Rebel Wilson, the Australian actress and comedian, has claimed that a member of the Royal family invited her to a medieval themed drug-fuelled orgy at the house of an American tech billionaire in her new memoir, Rebel Rising.
Rebel stops short of naming the royal in question, but states they were far removed from the line of succession and that the incident occurred in 2014.
The actress, 44, said that she dressed in ‘a buxom damsel outfit complete with cone hat’ and watched the ‘British royal flounder around whilst [she] continuously hiked up [her] boobs.’
She writes: ‘I got thrown a last-minute invite to a tech billionaire’s party – the guy who invited me, who’s like fifteenth or twentieth in line to the British throne, had said to my male friend, “We need more girls”.
‘The party was insane. Men were jousting on horses in a field, girls dressed as mermaids were in the pool …
Rebel Wilson, the Australian actress and comedian, has claimed that a member of the Royal family invited her to a medieval themed drug-fuelled orgy
The actress, 44, has made the claims in her controversial new memoir
Rebel stops short of naming the royal in question, but states they were far removed from the line of succession and that the incident occurred in 2014. Rebel Wilson is pictured at the Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb film premiere in NYC in December 2014
‘The property was massive, and because it was quite a drive, people had been assigned rooms to sleep there overnight.
‘{..] There’s a huge private fireworks display and then all of a sudden it’s 2am and a guy comes out with a large tray piled with what looks like a ton of candy.
‘I’m like, “Ooooh, is that candy?” and the guy holding the tray says, “No, this is the molly [MDMA],” and I turned to the screenwriter I’ve been talking with, confused.
‘He says, “Oh, it’s for the orgy … the orgies normally start at these things about this time”.’
She continued: ‘Now the comment by the Windsor about needing more girls started to make a lot more sense. They weren’t talking about a boy-girl ratio like it was a year-eight disco. They were talking about an ORGY!
‘Needless to say, I hike up my damsel dress and run out of there as fast as I can.’
The memoir is set to be released in the UK on April 25 and has already created a wave of controversy in the US.
The Australian actress originally claimed she was facing potential legal action after dedicating an entire chapter to a difficult working experience with an unnamed former co-star – branded an ‘a**hole’ by Wilson.
Sacha Baron Cohen broke his silence in March after Rebel Wilson claimed he is the ‘a**hole’ she refers to in her explosive new memoir
Rebel has named the British actor and comedian Sacha as the celebrity responsible for making threats over her no-holds-barred memoir, Rebel Rising
The post came two days after the Pitch Perfect star alleged that a celebrity she had worked with was threatening her over the release of the memoir
Rebel Wilson is pictured in New York City in December 2014
She has since confirmed the actor in question is Sacha Baron Cohen, 52 – best known for his comedy creations Ali G and Borat – with whom she starred in 2016 action-comedy Grimsby.
Taking to Instagram on Sunday, she wrote: ‘I will not be silenced by high priced lawyers or PR crisis managers. The a****** I am talking about in ONE CHAPTER of my book is: Sacha Baron Cohen.’
The post came just two days after the Pitch Perfect star alleged that a celebrity she once worked with was threatening her over the release of the memoir.
‘I wrote about an a**hole in my book,’ she told Instagram followers. ‘Now, said a****** is trying to threaten me. He’s hired a crisis PR manager and lawyers.
‘He is trying to stop press coming out about my book. But the book WILL come out and you will all know the truth.’
Following this, Sacha’s rep shared a statement with TMZ, writing: ‘While we appreciate the importance of speaking out, these demonstrably false claims are directly contradicted by extensive detailed evidence.
‘Including contemporaneous documents, film footage, and eyewitness accounts from those present before, during and after the production of The Brothers Grimsby.’
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