1978
Vanessa #Redgrave wins the Oscar for the movie "Julia"
She bravely called out #zionists
She was articulate. Her words should echo everywhere 👏

See the clip here ....

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DV80OehjqZQ/?igsh=MTc1MW90bW8xeWxsaw==

#cdnpoli #uspoli #NetanyahuWarCriminal
#TrumpWarCriminal

MEANS TV on Instagram: "In 1978, Vanessa Redgrave won the Oscar for best supporting actress. Redgrave had played the title role in “Julia,” about an anti-Nazi operative during World War II and her friendship with the writer Lillian Hellman (Jane Fonda). While she was shooting the movie in Paris, Redgrave lived with a couple of Palestinian students who inspired her to produce and narrate a documentary called “The Palestinian.” On tour to promote “Julia,” Redgrave screened the documentary for potential distributors, and the Jewish Defense League objected, threatening to boycott 20th Century Fox, the studio behind “Julia,” unless it denounced Redgrave and promised never to hire her again. After Redgrave earned one of the film’s 11 Oscar nominations in 1978 the academy president, Howard W. Koch, “urged me not to say anything except ‘Thank you’ if I won,” she wrote in her 1991 autobiography. “I told Howard I must reserve the right to say whatever I thought was right and necessary.” As Redgrave arrived at the Oscars, Jewish Defense League members torched her likeness and counterprotesters waved the Palestinian flag. Overseeing it all were police sharpshooters on the roof. Two months later, a Los Angeles theater scheduled to show “The Palestinian” was bombed. A member of the Jewish Defense League was convicted in the case. Watch “The Palestinian” now on Means TV."

21K likes, 524 comments - means_tv on March 16, 2026: "In 1978, Vanessa Redgrave won the Oscar for best supporting actress. Redgrave had played the title role in “Julia,” about an anti-Nazi operative during World War II and her friendship with the writer Lillian Hellman (Jane Fonda). While she was shooting the movie in Paris, Redgrave lived with a couple of Palestinian students who inspired her to produce and narrate a documentary called “The Palestinian.” On tour to promote “Julia,” Redgrave screened the documentary for potential distributors, and the Jewish Defense League objected, threatening to boycott 20th Century Fox, the studio behind “Julia,” unless it denounced Redgrave and promised never to hire her again. After Redgrave earned one of the film’s 11 Oscar nominations in 1978 the academy president, Howard W. Koch, “urged me not to say anything except ‘Thank you’ if I won,” she wrote in her 1991 autobiography. “I told Howard I must reserve the right to say whatever I thought was right and necessary.” As Redgrave arrived at the Oscars, Jewish Defense League members torched her likeness and counterprotesters waved the Palestinian flag. Overseeing it all were police sharpshooters on the roof. Two months later, a Los Angeles theater scheduled to show “The Palestinian” was bombed. A member of the Jewish Defense League was convicted in the case. Watch “The Palestinian” now on Means TV.".

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