"Surprised to hear that Donald Trump is apparently claiming that my late sister Diana wanted to 'kiss his arse,' since the one time she mentioned him to me-when he was using her good name to sell some real estate in New York-she clearly viewed him as worse than an anal fissure," Spencer wrote on Twitter Wednesday. "Feels like the adult equivalent of when a toddler proudly presents you with what they've done on the potty."ĭiana's brother, Charles Spencer, has also come forward after Trump claimed in an interview with Breitbart that the late royal, alongside her ex-mother-in-law Queen Elizabeth II, used to "kiss my a**." "Nothing says deeply-insecure-has-been quite like publishing private correspondence with the hope that people will believe you once garnered respect," Merrill said. Trump." The former president mistakenly claimed over Truth Social several days later, however, that Leno "did when you sent it!"Ĭlinton's spokesperson, Nick Merrill, also told Newsweek that "of course he didn't" ask permission from Clinton before putting her letters in the book. Australian-born Allen was Judy Garland’s protégé in the mid-1960s. Her first marriage was to entertainer Peter Allen on March 3, 1967. "Lord Justice Hardwick announced a distinction between the 'property of the paper' which belonged to the recipient of the letters, and the property in the words, which remained with the writer."Ī representative for former Tonight Show host Leno previously told Newsweek that "Jay did not release, nor authorize any use of any letter to Mr. Minnelli has married and divorced four times. Ginsburg, professor of literacy and artistic property law at Columbia University School of Law in New York, previously told Newsweek that the principle has been "well-established in copyright law" for hundreds of years, "Going back to a famous case from 1741, in which poet Alexander Pope sued Edmond Curll for publishing Pope's letters." However, previous copyright law rulings find that the writers of letters, not the letters' recipients, retain the rights to the text. The company behind Trump's book, Winning Team Publishing, has claimed that there is "actual or implied" permission from the private citizens who sent the letters to be included in the book. John Lamparski/WireImage Brandon Bell/Getty Minnelli's representative on Friday told Newsweek that the entertainer was not aware of Trump's forthcoming book and has not granted permission to be featured in it. Former President Donald Trump, right, is shown at the Hilton Anatole on August 6, 2022, in Dallas, Texas. Hollywood legend Liza Minnelli, left, is pictured at the Ziegfeld Theatre on January 31, 2013, in New York City.
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