Houston "unconscious, unresponsive"
Police say pop star Whitney Houston was found "unconscious and unresponsive" when first responders arrived at a Beverly Hills hotel room. Video
Universal Pictures calls "Bruno" suit frivolous
LOS ANGELES |
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Movie studio Universal Pictures on Friday responded to a lawsuit filed earlier this week against its parent company and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen calling it "frivolous" and saying its claims were "baseless."
California resident Richelle Olson sued Cohen and Universal Pictures' parent NBC Universal, the media division of General Electric Co., in Los Angeles Superior Court over an encounter with Cohen when he was filming his movie "Bruno."
Olson claims Cohen showed up at a charity bingo event in 2007 as the flamboyant gay Austrian character Bruno and pushed her. Olson says she fell and was surrounded by cameramen who attacked her. Later, she says she fainted, hit her head causing bleeding to her brain, and must now use a wheelchair.
But in its statement, Universal said: "filmed footage of the full encounter, which took place more than two years ago, clearly shows that Ms. Olson was never touched or in any way assaulted by Sacha Baron Cohen or any member of the production and suffered no injury."
Universal said "we expect each of the defendants to be fully vindicated."
"Bruno," which lands in theaters in July, follows Cohen's 2006 surprise hit "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan," which made more than $260 million at worldwide box offices.
That comedy featured the comic actor in the role of a naive and rude journalist from Kazakhstan named Borat, who has unscripted meetings with dumbstruck Americans.
"Borat" attracted several lawsuits from individuals Cohen encountered while shooting that film. Both Borat and Bruno are characters Cohen invented for his "Da Ali G Show," which aired on British and American television.
(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints
Entertainment News From the Wrap
Scott Rudin's Grammy Win Puts Him in Elite Company
"Book of Mormon" producer Scott Rudin becomes only the 11th person to win Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Awards
Uggie Is Top Dog at the Golden Collar Awards, Of Course
Uggie from "The Artist" wins the film award at thoroughly silly awards show; "Modern Family" dog Brigitte wins for TV
Michael Bay Directing Next 'Transformers' Film
Paramount signs action maestro to two picture deal that will include "Pain and Gain" with Mark Wahlberg and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson
Whitney Houston's Death: Why the Media Sidestepped the Lurid Details
Media outlets have struggled to strike a balance between honoring "The Bodyguard" star's legacy and acknowledging her sad final act




Follow Reuters