Meryl Streep responds to Rose McGowan's Golden Globes protest criticism

'We are both … standing in defiance of the same implacable foe,' Streep says

Meryl Streep has responded to Rose McGowan’s criticism suggesting that she is complicit in Hollywood’s sexual misconduct scandal because she worked with Harvey Weinstein, and that Streep and other actresses’ plan to wear black to the Golden Globes to protest harassment is hypocritical.

“I am truly sorry [McGowan] sees me as an adversary, because we are both, together with all the women in our business, standing in defiance of the same implacable foe,” Streep said Monday in a statement provided to EW. She also stressed that she did not know about Weinstein’s alleged misconduct in the past.

In a tweet posted Saturday and since deleted, McGowan wrote, “Actresses, like Meryl Streep, who happily worked for The Pig Monster, are wearing black @goldenglobes in a silent protest. YOUR SILENCE is THE problem. You’ll accept a fake award breathlessly & affect no real chance. I despise your hypocrisy.”

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In Streep’s statement Monday, she said she provided her phone number to McGowan through friends but didn’t hear from her. Streep also asserted that she was never “deliberately silent,” and was unaware of any wrongdoing on Weinstein’s part. (Weinstein has denied all allegations of non-consensual sex.) Streep said she has never been to Weinstein’s home or hotel room and noted that many of the films she made with him were projects she worked on with other people that were then distributed by Weinstein and his film company.

At the end of her statement, Streep addressed the issue more broadly and spoke directly to McGowan, writing, “I am truly sorry she sees me as an adversary, because we are both, together with all the women in our business, standing in defiance of the same implacable foe: a status quo that wants so badly to return to the bad old days, the old ways where women were used, abused and refused entry into the decision-making, top levels of the industry. That’s where the cover-ups convene. Those rooms must be disinfected, and integrated, before anything even begins to change.”

Read Streep’s full statement, which was first reported by HuffPo, below:

It hurt to be attacked by Rose McGowan in banner headlines this weekend, but I want to let her know I did not know about Weinstein’s crimes, not in the 90s when he attacked her, or through subsequent decades when he proceeded to attack others.

I wasn’t deliberately silent. I didn’t know. I don’t tacitly approve of rape. I didn’t know.  I don’t like young women being assaulted. I didn’t know this was happening.

I don’t know where Harvey lives, nor has he ever been to my home.

I have never in my life been invited to his hotel room.

I have been to his office once, for a meeting with Wes Craven for “Music of the Heart” in 1998.

HW distributed movies I made with other people.

HW was not a filmmaker; he was often a producer, primarily a marketer of films made by other people- some of them great, some not great. But not every actor, actress, and director who made films that HW distributed knew he abused women, or that he raped Rose in the 90s, other women before and others after, until they told us. We did not know that womens’ silence was purchased by him and his enablers.

HW needed us not to know this, because our association with him bought him credibility, an ability to lure young, aspiring women into circumstances where they would be hurt.

He needed me much more than I needed him and he made sure I didn’t know. Apparently he hired ex Mossad operators to protect this information from becoming public. Rose and the scores of other victims of these powerful, moneyed, ruthless men face an adversary for whom Winning, at any and all costs, is the only acceptable outcome. That’s why a legal defense fund for victims is currently being assembled to which hundreds of good hearted people in our business will contribute, to bring down the bastards, and help victims fight this scourge within.

Rose assumed and broadcast something untrue about me, and I wanted to let her know the truth. Through friends who know her, I got my home phone number to her the minute I read the headlines. I sat by that phone all day yesterday and this morning, hoping to express both my deep respect for her and others’ bravery in exposing the monsters among us, and my sympathy for the untold, ongoing pain she suffers. No one can bring back what entitled bosses like Bill O’Reilly, Roger Ailes, and HW took from the women who endured attacks on their bodies and their ability to make a living.. And I hoped that she would give me a hearing. She did not, but I hope she reads this.

I am truly sorry she sees me as an adversary, because we are both, together with all the women in our business, standing in defiance of the same implacable foe: a status quo that wants so badly to return to the bad old days, the old ways where women were used, abused and refused entry into the decision-making, top levels of the industry. That’s where the cover-ups convene. Those rooms must be disinfected, and integrated, before anything even begins to change.

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