logo
The sleazy rise – and billion-dollar fall – of Hollywood's self-styled ‘pick up artist'

The sleazy rise – and billion-dollar fall – of Hollywood's self-styled ‘pick up artist'

Yahoo11-04-2025

A few years ago, the actress Julianne Moore shared an illustrative anecdote on social media. She recounted how a film-maker, of some standing, approached her on Columbus Avenue in New York in the Eighties and asked her if she would come and audition for him. Moore, suspecting nefarious intent, refused. A month later, she ran into the film-maker again, and he propositioned her again, using exactly the same language. Exasperated as much as anything else, she responded 'Don't you remember you did this before?'
The director was James Toback, who has now been found responsible for sexually assaulting 40 separate women over a four-decade period in New York. Toback, 80, has been ordered to pay a staggering $1.68 billion; $1.4 billion in punitive damages and $280 million in compensation to his victims. He has denied all of the charges against him, saying that his health issues, which include diabetes and a heart condition, have made it physically impossible for him to have committed the crimes, and that he either never met the women who have levelled complaints against him or, if he did, it 'was for five minutes and [he has] no recollection'.
He went further in a combative 2017 Rolling Stone interview, in which he said of the allegations that he found them 'offensive and insulting and disgusting' and that 'It's too stupid to dignify. It's pathetic lies. It's just too f______ embarrassing and idiotic.' But a jury sided with his accusers – many now in their 40s and 50s – and awarded them $42 million each.
In truth, Toback's downfall had been in train for years, and it seemed appropriate that it took place shortly after the exposure of Harvey Weinstein. The Los Angeles Times ran a detailed story in October 2017 about Toback's penchant for exploitative behaviour around young women. According to the feature, his modus operandi was consistent. Toback would walk up to attractive strangers and introduce himself as a big-shot Hollywood director, a close friend and mentor to Robert Downey Jr and an Oscar-nominated screenwriter. These women, impressed by his charisma, would often consent to an audition with him, sometimes in public but more often in a hotel room or on-set trailer.
Under the guise of an interview, Toback would ask increasingly personal and pointed questions about their sex lives and personal appearance, before he would talk about his own high sex drive, saying that he was unable to function unless he masturbated several times a day. He would then demonstrate this by masturbating in front of these appalled women, often ejaculating over them, and then, abruptly, the meeting was finished and they would never hear from him ever again.
As one actress interviewed by the LA Times, Adrienne LaValley, recounted: 'The way he presented it, it was like, 'This is how things are done.'' After Toback had finished, she was aghast. 'I felt like a prostitute, an utter disappointment to myself, my parents, my friends. And I deserved not to tell anyone.'
Hollywood is a strange place when it comes to its film-makers. If you're responsible for a notorious flop, and you're not an especially popular character in the first place, then prepare for a visit to director jail, and to remain there for a considerable time to come. Yet if you are, like Toback, friends with some of the leading figures in the Hollywood A-list, and you've assiduously – some would argue luckily – built a reputation as a respected auteur, it neither matters that your films flop nor that your public standing is, at best, controversial.
After decades sailing close to the wind, and offering unfortunately candid comments in interviews that now read like statements of untouchable arrogance, he now faces disgrace and destitution. It's the end of a once-glittering career that came to represent the highs and lows of auteur cinema.
A few decades ago, it was all rather different. After graduating from Harvard, where he was friends with Tommy Lee Jones and claimed to have taken the largest single dose of LSD in history, Toback worked briefly as a journalist before he received acclaim for writing the screenplay of Karel Reisz's loose Dostoyevsky adaptation The Gambler, into which he incorporated autobiographical elements relating to its obsessive protagonist.
