Disney ditched Holywood star Johnny Depp after Amber Heard op-ed - manager
Heard’s December 2018 Washington Post op-ed was “catastrophic” and “destroyed” Depp’s career, talent manager Jack Whigham testified on video Monday amid their ongoing defamation trial.
- Magazine
- DPA
- Published Date: 09:11 | 03 May 2022
- Modified Date: 09:41 | 03 May 2022
Heard's December 2018 Washington Post op-ed was "catastrophic" and "destroyed" Depp's career, talent manager Jack Whigham testified on video Monday amid their ongoing defamation trial.
Before the allegations, Depp was working steadily, Whigham said, rattling off a string of movies beginning in October 2016 when he joined the team: "City of Lies" ($8 million), "Murder on the Orient Express" ($10 million), "Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald" ($13.5 million), "Waiting for the Barbarians" ($1 million) and "Minamata" ($3 million), which was set to shoot in early 2019.
But after the op-ed, financing fell apart on "Minamata," which starred Depp as photojournalist Eugene Smith, and the actor gave up some of his salary to get the independent film across the finish line.
Then Disney ditched him for the planned "Pirates" sequel, which was supposed to net Depp $22.5 million, according to Whigham. During cross-examination, the manager admitted that he had never affirmatively seen that number "written on a page."
"After the op-ed, it was impossible to get him a studio film," Whigham testified.
Last week, Depp said Disney was "trying to cut ties to be safe" by cutting him from the movie franchise in which he played Captain Jack Sparrow.
"They didn't remove my character from the rides," he testified. "They didn't stop selling dolls of Captain Jack Sparrow. They didn't stop selling anything. They just didn't want there to be something trailing behind me that they'd find."
Heard's team has argued that Depp was already on the outs with Disney for his drug and alcohol problems while filming "Dead Men Tell No Tales" in 2015.
"It was trending badly in the late fall on behalf of Disney," Whigham testified. "But Jerry Bruckheimer and I were lobbying to make it happen, and so we had hope. And it became clear to me in early 2019 that it was over."
"Pirates 6″ has still not been made and it's unclear if it will be.
In earlier testimony Monday, Depp's security guard, Travis McGivern, told the Fairfax, Virginia, jury that he saw Heard throw a can of Red Bull at the actor in March 2015 at their Los Angeles home, then later that evening allegedly heard her punch him with a "closed fist" to the face.
That night, McGivern testified, Heard spat at Depp and called him names, including a "deadbeat dad," a "f--king c--n" and "f--king washed up."
During the London trial in which Depp sued The Sun for calling him a wife-beater, Heard admitted to punching Depp that night, but said it was to protect her sister, Whitney, who was with her at the time.
"I had heard that he had pushed a former girlfriend, I think it was Kate Moss, down the stairs," Heard testified in July 2020. "And I thought of that at the moment and I reacted in defense of (Whitney)."
During his own testimony in this trial, Depp denied ever hitting Heard.
Depp is suing Heard, to whom he was married from 2015 to 2017, for defamation over the 2018 op-ed she wrote for The Washington Post in which she described herself as a "public figure representing domestic abuse," without naming her ex-husband.
Each has now accused the other of abuse and each has denied the allegations.