Oprah Winfrey believes Reese Witherspoon suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder when the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke.
The media mogul said during her Super Soul Sunday Conversation special with Salma Hayek that her Wrinkle in Time co-star reacted oddly when the allegations against the now disgraced movie producer surfaced in October.
‘I was on set with Reese Witherspoon, who has since spoken out … and some other actresses, who haven’t spoken out, so I won’t say who they were, and this was like two days after the Harvey scandal had broken in The New York Times,’ Oprah said, according to ET.
‘Everyone, including Reese…. was acting like, I was seeing some of the girls at my school behave, who were suffering from PTSD. Everybody was acting like they were afraid and they were having the conversation,’ the 64-year-old said.
Opinion: Oprah Winfrey says she believes Reese Witherspoon suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder when the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke. The two are pictured in 2014
PTSD symptoms: Oprah, who just filmed A Wrinkle In Time with Reese, recalled how the actress started crying at the mention of Weinstein’s name and said she wasn’t able to sleep
Oprah described the Big Little Lies star, 41, as crying at the mention of Weinstein’s name and not being able to sleep.
She recalled: ‘I remember Reese saying, ‘Oh god, this is just so upsetting. And someone mentions his name, I start tearing up. And every time I hear someone else speak, it just causes me to be upset and I haven’t slept in two days.”
‘So I said, ‘Jeez, you guys are suffering from PTSD. Did something happen to you?’ Nobody said anything at the time,’ Oprah said.
During her conversation with Oprah, Salma revealed that Weinstein once allegedly threatened to ‘break her kneecaps’ after she spurned his advances.
To be shown on TV: Oprah made her remarks about Reese during her Super Soul Conversation in New York City with Salma Hayek on Wednesday
Victim: Salma told Oprah that she ‘lived in fear’ of Weinstein (pictured with him left, in Cannes, France in 2010, and right, in an undated photo) after he allegedly threatened her
The actress admitted that she ‘lived in fear’ of the disgraced producer while working on movie Frida.
Hayek said in conversation with the TV host on Wednesday, that Weinstein told the film’s director, Julie Taymor: ‘I am going to break the kneecaps of that C-word.’
‘I don’t want to get into the details because we have more important things to talk about… but I was depressed,’ the 51-year-old actress added. ‘I was paranoid. I lived in fear. I tried to get out. I couldn’t get out.’
Weinstein has since issued an apology for what he referred to as ‘his boorish behavior’, although cited the ‘creative friction on Frida’ as being a force that ‘served to drive the project to perfection.’
‘Mr. Weinstein apologizes for the way he may have approached the situation. He hopes all involved can at least agree that the movie was fantastic,’ his spokesperson told DalyMail.com, adding that Weinstein ‘never fought with Ms. Hayek on set’ and ‘doesn’t recall ever saying such an awful thing.’
Candid: The Frida star told Oprah that she felt like a coward after declining to participate in a New York Times article about Weinstein, who’d threatened to ‘break her kneecaps’
Moving on: Salma, 51, who’s married to French multimillionaire Francois-Henri Pinault, said it was important to be productive instead of angry about what had happened
The Wild Wild West star said that for years she felt too ashamed to come forward and talk about Weinstein’s sexual harassment, and was worried about going public because she didn’t want her 10-year-old daughter Valentina to know.
Salma, who’s married to French multimillionaire Francois-Henri Pinault, told Oprah that she decided it was important to speak out because her pain was ‘so small’ compared to other people’s.
She said: ‘[The New York Times] contacted me to be a part of the first story and already by this contact, there was all this turmoil and I started crying when they asked and I ended up not doing it.
The Mexican actress added: ‘It’s important to take responsibility for the things we do to others, but we must stop apologizing for being attacked and we must move into a place where you can actually have a conversation.
‘It is important to release the anger. I don’t want us to go from victims to angry. I don’t want our anger to be our motto. That doesn’t mean we are not angry … I am a short, Mexican-Arab, angry woman … but I don’t let that anger blur my vision. I can use that energy to be productive,’ she said.
Regret: The actress said that, for years, she felt too ashamed to come forward and talk about Weinstein’s sexual harassment