Woody Allen's wife Soon-Yi weighs in on Mia Farrow
Woody Allen's wife, Soon-Yi Previn, broke a long silence to defend the
filmmaker against allegations of sexual abuse brought by his daughter,
Dylan, speaking out on the running feud between her mother, Mia Farrow,
and her husband.
"What's happened to Woody is so upsetting, so unjust," Previn said in a rare interview with New York Magazine.
Mia "has taken advantage of the #MeToo movement and paraded Dylan as a
victim. And a whole new generation is hearing about it when they
shouldn’t," she said.
In the article by Daphne Merkin, a longtime friend of Allen's, Soon-Yi
discusses her difficult childhood relations with her adopted mother,
portraying her as dismissive and abusive.
"Mia described me as 'elegant,'" she is quoted as saying. "It was the only positive thing she said about me."
Now 47 and married for more than 20 years, Soon-Yi was a 21-year-old
college freshman in 1991 when she began an affair with Allen.
Farrow, the director's long-time partner on screen and off, discovered
the affair a year later, causing an angry public break that set the rest
of the family against Allen and Soon-Yi.
In a television interview in January, Dylan, Allen's adopted daughter
with Farrow, revived accusations that her father molested her in August
1992 when she was seven years old.
In a statement to New York Magazine, Dylan said it was "offensive" of
Soon-Yi to assert that she had been pushed to accuse Allen in the wake
of the #MeToo movement.
"This only serves to revictimize me," Dylan said. "Thanks to my mother, I
grew up in a wonderful home, filled with love, that she created."
After the article's publication, Dylan also tweeted a statement signed
by several of Mia Farrow's biological and adopted children, attesting
that their mother has always been "a caring and giving parent."
"We reject any effort to deflect from Dylan's allegation by trying to vilify our mom," it said.
Ronan Farrow, a son of Mia Farrow and Allen who won a Pulitzer prize for
investigative articles in the New Yorker that helped propel the #Me Too
movement, denounced Merkin's article as "shameful."
"I owe everything I am to Mia Farrow," he tweeted.
"As a brother and a son, I am angry that New York Magazine would
participate in this kind of a hit job, written by a longtime friend and
admirer of Woody Allen," he said, adding, "Survivors of abuse deserve
better."
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