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The powerful producer faces accusations of abuse and intimidation going back decades.
By Hilary Hanson and Kimberley Richards
Producer Scott Rudin will “step back” from Broadway, following a series of allegations that he was abusive in the workplace over the course of decades, he told The Washington Post.
Rudin apologized for the “pain” he has caused and said he would be “taking steps that I should have taken years ago to address this behavior.”
“Much has been written about my history of troubling interactions with colleagues, and I am profoundly sorry for the pain my behavior caused to individuals, directly and indirectly,” the producer of Broadway’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “The Book of Mormon” said in his statement.
Female McDonald s employees accuse fast-food chain of abuse, harassment in workplace
Young women from across the country with remarkably similar accounts of workplace abuse and harassment at one of America s largest, most iconic fast-food restaurant chains: McDonald s: He would make comments on my body, and other workers bodies, saying, like, I would have sex with you, I wouldn t have sex with her, said Emily Anibal. First he was like, You have nice hair, started touching my hair, said Jamelia Fairley. Then he was like, physical; then he actually started grabbing my butt.
Kat Barber said, Any woman that he could get his hands on or be near, he was taking advantage of that moment.