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Actress Rebel Wilson tells court Australian articles hurt her career

The Pitch Perfect star is suing Australian publisher Bauer Media.

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A tearful Rebel Wilson testified on Tuesday that a series of magazine articles published in Australia were a deliberate attack on her character and damaged her acting career.

Rebel is suing Australian publisher Bauer Media for defamation over several articles published in 2015 that the Australian-born actress said led to her film contracts being terminated. The articles said Rebel had lied about her name, age and upbringing in Australia.

Rebel Wilson in the press room at the EE British Academy Film Awards at the Royal Opera House, Bow Street, London
Rebel Wilson in the press room at the EE British Academy Film Awards at the Royal Opera House, Bow Street, London.

Rebel wiped away tears as she testified in the Supreme Court of Victoria, rejecting the publisher’s argument that the stories were light-hearted and had no serious impact on her career.

“These articles were a deliberate malicious take-down of me,” the actress testified.

Rebel, known for her work in comedies such as Pitch Perfect and Bridesmaids, said she has only had two roles since the articles were published, one for the film Absolutely Fabulous and the other a stage role in London.

“It’s not lucrative,” she told the court. “The reason why I’m here today is to stand up for myself and to stand up for my family, who’ve been harassed.”

Rebel is seeking unspecified damages from the publisher.

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