Page 24 Daily Mail, Tuesday, March 3, 2020
life
T
HE restaurant Bedford 234
p r i d e s i t s e l f o n i t s
‘comfortable yet engaging
atmosphere’, avocado fries
a n d s t r o z z a p r e t i w i t h
pecorino and winter black truffle.
But the presence last summer of one
particular regular customer provoked out-
rage among the moneyed clientele of this
upstate New York dining spot.
Harvey Weinstein — convicted last week of
sexual assault and rape in the third degree
by a Manhattan court — was that customer.
He would often arrange to meet ex-wife
Georgina Chapman plus their children
Dashiell, six and India, nine, there.
The eaterie is near to the large farm in
Bedford — a town populated by stars such as
Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones and
Ryan Reynolds — which Georgina bought
last year, after reportedly receiving nearly
£ 15 million in a divorce settlement in 2018.
Weinstein was renting a house nearby.
Manager Kyle O’Connor said: ‘What he
would do is he had people come in first — his
family, ex-wife, they would come in, sit down,
order food, and he’d join a half-hour later. He
might have tipped all right, but [customers]
around him were disappearing. He made
everyone uncomfortable.’ He was asked not
to return.
Now, following a landmark three-week trial,
Weinstein is awaiting a sentencing hearing.
His disgrace is on an epic scale. More than
80 women have said he abused them.
So what must it be like to be the ex-wife of
Hollywood’s most hated predator — and the
mother of his two youngest children?
Friends say that Georgina, 43, ‘does not
want to be seen as a victim’. That right she
reserves for others. In the first five months
after he was exposed, she scarcely dared to
leave her apartment — she feared that having
any kind of public profile might seem
disrespectful to his victims.
She has undergone therapy to try to cope
with her sense of shock and shame. ‘I was so
humiliated and broken that I didn’t think it
was respectful to go out,’ she said.
She has also had to fight hard to remain in
business — she is the co-founder of designer
fashion label Marchesa — as her association
with Weinstein, to whom she was married
from 2007, has threatened to derail her career.
And not only has she remained in business,
she produces four collections a year and has
branched out into childrenswear.
Some thought that she might lend her
support at his trial, but she chose to stay
away. His lawyers tried to paint a picture of
her as a part of his family, with attorney
Donna Rotunno saying: ‘They are divorced
but they work well together with the kids.’
She added that the children ‘rely’ on their
father ‘on a daily basis’, noting: ‘He’s been
seeing the younger kids their whole lives. They
live next door to each other, he has a great
Divorced:
Georgina
with ex-
husband
Harvey
Weinstein
in 2016
by Alison
Boshof f
relationship with [them].’ But
Georgina’s friends say things
are by no means ‘cosy’ between
them. ‘It’s a little damper than
has been indicated,’ says one.
He did not, for one thing, live
‘next door’.
G
EORGINA has not
been among those
visiting Weinstein
a t t h e s u i t e i n
Bellevue Hospital following
his conviction. In fact, she left
the country with her children
before the trial.
The Mail has also learned
that she is ready to officially
confirm a romance with the
American actor Adrien Brody,
whom she has been dating for
s e v e r a l m o n t h s. H e a n d
Georgina are ‘very happy’, and
I’m told the new romance is a
‘positive’ element in the new
life she has been building.
Adrien, 46, an Oscar winner
himself, seems to be every-
thing Weinstein was not —
c h a r m i n g , d i s c r e e t a n d
self-deprecating.
Romance blossomed after
they met at the launch of
H e l e n a C h r i s -
tensen’s swimwear
range last April.
They were spotted
h a v i n g d i n n e r
together in New
York in autumn.
It was said she
wasn’t interested in
dating post-Harvey,
but she has found that
Adrien has been a
source of support.
With a new man in her
l i f e — a n d a
determination to not be
b r o u g h t d o w n b y t h e
sins of her ex-husband —
Georgina is embracing a
new beginning.
The British model and
former actress, who attended
Kate Middleton’s alma mater
Marlborough College, was
born into money.
