'Not credible or reliable': Geoffrey Rush wins defamation case against Daily Telegraph

Geoffrey Rush has won his defamation case against Sydney newspaper The Daily Telegraph over a series of reports accusing him of "inappropriate behaviour".

Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney

A Federal Court judge is expected to rule in the Geoffrey Rush defamation case later today. Source: AAP

Geoffrey Rush has won his defamation case against a Sydney newspaper publisher and journalist over articles saying he'd been

The 67-year-old Oscar-winning actor had sued the Daily Telegraph's publisher and journalist Jonathon Moran over two stories and a poster published in late 2017.

Australian actor Geoffrey Rush (centre) arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney, Tuesday, October 23, 2018. Rush is suing Nationwide News for defamation. (AAP Image/Brendan Esposito) NO ARCHIVING
Australian actor Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney in 2018. Source: AAP


In Sydney's Federal Court on Thursday, Justice Michael Wigney found Rush had been defamed.

"Nationwide News and Mr Moran did not make out their truth defence," the judge said.

The Telegraph publications related to an allegation Rush behaved inappropriately toward a co-star - later revealed to be Eryn Jean Norvill - during a Sydney Theatre Company production of King Lear.

Eryn Jean Norvill is seen leaving the Federal Court
Eryn Jean Norvill says there's a culture of bullying and harassment in the theatre industry. Source: AAP


Norvill was a defence witness in last year's trial, telling the court Rush deliberately stroked the side of her breast during a preview performance when her character was dead onstage.

"It couldn't have been an accident because it was slow and pressured," she said.

He also stroked Norvill's lower back backstage, made groping gestures toward her during rehearsal and would sometimes growl and call her yummy, she alleged.

Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney.
Geoffrey Rush arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney. Source: AAP





Rush said it was possible he used the word yummy - which had "a spirit to it" - but otherwise denied the allegations, saying that he thought he and Norvill had enjoyed a "very sparky, congenial rapport".

He became emotional when he said that to perform the death scene, he imagined "it was my own real-life daughter and that she'd been hit by a bus on the street near where we live ... and I knew she was gone".

He said the months following the publication of the articles had been the worst of his life.

Justice Wigney on Thursday said he wasn't persuaded that Norvill's evidence was "credible or reliable" while he accepted Rush's testimony.

Rush and Norvill were both in court on Thursday afternoon.


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Published 11 April 2019 9:30am
Updated 11 April 2019 3:16pm


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