Since The New York Times published its first explosive report about Harvey Weinstein, 63 women and counting have stepped forward with allegations about his sexual misconduct. Many of their allegations are similar: they say that Weinstein invited them to a private room, where he either asked for a naked massage or sexually assaulted them. The majority of the time, Weinstein’s alleged targets were young, aspiring actresses—whom he reportedly preyed upon using his colleagues and his powerful title to cushion against any blowback.

From Angelina Jolie to Rose McGowan to Cara Delevingne to Kate Beckinsale, here are the women who have told their stories thus far. This list will be updated if and when more women come forward.

Hope Exiner d’Amore:

In the late 1970s, Exiner d’Amore was working for Weinstein’s Buffalo-based pre-Miramax concert promotion company when she went with Weinstein on a business trip to New York City. There, she says, Weinstein forced sex and oral sex on her: “I told him no. I kept pushing him away. He just wouldn’t listen. He just forced himself on me.” Following the alleged incident, she says, Weinstein kept pursing her; when she declined his offers, she says, she was fired.

Cynthia Burr:

The actress told The New York Times that in the late 1970s, her manager set up a meeting between her and Weinstein; they met in an elevator, says Burr, where she says Weinstein tried to kiss her and forced her to perform oral sex on him. “The way he forced me made me feel really bad about myself,” she told the Times. “What are you going to do when you are a girl just trying to make it as an actress? Nobody would have believed me.”

Ashley Matthau:

The dancer says that she met Weinstein in 2004, when he visited the set of Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights and began pressuring her to take a private meeting with him. Eventually, she relented, and went with him to his hotel room, where Weinstein allegedly bragged about other actresses he had supposedly slept with before groping her and masturbating on top of her. “I kept telling him, ‘Stop, I’m engaged,’ but he kept saying: ‘It’s just a little cuddling. It’s not a problem. It’s not like we’re having sex,’” she told the Times. Matthau subsequently retained a lawyer—but when they met with Weinstein and one of his lawyers, Matthau says, she was told her name would be smeared if she tried to bring action against Weinstein. Matthau then agreed to enter into a settlement for more than $100,000.

Lacey Dorn:

Dorn told the Times that after meeting Weinstein at a party in 2011, the producer asked for her e-mail address, then groped her. “I was so naïve, I didn’t say anything. And he didn’t say anything either,” she said. “I just got out of the party as fast as possible.”

Daryl Hannah:

Hannah told The New Yorker that she had several encounters with Weinstein: two in which he pounded incessantly on her hotel-room door until she left the room by a back entrance (the first time) or barricaded the door (the second); another in which he barged into her hotel room “like a raging bull. And I know with every fibre of my being that if my male makeup artist was not in that room, things would not have gone well. It was scary.” Weinstein allegedly then told Hannah to attend a party downstairs; when she arrived at the room he had mentioned, she says, it was empty save Weinstein. When Hannah asked for an explanation, she says Weinstein replied, “Are your tits real?” before asking if he could touch them.