The Lives of Others: Unauthorized Depictions of Public Figures in U.S. Film and TV Drama

Authors

  • Jonathan Stubbs Cyprus International University

Keywords:

law, historical drama, defamation, publicity rights, free speech

Abstract

This article examines the unauthorized depiction of public figures in contemporary U.S. film and TV from a legal perspective, particularly the conflict between free speech and reputational damage. These issues are historicized by reviewing the earliest cases brought against film producers in the 1910s and 1920s, and by analyzing the main practices employed in the film industry to minimize the legal risks of dramatizing real people. The second section considers changes in the legal standing of films and their representation of real people over time, including the extension of First Amendment protection, the revision of defamation standards, and the emergence of publicity rights. Finally, the article examines the recent case brought by Olivia de Havilland over her depiction in the miniseries Feud: Bette and Joan. Testing the validity of publicity rights laws, the case depended on whether her depiction was “transformative” rather than realistic and thus protected as free speech.

Author Biography

Jonathan Stubbs, Cyprus International University

Jonathan Stubbs is a Professor in the Faculty of Communication at Cyprus International University. His research focusses on the representation of history in film, film policy, the economic and cultural relationship between Hollywood and the British film industry, and the history of media in Cyprus during the British colonial period. He is the author of Hollywood and the Invention of England: Projecting the English Past in American Cinema, 1930–2017 (Bloomsbury Academic, 2019) and Historical Film: A Critical Introduction (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013).

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Published

2023-11-15

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Section

Articles