Woody Allen's Ex Teen Lover Speaks Out
by EG
Woody Allen's Manhattan, a story about a middle-aged man's affair with a teenager, looks even more creepy when you consider that it may have been inspired by a true story. A woman who says she was the inspiration for the film is giving details about the relationship she had with the 41-year-old Allen when she was only 16. Read on for details.
Sixteen, emerald-eyed, blond, an aspiring model with a confident streak and a painful past: Babi Christina Engelhardt had just caught Woody Allen's gaze at legendary New York City power restaurant Elaine's. It was October 1976, and when Engelhardt returned from the ladies' room, she dropped a note on his table with her phone number. It brazenly read: "Since you've signed enough autographs, here's mine!"
“It wasn’t until after it was done when I really had time to think of how twisted it was when we were together,” Babi Christina Engelhardt said of her relationship with Woody Allen. https://t.co/GlxL4tfoIv
— HuffPost Ent (@HuffPostEnt) December 18, 2018
Soon, Allen rang, inviting her to his Fifth Avenue penthouse. The already-famous 41-year-old director, still hot off Sleeper and who'd release Annie Hall the following spring, never asked her age. But she told him she was still in high school, living with her family in rural New Jersey as she pursued her modeling ambitions in Manhattan. Within weeks, they'd become physically intimate at his place. She wouldn't turn 17, legal in New York, until that December.
In a new report, Babi Christina Engelhardt says she was in an eight-year affair with then-41–year-old Woody Allen in 1976. She was 16.
— Washington Post Opinions (@PostOpinions) December 18, 2018
"I read decades of Woody Allen’s private notes," Richard Morgan wrote in January. "He’s obsessed with teenage girls." https://t.co/Pr7KII2SBF
The pair embarked on, by her account, a clandestine romance of eight years, the claustrophobic, controlling and yet dreamy dimensions of which she's still processing more than four decades later. For her, the recent re-examination of gender power dynamics initiated by the #MeToo movement (and Allen's personal scandals, including a claim of sexual abuse by his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow) has turned what had been a melancholic if still sweet memory into something much more uncomfortable. Like others among her generation — she just turned 59 on Dec. 4 — Engelhardt is resistant to attempts to have the life she led then be judged by what she considers today's newly established norms. "It's almost as if I'm now expected to trash him," she says.
Time, though, has transfigured what she's long viewed as a secret, unspoken monument to their then-still-ongoing relationship: 1979's Manhattan, in which 17-year-old Tracy (Oscar-nominated Mariel Hemingway) enthusiastically beds Allen's 42-year-old character Isaac "Ike" Davis. The film has always "reminded me why I thought he was so interesting — his wit is magnetic," Engelhardt says. "It was why I liked him and why I'm still impressed with him as an artist. How he played with characters in his movies, and how he played with me."
Get the rest of the story at The Hollywood Reporter.
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