed the 2019 lawsuit, Tither-Kaplan and several other women had accused Franco of sexual misconduct in a Los Angeles Times story after he won a Golden Globe for his performance in The Disaster Artist in January 2018. Other women discussed their experiences with Franco in social media posts they shared during and after the broadcast, which came amid the #MeToo movement.

Franco continued to appear in public in the days following the allegations, in which he explained that he supported the rights of women to call out acts of sexual misconduct but said the specific claims about him were inaccurate. Franco denied the allegations in an appearance on the US talkshow The Late Show but told the host, Stephen Colbert, "If there's restitution to be made, I will make it. I'm here to listen and learn and change my perspective where it's off." – New York Times