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Fresh Intelligence
06092005

For Brangelina, Talk Ain't Cheap

BRAD'S MONEY PITT

Journalists the world over were outraged over reports that Mr. and Mrs. Smith co-stars Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie have been brandishing contracts threatening legal action against interviewers who ask them about their personal lives. But sources say the contracts may have more to do with protecting Pitt during his impending divorce from Jennifer Aniston than a newfound desire for privacy. If either leaks word that a liaison took place prior to Pitt's formal separation from Aniston, the chisel-cheeked actor may be at risk of losing not only his innocent mystique but a nice chunk of the couple’s estimated $190 million fortune.

Their joint assets include a production company, Plan B Entertainment (which is releasing Charlie and The Chocolate Factory next month), several homes, and Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton’s old yacht, worth an estimated $5.7 million. Aniston, who ranked 17th last year on the Forbes Celebrity 100 list—19 slots above her soon-to-be ex—banked $26 million last year and took home $1.25 million an episode in her last season of Friends (there were 233 episodes in the sitcom’s 10-year run.) Under California statutes, everything the couple acquired during their marriage would be divided in family court and any evidence of an affair could be used against Pitt. “There’s no question that this information could be entered into a divorce trial as evidence,” says famed New York divorce attorney Raoul Felder. “It’s obvious they want to control whatever exposure they get, but I don’t understand how any journalist would agree to be party to this. In fact, any journalist who signs this agreement is in my mind a member of the oldest profession.”

Earlier: Pitt and Jolie Shoot a Load in W

Photo: PMC

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Spy vs. Spy

SPY VS. SPYJessica Hendra was inspired to lay bare the child abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of Father Joe author and former Spy Editor in Chief Tony Hendra by an unlikely ally—an old colleague of her father’s. As Jessica writes in her upcoming memoir, How to Cook Your Daughter (the title of which is a takeoff on a satire Hendra penned for National Lampoon), it was Rudy Maxa, Hendra’s Washington Bureau Chief at the magazine and current NPR contributor, who encouraged her to speak out about her dad’s 2004 bestseller.

After reading a rapturous review of Father Joe by Andrew Sullivan in the New York Times Book Review (“it belongs in the first tier of spiritual memoirs ever written”), Maxa, who was best man at Jessica’s wedding, immediately called her and said, “If you have something to say about the book, let me know. I can get you to the right people.” Jessica, now 40, says she read Father Joe and was infuriated by the way her dad portrayed his supposed path to redemption—while glossing over the fact that he had repeatedly sexually abused her as a child. With Maxa’s guidance, Jessica contacted the Times and cooperated with a July 2004 article published on the cover of the Arts section that outlined and supported her claims. Tony Hendra vehemently denied the allegations and quickly fled to the south of France for an extended vacation. But if the buzz in New York publishing circles is to be believed, perhaps he should consider a return trip—the memoir, due out in October, is said to be devastating. Asked if he had any regrets about helping to expose his former boss, Maxa said simply, “A friend needed help and it was the right thing to do.”

Photo: Regan Books

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Editor:
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Staff Writer:
Andrew M. Goldstein

Contributing Writers:
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