That film's success enabled him to make his first picture as director in 1978, Fingers, which starred Harvey Keitel and began a pattern in his filmmaking that would recur over and over again: Keitel played a brilliant, solitary and tormented pianist who moonlighted as an enforcer for his gangster father.
In the unquestioning depiction of his artistic genius, Toback clearly intended his protagonist to be a self-reflection, just as James Caan's brilliant, solitary (etc) gambler had been in the previous film. Initially, few were convinced. The critic-turned-screenwriter Stephen Schiff scoffed that the film was not 'just bad; it's wildly; extravagantly, even entertainingly bad,' and went on to suggest, presciently, 'what comes through is not how troubled Jimmy is, but how bizarre the man who made this film [Toback] must be.' (It was remade, far more successfully, by Jacques Audiard in 2005 as The Beat That My Heart Skipped.)
Fingers should have killed his career immediately, but the hugely influential film critic Pauline Kael loved it, raving that it had 'the wild self-dramatization that one associates with the young Tennessee Williams, or with Mailer when he gets high on excess.' She was so impressed with Toback that she offered to help him with his next film, 1982's Love and Money, which Warren Beatty intended to star in and produce. However, as would become a feature in Toback's career, early intentions did not come to pass; the eventual result, made without Kael or Beatty, flopped.
By rights, Toback's career should have fallen apart, but unbelievably he managed to obtain an $18 million budget for his reunion with Keitel, 1983's Exposed, which starred Nastassja Kinski as a waitress who engages in a love affair with an obsessive violinist (played, equally unbelievably, by the ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev) while being pursued by a terrorist (Keitel, naturally). It is a truly terrible picture, which even the great Ian McShane cannot rescue, but according to Toback, it came about after he bribed the MGM executive David Begelman with money he won at gambling at Las Vegas to allow him to make the film. (He had picked the right person; Begelman was a notorious crook who was once, accurately, denigrated by Kirk Douglas as 'a forger and a thief' after being found to have embezzled money from his studio, Columbia Pictures, throughout the Seventies, and committed suicide after being declared bankrupt.)
Toback declared in a contemporary interview that 'I'm not getting much money but I'm being treated a lot better than most studios treat me... I figure now I have a remote chance of putting across a movie that only got made by a miracle anyway.'
Inevitably, Exposed – which he suggested was inspired by his own affair with an airline hostess he met – flopped heavily, but Toback sprang out of director jail a few years later with what was intended to be a bright and breezy John Hughes-style romantic comedy, 1987's The Pick Up Artist, with his regular collaborator Robert Downey Jr in the lead opposite Molly Ringwald.
The film, which was produced by Beatty, starred Downey Jr as another idealised version of how Toback saw himself: a womaniser so irresistible to women that he charms everyone he meet. He even has to keep away from the mothers of the students he teaches as otherwise his wiles will inevitably work on them, too. Downey Jr's charisma makes the film less ridiculous than it would otherwise be, but it was no particular success and, once again, suggested that Toback was a one-trick pony with delusions.
These delusions were in full evidence in his unintentionally hilarious 1990 documentary The Big Bang, which featured Toback earnestly interviewing various figures – billed as The Writer, The Survivor and The Gangster, amongst others - about the meaning of life and existence. Although it was as vacuous as the rest of his pictures, with added faux-profundity, it got better reviews than it deserved, as Toback persuaded critics that he knew something about existence that they did not.
His friendship with Beatty then led to his being asked to write the screenplay for Bugsy, for which he was Oscar-nominated, but already murmurs about his off-screen behaviour were so widespread for Spy magazine to write in 1989 that 'he would in rapid-fire fashion tell [women] that he was a Hollywood director and offer to show them his Director's Guild of America card. The pitch invariably ended up with an invite to meet privately—sometimes at an outlandishly late hour—to talk about appearing in one of his films.'
