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Eddie Redmayne says 'vitriol' aimed at J.K. Rowling's transgender comments is 'disgusting'

Photo by: KGC-161/STAR MAX/IPx 11/15/16 Eddie Redmayne and J.K Rowling at the European premiere of "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them". (London, England)
Eddie Redmayne and J.K Rowling (Credit: KGC-161/STAR MAX/IPx)

Eddie Redmayne has said that the targetting of J.K. Rowling over her comments on transgender issues has 'absolutely disgusting'.

Redmanye, who plays stars in the Rowling-penned Fantastic Beasts movies, said that he does not agree with her stance, but was alarmed at the 'vitriol' that has been directed towards her, and addressed it in a ‘personal note’ to the author.

He added that the insults hurled at trans people on social media are 'equally disgusting'.

Read more: Rupert Grint responds to Rowling comments

Speaking to the Daily Mail, Redmayne said that he has 'trans friends and colleagues' who are 'having their human rights challenged around the world and facing discrimination on a daily basis'.

Watch: J.K. Rowling is under fire for plot of her new novel: 'transvestite serial killer'

He went on: “Similarly, there continues to be a hideous torrent of abuse towards trans people online and out in the world that is devastating.”

Famously, Redmayne starred in The Danish Girl in 2015, a biopic of the pioneering transgender artist Lili Elbe.

Rowling was targeted on social media earlier this year, after taking issue with an online article which described 'people who menstruate'.

Redmayne in The Danish Girl (Credit: Universal/Working Title)
Redmayne in The Danish Girl (Credit: Universal/Working Title)

The Harry Potter writer noted that the word 'women' appeared to be missing, but objections were then raised over the fact that those transitioning can still menstruate.

Following the backlash, she penned a long essay defending her right to discuss issues of gender and sexuality as a survivor of sexual assault and abuse.

However, the controversy resurfaced, after it emerged that her new novel, one of her Cormoran Strike series, written under her Robert Galbraith pseudonym, contained reference to a male character who murders while dressed as a woman.

FILE - In a Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2019 file photo, author and Lumos Foundation founder J.K. Rowling attends the HBO Documentary Films premiere of "Finding the Way Home" at 30 Hudson Yards, in New York. “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling has fallen under scrutiny after her series of tweets Saturday, June 6, 2020 were deemed as trans phobic.(Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)
In a Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2019 file photo, author and Lumos Foundation founder J.K. Rowling attends the HBO Documentary Films premiere of "Finding the Way Home" at 30 Hudson Yards, in New York. (Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

Read more: Emma Watson speaks out in support of transgender community

Over the weekend, a large group of actors and writers, including the likes of Ian McEwan, Lionel Shriver, Griff Rhys Jones and Frances Barber, signed an open letter in support of Rowling published in The Sunday Times.

It objected to the 'hate speech' directed at Rowling 'in the hope that, if more people stand up against the targeting of women online, we might at least make it less acceptable to engage in it or profit from it'.

“I'm profoundly grateful to all the signatories, not only on a personal level, (though believe me, I'm EXTREMELY grateful on that level), but because the signatories are showing solidarity with all the women who're currently speaking up for their own rights and facing threats of violence and even death in return,” Rowling said in her response on Twitter.

Watch: Are people boycotting Harry Potter books after J.K Rowling's controversial comments?