Her father Brian Chapman is
a m u l t i - m i l l i o n a i r e w h o
founded the Percol coffee
brand. He has houses in
Wimbledon and on the Isle of
Wight. Her mother, Caroline
Wonfor, worked for Reader’s
Digest. They are divorced, and
Caroline lives in Richmond.
Georgina boarded
at St David’s in
A s h f o r d , S u r r e y.
She has dyslexia, but
this was not diagnosed until
s h e w a s e i g h t. S h e a l s o
suffered from a hip defect
which gave her pigeon toes.
‘I was incredibly clumsy, and
it set me back at school
socially,’ she said. ‘I was always
that kid who was the last to be
picked for any sport as I
couldn’t do it.’ She left school
to model aged 17, then decided
to go into acting. She had roles
in the 2003 TV adaptation of
D. H. Lawrence’s Sons And
Lovers, and in Julian Fellowes’s
fi l m a d a p t a t i o n o f P. G.
Wodehouse’s Piccadilly Jim.
She met Weinstein at a party
in 2004, and had a tiny role in
2006’s Factory Girl, produced
by Miramax, the company he
co-founded. Weinstein split
POSTMASTERS who claim they were
w r o n g l y j a i l e d f o r t h e f t a r e t o
s p e a r h e a d B r i t a i n’ s l a r g e s t e v e r
miscarriage of justice case.
Their lives were ruined when money appar-
ently went missing from their branches. But
it later emerged that the Post Office’s coun-
ter-top terminals were riddled with bugs.
The Post Office eventually settled a long-running
High Court case brought by 550 former postmas-
ters who were wrongly accused, agreeing to pay
them £58million last year.
And yesterday the Criminal Cases Review Com-
mission, which examines possible miscarriages of
justice, revealed that it is considering pleas from
56 of them to have their convictions quashed.
In a letter to claimants, it says it will decide this
month whether to refer the cases to the Appeal
Court. If it referred them all, it would be the big-
gest miscarriage of justice case in the commis-
sion’s history.
Jo Hamilton was convicted after her terminal in
South Warnborough, Hampshire, recorded inex-
plicable losses of £36,000. She said: ‘This is the
first time in five years I have felt optimistic about
my conviction being overturned.
‘The mood changed in their letter and when I
hear that there will be a meeting of commissioners
in March I am very optimistic. Justice is coming.
Now post
staf f f ight
to have
thef t slurs
quashed
By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter
Giant of UK Asian
media dies at 88
RaMniklal Solanki CBE, who founded the
biggest asian media company in Britain, has died
after a short illness at the age of 88.
Mr Solanki came to England in 1964 and four
years later launched weekly newspaper Garavi
Gujarat from a small terraced house in Wem-
bley, north-west london. it became the biggest
selling Gujarati paper outside india.
His asian Media Group went on to create a
range of titles and events, including the GG2
leadership awards, where the Daily Mail spon-
sors the young journalist category.
Home Secretary Priti Patel was one of many to
pay tribute to the ‘giant of Gujarati journalism’.
‘I like to think justice
will now be swift’
Hopefully, unlike some, I’ll still be alive to see the
day I get my conviction overturned.’
Tracy Felstead was thrown into jail as a teenager,
her supposed crime was to ‘steal’ £11,500 from the
post office where she worked in her first job after
leaving school. Yesterday the 36-year-old mother-
of-three said: ‘I have had to endure this my entire
adult life since aged 19. I’d like to think justice will
now be swift.’
The Post Office settled the High Court case after
being lambasted by the judge in a series of exco-
riating ruling. It had spent years battling its
postal veterans and fiercely denying any problem
with its IT system.
The publicly-owned service blew an estimated
£32million on legal costs fighting the mammoth
series of interlinked High Court trials.
Mr Justice Fraser mocked as wishful thinking its
description of itself as ‘the nation’s most trusted
brand’. And he said the Post Office’s long-running
refusal to accept its computer system was faulty
‘amounts to the 21st century equivalent of main-
taining that the Earth is flat’.
The Post Office said: ‘We are assisting the CCRC
to the fullest extent with inquiries concerning past
convictions of a number of former postmasters.’