He was, at least, consistent in his modus operandi. His next film, Two Girls And A Guy, reunited him with Downey Jr – then in the midst of his well-publicised drug addiction – and attracted controversy for an envelope-pushing sex scene between Downey and his co-star Heather Graham, which would have led to the film being rated NC-17, the commercial kiss of death, unless Toback agreed to edit it. It was modestly profitable, because of the hoo-ha, but only minimally; it had cost $1 million to make and grossed slightly more than double that.
One unexpected and deeply unfortunate side-effect is that it allowed Toback to make his most controversial film to date in 1999 in the form of the dismal Black and White, which featured various members of the Wu Tung Clan along with Downey Jr, Claudia Schiffer and Mike Tyson. Its most memorable moment comes when Downey Jr, in character as a closeted homosexual, attempts to kiss an unsuspecting Tyson: matters go as you would expect.
Nominally a crime drama about hip-hop, it was clear that the (largely improvised) script bore about as much relation to any understanding of the complex post-Tupac Shakur world of rap music as did the Teletubbies. It also became regrettably clear that Toback, a large, bearded man in his mid-fifties, came to believe that he himself was a hip, down-with-the-kids pioneer, despite his film featuring dialogue along the lines of 'These pants is just big, yo!' Toback at one point announced that he knew what it was to be 'the only white guy in a totally black orgiastic world'.
He may have wished to record his own hip-hop album around this time, but instead he gave self-regarding and hollow interviews, even as one of his defenders, the chairman of Sony Pictures, accurately observed that 'His life is more interesting than his films, which is rarely true anymore.' In one New York Times profile, which now reads very differently to when it was published, the journalist observed: 'Sex is to Mr. Toback what violence is to Quentin Tarantino'. A friend of Toback's added: 'He sees an attractive woman three or four cars back, so he goes back to talk to her and leaves me sitting in traffic.'
The director laughed off the scorn as simple jealousy, and continued to make films throughout the 2000s. Sometimes these were acclaimed, as with his 2008 documentary about Mike Tyson, simply entitled Tyson. At other times, they seemed like Bernardo Bertolucci-level male wish fulfilment, in the case of the Neve Campbell-starring When Will I Be Loved, which featured lengthy scenes of Campbell naked, having sex or masturbating.
Toback talked a good game about his picture – 'I have never had an actor do anything faked or real, sexually, on the screen, that hasn't been in complete harmony with what that actor wanted to do or would believe he or she would be doing in the context of the character and the scene' – but most observers of his work might have described it as simple prurience. It did not help that he claimed, of the film's five-minute opening masturbation scene, 'Well, I'm obsessed with women, so I can imagine my way into a female consciousness very well.' Others may have disagreed.
By the time that Toback's 2013 Cannes-set mock-documentary Seduced and Abandoned, which he made with another equally problematic figure in the shape of Alec Baldwin, came around, critics had wearied of his schtick. Slant magazine's review, which began was especially damning, as it posited the ridiculousness of the idea of Toback and Baldwin trying to mount a sexually explicit drama starring the actor and Campbell on a $20 million budget. 'To enjoy Seduced and Abandoned,' read the review, 'you'll have to be able to push a lumbering, hypocritical white elephant out the nearest door.'
That Toback was still able to draw attention and a starry range of interviewees – including Ryan Gosling, Martin Scorsese and Jessica Chastain, as well as the more predictable inclusions of Bertolucci and Polanski – was a testament to his being able to talk a good game, just as he had done to all the would-be stars he, appropriately enough, was said to have seduced and abandoned.
Those days are now well and truly over. It seems impossible that Toback will be able to pay the staggering amount that he has been ordered to pay, but his reputation has been ruined forever and his film-making career has ended in the process. It is salutary to return to a remark that his friend Warren Beatty made to the New York Times in 2000: 'Let me put it this way: Jimmy is not boring.'
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jonathan Joss, ‘King of the Hill' Voice Actor, Fatally Shot at 59
Jonathan Joss, ‘King of the Hill' Voice Actor, Fatally Shot at 59

