
Polanski abandons plan to preside over French Oscars
PARIS — Filmmaker Roman Polanski has abandoned plans to preside over the French equivalent of the Oscars, after protests from France’s women’s rights minister and feminist groups prompted by decades-old U.S. sex charges against him.
It’s a surprising setback for the 83-year-old director, a Holocaust survivor who is widely respected in France and whose film career has continued to flourish since he settled in Paris after fleeing the U.S. in the late 1970s.
“Deeply saddened” by the renewed criticism, Polanski decided not to lead the Feb. 24 Cesars Awards “so as not to disrupt the Cesars ceremony, which should be devoted to cinema and not to the designation of its president,” according to a statement from Polanski’s lawyer Herve Temime.
The arts academy holding the Cesars Awards is discussing alternative options after Polanski’s decision, an academy official said Tuesday.