Just weeks after James Woods said he was
blacklisted in Hollywood because of his conservative views, the
Oscar-nominated actor said he was retiring from the industry.
Woods tweeted this summer that he had
“accepted the fact that” he was blacklisted from Hollywood because of
his views. He has said being conservative has made it tough to find work
in Hollywood the past few years.
The “Casino” actor has twice been nominated for an
Academy Award and has won an Emmy Award three times. His movie credits
include “Salvador (1986)” and “Ghosts of Mississippi (1996),” both of
which earned him a nomination for an Oscar. He's also played H.R.
Haldeman in Oliver Stone's "Nixon (1995)," starred alongside Barbra
Streisand and Robert Redford in Sydney Pollack's "The Way We Were
(1973)" and was also in Martin Scorsese's epic crime drama "Casino
(1995)."He said on Twitter that he switched parties because of his disgust with the former president.
"Every single #Democrat without exception stood behind a convicted perjurer," he wrote on Twitter this summer. "That was the end."
His luck in Hollywood turned sour soon after he became a Republican. He has not had a major role in a film in at least a decade.
The news of his retirement was included in a press release issued by Woods' real estate agent offering Woods' Rhode Island lake house for sale.
Gammons said Woods' decision was not political.
The announcement comes after Woods was in a Twitter feud with actress Amber Tamblyn, who last month accused him of trying to pick her up when she was 16. Woods called it a lie. Gammons said Woods declined to comment Friday when asked about Tamblyn's accusation.
Woods has said there are many conservative stars who didn’t speak up because “the blacklist against conservatives in Hollywood is very real.”
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