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jonathan Joss, ‘King of the Hill' Voice Actor, Fatally Shot at 59

Jonathan Joss, best known as the voice actor behind King of the Hill's John Redcorn, died after being fatally shot at the age of 59, according to police. During a dispute, Joss was shot and killed by a neighbor on Sunday night in San Antonio, Texas, said authorities. According to The New York Times, the neighbor was identified by investigators as Sigfredo Ceja Alvarez, who was taken into custody and charged with murder. More from Rolling Stone Valerie Mahaffey, 'Northern Exposure' and 'Desperate Housewives' Actress, Dead at 71 Alf Clausen, Longtime 'The Simpsons' Composer, Dead at 84 James Lowe, Lead Singer of Psychedelic Band the Electric Prunes, Dead at 82 According to a statement shared on Joss' Facebook account by his husband, Tristan Kern de Gonzales, the couple had returned to the site of their former home, which had been damaged in a fire, to check on their mail. They were approached by a man who began yelling homophobic slurs and fired his gun, said de Gonzales. 'Jonathan and I had no weapons. We were not threatening anyone,' said de Gonzales. 'We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life.' Joss and de Gonzales married earlier this year on Valentine's Day. In a text message to The Associated Press, de Gonzales wrote, 'He was murdered.' Joss was found near the street by officers, and paramedics pronounced him dead when they arrived, according to The Times. The San Antonio Police Department did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone's request for comment. Joss was best known for his distinct voice playing Redcorn, a Native American character on King of the Hill, which ran for 13 seasons from 1997 to 2008. The series will return to the small screen 15 years after it ended its original run and Hulu will debut Season 14 of King of the Hill in August. It's unclear if Joss will be featured in the revival. A rep for Mike Judge did not immediately return Rolling Stone's request for comment. Joss also featured in a recurring role on the popular television show Parks and Recreation as Chief Ken Hotate. He has also appeared in Tulsa King, Ray Donovan, True Grit, and The Magnificent Seven. Before his death, Joss posted a video on Instagram as he shared his excitement about the beloved series' return, saying that the 'reboot is up and moving' and invited fans to meet him at a comic shop in Austin, Texas, and take photos for free. When walking around the shop and discussing his character in the new series (his role in the next season has not yet been confirmed), Joss mused about the idea of 'expiration dates.' 'We have them, man, life and death. Sometimes we have a talent, a desire. Sometimes you get put on a shelf,' he said. 'If you're canned and you put on the shelf, expiration date is like forever. Be a can of whoop ass when you get on that shelf. Think about moving forward. Think about being a can with an amazing expiration date. So, even if they put you on the shelf, man, when you come out of that can, you're fresh.' Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Characters of All Time Denzel Washington's Movies Ranked, From Worst to Best 70 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century

Philo Is Quietly One of the Best Deals In Streaming (and Offers One of the Longest Free Trials)
Philo Is Quietly One of the Best Deals In Streaming (and Offers One of the Longest Free Trials)

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Philo Is Quietly One of the Best Deals In Streaming (and Offers One of the Longest Free Trials)

