
Sally Field
Sally Margaret Field is an American actress. She has performed in movies, Broadway theater, and television, and made records of popular music.
Why Sally Field Appears in the Documents
Sally Field is mentioned in 10 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 10 emails, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These documents include titles such as "Email thread about rights to Woody Allen footage for Harvard Modernism course", "Email chain about taping celebrities and rights for Woody Allen footage", "Discussion about rights to Woody Allen footage for academic course and TV" among others. Sally Field's name appears across these documents in various contexts. The document corpus contains a wide range of materials including media coverage, government records, and legal proceedings where many public figures are mentioned.
Disclaimer: Appearing in the Epstein document corpus does not imply wrongdoing, guilt, or any form of association with criminal activity. Many public figures are mentioned incidentally in these documents due to the broad scope of the released materials.
Documents (10)
Email thread about rights to Woody Allen footage for Harvard Modernism course
Harvard professor Elisa New explains in an email thread about an ambitious Modernism course project that she has been taping a who’s-who of figures—from politicians like Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, John McCain and Jerry Brown to diplomats, judges, journalists, artists, and scientists—for possible use in an online course and potentially a TV episode on poetry, art, sport, and play; Woody Allen’s lawyers have refused permission to use the footage online or for broadcast, leaving the future of the project contingent on permission and timing as the course is developed chronologically.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email thread about rights to Woody Allen footage for Harvard Modernism course
Harvard professor Elisa New explains in an email thread about an ambitious Modernism course project that she has been taping a who’s-who of figures—from politicians like Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, John McCain and Jerry Brown to diplomats, judges, journalists, artists, and scientists—for possible use in an online course and potentially a TV episode on poetry, art, sport, and play; Woody Allen’s lawyers have refused permission to use the footage online or for broadcast, leaving the future of the project contingent on permission and timing as the course is developed chronologically.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email chain about taping celebrities and rights for Woody Allen footage
An internal email thread between Harvard professor Elisa New and collaborator Jeffrey E. outlining their efforts to assemble a rights-cleared archive of interviews for a Modernism course (and a potential TV piece), detailing who has already taped or agreed to tape high-profile figures from politics, journalism, the arts, and science, and describing the major obstacle of Woody Allen’s lawyers denying use of that footage, along with ongoing rights negotiations and confidentiality notices.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email chain about taping celebrities and rights for Woody Allen footage
An internal email thread between Harvard professor Elisa New and collaborator Jeffrey E. outlining their efforts to assemble a rights-cleared archive of interviews for a Modernism course (and a potential TV piece), detailing who has already taped or agreed to tape high-profile figures from politics, journalism, the arts, and science, and describing the major obstacle of Woody Allen’s lawyers denying use of that footage, along with ongoing rights negotiations and confidentiality notices.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Discussion about rights to Woody Allen footage for academic course and TV
These emails reveal a high-stakes effort to secure rights to Woody Allen’s footage for an online course and a potential TV episode on Modernism, with Allen’s lawyers blocking any use of the interview, while Harvard professor Elisa New inventories other high-profile collaborators who have taped or agreed to tape and asks Jeffrey E. to assess the chances and broaden the pool to include political and journalistic figures.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email discussing rights to Woody Allen footage and potential TV episode
Harvard literature professor Elisa New asks colleague Jeffrey Epstein for advice on securing permission to use Woody Allen’s filmed interview in an online course on Modernism—the Poetry of Art, Sport, and Play—and possibly a TV episode, explaining Allen’s lawyers have blocked any use and noting that she has already taped or secured commitments from numerous high-profile artists, while seeking his assessment of their chances to obtain the release.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email chain about taping celebrities and using footage for an arts course; Woody Allen footage rights
This email thread reveals a Harvard-based project to assemble archival interviews for an online course on Modernism and the Arts (and a possible TV episode), detailing a growing roster of high-profile taped figures—ranging from politicians like Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and Joe Biden to journalists and artists—along with plans to expand and repurpose the material; however, it also notes a legal hurdle: Woody Allen’s team will not permit using the footage, prompting discussion of how to proceed, including generating a targeted list of potential interviewees and seeking permission, with confidentiality notices embedded in the correspondence.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Discussion about rights to Woody Allen footage for academic course and TV
These emails reveal a high-stakes effort to secure rights to Woody Allen’s footage for an online course and a potential TV episode on Modernism, with Allen’s lawyers blocking any use of the interview, while Harvard professor Elisa New inventories other high-profile collaborators who have taped or agreed to tape and asks Jeffrey E. to assess the chances and broaden the pool to include political and journalistic figures.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email discussing rights to Woody Allen footage and potential TV episode
Harvard literature professor Elisa New asks colleague Jeffrey Epstein for advice on securing permission to use Woody Allen’s filmed interview in an online course on Modernism—the Poetry of Art, Sport, and Play—and possibly a TV episode, explaining Allen’s lawyers have blocked any use and noting that she has already taped or secured commitments from numerous high-profile artists, while seeking his assessment of their chances to obtain the release.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email chain about taping celebrities and using footage for an arts course; Woody Allen footage rights
This email thread reveals a Harvard-based project to assemble archival interviews for an online course on Modernism and the Arts (and a possible TV episode), detailing a growing roster of high-profile taped figures—ranging from politicians like Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and Joe Biden to journalists and artists—along with plans to expand and repurpose the material; however, it also notes a legal hurdle: Woody Allen’s team will not permit using the footage, prompting discussion of how to proceed, including generating a targeted list of potential interviewees and seeking permission, with confidentiality notices embedded in the correspondence.
Source: House Oversight Committee