So Florida Sun-Sentinel
Rosie wants her name and voice taken off
documentary
The group that made the Oscar-nominated film
is reportedly anti-gay.
By Christy Lemire
AP Entertainment Writer
Posted March 21
2002
March 21, 2002
Rosie
O'Donnell is asking to have her name and voice removed from an Oscar-nominated
documentary after learning that the filmmakers are involved in a group that has
been described as a homophobic cult.
The talk show host, who recently
came out as a lesbian, narrated "Artists and Orphans: A True Drama," about a New
York theater group that travels to the former Soviet republic of Georgia to help
orphaned and abandoned children. The film is competing against two other
documentary shorts for an Academy Award on Sunday.
O'Donnell, who has
three adopted children and has been a vocal proponent of gays adopting children,
volunteered to narrate the short.
But her spokeswoman said Wednesday that
O'Donnell found out this week that the filmmakers -- including director Lianne
Klapper McNally -- are involved with the Fourth Way School. The group emphasizes
personal development, and, according to various newspaper reports, bans
homosexuals and believes gays shouldn't be parents.
"If Rosie had known
the truth about this organization, she never would have consented to lend her
name and voice," said O'Donnell's publicist, Cindi Berger.
She added that
"Rosie is angry that the background wasn't disclosed to her."
During her
show Wednesday morning, O'Donnell said she was angry about her association with
the film.
Klapper McNally has an unlisted phone number and did not
immediately respond to an e-mail request for comment. The Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences also did not immediately return a call for comment;
voting for the awards concluded Tuesday.
David Goldstein, a lawyer
representing the film, told New York's Daily News that suggesting that "Artists
and Orphans" is "the work of some kind of nefarious cult is completely
baseless."
"Furthermore, the inflammatory accusation that certain people
affiliated with the film are involved in an organization that endangers the
welfare of children or discriminates against ... gays and lesbians or families
is without foundation," Goldstein said.
Rick Ross, a New Jersey-based
cult expert and lecturer who helped deprogram Branch Davidians in the mid-'90s,
said the Fourth Way is a cult and excludes gays.
"They must renounce
their sexual preference and work toward becoming heterosexual," said Ross, who
said he has spent hours talking with former members.
Articles from 1996
in the Los Angeles Times and from 1995 in the San Diego Union-Tribune about a
branch of the Fourth Way School, in Oregon House, Calif., said the group bans
gays.
Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press
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