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. The streaming landscape is more confusing than ever, with dozens of services and some content that's still only available from traditional cable TV channels. But one streaming service that's worth checking out is Philo, which delivers both live and on-demand content at a very affordable price. More from Rolling Stone As Bogg Bags Are Selling-Out for the Summer, Amazon Has a Great Dupe for Half the Price From Gaming Monitors to Music Frame Speakers, Here Are the Best Deals We're Seeing from the Discover Samsung Sale The $500 Wes Anderson Criterion Box Set Is Cinephile Catnip At just $28 a month, Philo is less than any similar live TV streaming service, such as Sling ($46+ a month) or Fubo ($85+ a month). Even better: Philo offers a seven-day free trial, which is longer than Fubo's five-day trial, DirecTV's five-day trial, or Hulu + Live TV's three-day trial (Sling doesn't offer any free trial, as of writing). get free trial ➤ Pros: Free trial, very affordable, large channel lineup, stream on 3 devices simultaneously➤ Cons: Some big channels missing (such as locals) The best Philo deal right now: you can test out the service with a 7-day free trial before committing to a subscription. Use the free trial to watch live TV over the internet, from your computer, tablet, phone, or smart TV unit. There's no promo code required to claim this deal. Philo is a live TV streaming service similar to Hulu + Live TV and Sling. But while Sling only offers up to 46 channels, Philo gives you access to more than 70 TV channels, including AMC, Discovery, Food Network, Hallmark, Lifetime, MTV, Nickelodeon, and TV Land. You can also purchase add-on channels like Starz and Epix for even more shows and movies. We also love that AMC+ is bundled as part of Philo's offerings — no need to get a separate subscription anymore. Use Philo to watch shows like AMC's Interview With a Vampire, plus reality TV faves like RuPaul's Drag Race, The Challenge, the reboot of The Braxtons, and more. You'll be able to stream Philo on your smartphone, laptop, or TV and be able to cast onto your TV through a streaming device like the Fire TV Stick. Watch the channels live, like you would with a conventional cable package. There are also on-demand TV and movies available for streaming too and you've got unlimited DVR space to record all your favorite shows while you're busy at work, and watch them on-demand and on your own time. What we like: Philo lets you stream content on up to three devices at once, so you and your housemates, friends, or family members can share a subscription and watch three separate programs simultaneously (no need to hog the screen or remote). While you won't have access to regional channels or sports necessities like ESPN, Philo offers one of the widest on-demand libraries compared to its competitors, and it's one of the most affordable TV services out there. get philo 7-day free trial Philo offers discounts and other deals from time to time. Right now, the best Philo deal is a 7-day free trial that you can use to test out the streamer before committing to a subscription. If you choose to continue after the seven-day trial, you'll get a month of Philo for just $28 and access multiple channels and on-demand shows for a fraction of the price of other services. Or, you can cancel after your 7-day free trial is over without being charged. get philo 7-day free trial Another great Philo deal: their totally free package. If you just want to see how the service works without entering a credit card, you can sign up for a free subscription that carries channels like BBC News, We TV, Duck Dynasty, and more. Best of Rolling Stone The Best Audiophile Turntables for Your Home Audio System

Legendary Actress, 87, Stuns in Monochromatic Purple Look
Legendary Actress, 87, Stuns in Monochromatic Purple Look

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Legendary Actress, 87, Stuns in Monochromatic Purple Look

Legendary Actress, 87, Stuns in Monochromatic Purple Look originally appeared on Parade. Jane Fonda knows how to work it in front of the cameras. The iconic actress and activist, 87, got plenty of attention at the MOCA Gala at The Geffen Contemporary in Los Angeles on Saturday, May 31. There to deliver remarks honoring philanthropist Wendy Schmidt, Fonda looked stunning in a monochromatic purple look. The Oscar-winning actress and mastermind behind Jane Fonda's Workout wore a violet suit. Under the purple blazer, she wore a matching purple collared shirt. She paired that with metallic silver sandals and wore her gray hair in soft, thick waves as she worked the carpet next to Schmidt. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 Last month, Fonda opened up to The Hollywood Reporter about her incredible career trajectory and explained that she has no intention of slowing down anytime soon. But instead of taking on intense dance cardio these days, she prefers walking and strength training. 'It has to do with how you move, how you carry yourself, your posture,' she told THR. 'And you can't carry yourself well and have good posture if your back isn't strong. So staying strong and flexible — and I work a lot on balance — this is all critical for staying young. I'm 87, and I'll tell you what, I was a lot older at 20 than I am at 87, and it has to do with what's going on in your head. So in some ways, I'm younger today. But it also just makes a huge difference as a performer; walking down a red carpet, for example, you can do it with confidence, because you don't worry about falling down. It just makes all the difference in the world, and I feel very grateful that I'm able to continue doing it.'Legendary Actress, 87, Stuns in Monochromatic Purple Look first appeared on Parade on Jun 2, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store