As the stars in Hollywood gathered at the Golden Globes under the shadow of the recent wave of sexual assault allegations in Hollywood—and the #TimesUp movement—many of those watching closely from home were quick to use social media to call out the men in the room who had made questionable headlines over the years, and proudly stood in solidarity with the women of Hollywood on Globes night. As actor James Franco took the stage wearing all black and a Time’s Up pin to accept his award for best lead actor in a comedy for The Disaster Artist, actress Ally Sheedy, watching from home, weighed in.

Those tweets, including an earlier message from Sheedy calling out actor Christian Slater with the loaded hashtag #MeToo, were deleted a short time later.

Sheedy and Franco worked together in 2014 on the play The Long Shrift—his off-Broadway directorial debut. During a profile in The New York Times, Sheedy hugged Franco in front of the reporter and called him “a beautiful, generous man.”

But Sheedy was not the only person to call up Franco’s past during his win. 2014 articles covering the time Franco had a questionable Instagram exchange with a teenager also started making the round on social media Sunday night; just after that story hit, Franco himself appeared on Live with Kelly and Michael to admit that he had engaged in a flirtatious exchange with a girl who was then 17. “I guess I’m, you know, embarrassed, and I guess I’m just a model of how social media is tricky,” the then-35-year-old actor said at the time. Chalking up his actions to “bad judgment,” Franco concluded: “In my position, not only do I have to go through the embarrassing rituals of meeting someone, but sometimes it gets published for the world.”

VF.com has reached out to both Sheedy and Franco and will update with any comments.