Actor speaks out against ‘chaos, ineptitude and war-mongering’ of Trump administration during pre-Oscars protest

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

The actor Jodie Foster has told protesters it is “our time to resist” at a rally opposing Donald Trump’s proposed travel ban, two days before the Academy Awards.



The Oscar winner spoke to hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside the Beverly Hills headquarters of United Talent Agency (UTA), which cancelled its Oscars party to stage the protest.

Foreign language Oscar nominees decry 'climate of fanaticism in US' Read more

“I’m not somebody who feels very comfortable using my public face for activism,” she said. “This year is a very different year and it’s time to show up. It’s the singular time in history. It’s time to engage.

“We know the first attack on democracy is an assault on free expression and civil liberties and this relentless war on truth. Unfortunately it’s too familiar because history repeats itself.

“No matter where you’re born and no matter who you voted for, red or blue, whether you’re white, black or brown and all the colours of the identity rainbow – this is our time to resist.

“It’s our time to show up and demand answers. It’s our time to tell our elected officials to do their job. We will not tolerate chaos, ineptitude and war-mongering.”

The Oscar-nominated Iranian director Asghar Farhadi sent a video message to the rally after he decided to boycott the awards ceremony over the travel ban affecting seven Muslim-majority countries.

Farhadi, who is nominated for best foreign language film for The Salesman, told the crowd: “It is comforting to know that at a time when some politicians are trying to promote hate by creating divisions between cultures, religions and nationalities, the cinema community has joined the people in a common show of unity to show its opposition.

“I hope this unity will continue and spread to fight other injustices. Film-makers can break stereotypes around the world by turning their cameras to capture shared human qualities.”

Farhadi also signed a joint statement with the other five directors up for the foreign language Oscar in which they blamed “leading politicians” for the fear they felt was creating “divisive walls”.

They condemned “the climate of fanaticism and nationalism we see today in the US and in so many other countries, in parts of the population and, most unfortunately of all, among leading politicians”.

The actors Michael J Fox and Keegan-Michael Key and the British former foreign secretary David Miliband, who is chief executive of the International Rescue Committee (IRC), also addressed the rally.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Michael J Fox acknowledges the crowd. Photograph: Broadimage/Rex/Shutterstock

Fox told the crowd: “You have people who have given up everything, who have lost everything they have. They are struggling to keep their families alive and keep food in their mouths and disease away from their bodies and took tremendous risk to get to this country, and we say no?”

“We are the lucky ones.”

Miliband said: “We are living in the midst of a refugee crisis the likes of which the world has never been seen before. The executive order that was published in Washington three weeks ago was one story of America.

“Today this rally in Hollywood is telling another story. It’s a story of humanity, a story of reason, a story of patriotism that is founded in values, not in ethnicity.”

UTA said the rally, United Voices, was organised to “express the creative community’s support for freedom of speech and artistic expression and stand against policies of exclusion and division”.

The agency said it was donating more than $320,000 (£258,000) to the American Civil Liberties Union and the IRC.

After the rally it was reported that a 21-year-old Syrian cinematographer who worked on the Oscar-nominated film The White Helmets had been denied entry to the US.

The Department of Homeland Security blocked Khaled Khateeb from travelling to Los Angeles after officials reported finding “derogatory information” against him, according to correspondence seen by the Associated Press news agency.