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Geena Davis sues advocacy group over charity
Peter David
LOS ANGELES—Oscar-winning actress Geena Davis has sued the owners of a
Minnesota-based nonprofit group who she claims stole her idea for a
charity she created dealing with depictions of kids in the media.
In the suit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Monday, Davis has
asked a judge to rule that the charity See Jane belongs to her and order
Joseph Kelly and Nancy Gruver to stop using her celebrity and goodwill
to promote their nonprofit group.
According to court papers, Davis claims that Kelly and Gruver, who run
Dads & Daughters in Duluth, Minnesota, have told Davis that they are the
lawful owners to the See Jane charity.
The actress, 51, won an Oscar for best supporting actress in 1988 for
“The Accidental Tourist” and later was nominated for best actress in
“Thelma & Louise.” Recently she played a U.S. president on the
television show “Commander in Chief.”
In a statement, Kelly and Gruver said they were “shocked” to learn Davis
filed the suit. “The lawsuit, which we believe has no legal merit, is
filled with inaccuracies and false allegations,” the statement said.
In the suit, Davis claims that in 2004 she conceived the idea for See
Jane, a charitable group for researching and advocating depictions of
gender in children’s media.
Dads & Daughters provides information and support services for fathers,
stepfathers and new dads that helps them build better lives, according
to their Web site.
Davis said she was introduced to the Dads & Daughters owners as possible
financial sponsors for See Jane. She began working with them and then
went about raising money, which reached $750,000.
In July, Kelly and Gruver told Davis they were expanding Dads &
Daughters and moving it to New York City. Davis told them she wanted to
take See Jane elsewhere, and the pair claimed they owned See Jane,
according to the suit. |