Robin Wright: Netflix Refused to Pay Me the Same as Kevin Spacey for ‘House of Cards' Because I ‘Didn't Win an Academy Award'
Robin Wright is detailing how Netflix did her wrong as an actress for 'House of Cards.' Wright co-starred alongside Kevin Spacey in the hit 2013 series; she later took over as the lead star after Spacey was fired amid abuse allegations before Season 6. 'House of Cards' concluded in 2018.
Wright told Variety during the Monte-Carlo Television Festival that she had to fight to get paid the same as Spacey. 'Yes, it was difficult. I am going to be honest,' she said. 'When I said, 'I think it's only fair because my character became as popular as [Spacey's], they said, 'We can't pay you the same as an actor, so we will make you exec producer and you can direct. We will give you three different paychecks.' I asked, 'Why can't you pay me as an actor?' 'Because you didn't win an Academy Award.''
More from IndieWire
Four Starry Drama Emmy Contenders Reveal the Ongoing Power of Spy vs. Spy
Allison Williams Loves How a Particular 'Girls' Meme Took on New Life with the HBO Max Rebrand
Spacey won the Academy Award for 'The Usual Suspects' in 1995 and also 'American Beauty' in 2000.
Wright continued of her former co-star and the then-policy at Netflix, 'That has been the protocol for years — it just is. If you say, 'Why did so-and-so female not get the same amount as Will Smith?' They say, 'It will increase after you win.' Nomination, not so much. Why does it have to do anything with a raise?'
Wright previously told Marie Claire that she had to 'capitalize' on her character's fandom to negotiate a raise. 'I was like, 'I want to be paid the same as Kevin.' It was the perfect paradigm,' she said. 'There are very few films or TV shows where the male, the patriarch, and the matriarch are equal, and they are in 'House of Cards.' I was looking at the statistics and Claire Underwood's character was more popular than [Frank's] for a period of time. So I capitalized on it. I was like, 'You better pay me or I'm going to go public.' And they did.'
Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings admitted that he doubted Ted Sarandos' vision for 'House of Cards.' Hastings recalled to Variety that Sarandos told director David Fincher that Netflix would commit to spending $100 million on the series and greenlight it for two seasons before a pilot had even been shot. Fincher also would have full creative control of the show, with Netflix refraining from giving any notes.
Best of IndieWire
Guillermo del Toro's Favorite Movies: 56 Films the Director Wants You to See
'Song of the South': 14 Things to Know About Disney's Most Controversial Movie
Nicolas Winding Refn's Favorite Films: 37 Movies the Director Wants You to See
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
35 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Love "Summer I Turned Pretty"? Here's 7 Reading Recs
First and foremost, read the books that started it all Jenny Han's The Summer I Turned Pretty trilogy has all of the romance, drama, and summer vibes as the Amazon Prime series, except the book is always better. Whether you're sitting on your couch or hanging out by the ocean, you'll want to escape to Cousins Beach and get lost in Belly, Conrad, and Jeremiah's love triangle all over again. My Life With the Walter Boys and My Return to the Walter Boys by Ali Novak True story: I read My Life With the Walter Boys for the first time while sitting on the beach shortly after it was released. This book follows Jackie, who recently moved in with the Walter family following a family tragedy. The only catch? The Walters have a house full of boys, and Jackie is already torn between two of them. After the Netflix adaptation blew up, Ali Novak finally released the sequel...10 years after the first book debuted. Wrong Answers Only by Tobias Madden Living on a cruise ship, rent-free, and seeing the world with your best friend? There are few dreams I would rather escape to. Wrong Answers Only pairs this once-in-a-lifetime vacation with a rich, intriguing story of family and acceptance. After a panic attack, everybody in Marco's life encourages him to loosen up a they send him on a cruise ship captained by an estranged uncle he has never met, of course. The adventure that ensues involves everything from hooking up with a hot dancer to visiting the Italian sights of his grandmother's stories. Better Than the Movies and Nothing Like the Movies by Lynn Painter Anyone who wants to get swept away in a romance will love anything Lynn Painter writes. Better Than the Movies finds Liz hopelessly crushing on Michael, who recently moved back to town. So she schemes with Wes, the boy next door, to figure out how to win him over. But is Michael really who Liz wants in the long run? You'll devour this book in an afternoon unless you're careful, and then you'll have to immediately order the sequel. I'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson I'll Give You the Sun somehow feels timeless. It follows twins Noah and Jude as they navigate life both before and after their mom's death. Their stories contain love, heartbreak, struggling to belong, and a sibling bond that persists despite many small fractures. Set in a coastal California town, this book has all of the nostalgic summer vibes while telling an important story of finding your place in the world. Cool for the Summer by Dahlia Adler Cool for the Summer meets Lara at a crossroads: the boy she's loved from afar for years, or the girl who stole her heart last summer. This book follows Lara's journey as she discovers what it means to be bisexual, navigating a new relationship with Chase and memories of her summer spent with Jasmine. Those who adore the love triangle in The Summer I Turned Pretty will adore Lara's story just as much. Finally, various titles by K. L. Walther Swiftie fans of The Summer I Turned Pretty would love everything K. L. Walther writes. Her books are full of heart, charm, and Easter egg references to songs, not unlike the Taylor Swift song cameos in TSITP. The Summer of Broken Rules boasts the coastal setting and close family relationships that define summer, What Happens After Midnight tells the tale of an elaborate senior prank, and While We're Young details a senior skip day with more than a few similarities to Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Regardless of which book you choose, you will be met with a story you can't put down. Any books I missed? What are your favorite summer reads? Let me know in the comments!


USA Today
43 minutes ago
- USA Today
What time is Jake Paul vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.? Walkouts for boxing showdown
All that's left for Jake Paul and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. is the fighting. After months of trash talk, their cruiserweight boxing match scheduled for 10 rounds is taking place Saturday, June 28 at Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif. Paul (11-1) hasn't competed since last November when he scored a unanimous decision over Mike Tyson in a fight that turned out to be the most-streamed sporting event on Netflix, with an estimated 65 million viewers. Paul's lone defeat came in February 2023 against Tommy Fury, but since then the 28-year-old YouTuber-turned-boxer has rattled off five wins in a row against former UFC stars and boxers in the ring – Nate Diaz (unanimous decision), Andre August (KO), Ryan Bourland (TKO), Mike Perry (TKO), and Tyson. Chávez Jr. (54-6-1), the son of Mexican legend Julio Cesar Chavez, will enter on a two-fight winning streak after most recently defeating former UFC fighter Uriah Hall by unanimous decision last July. Chavez, 39, hasn't been a world champion since 2012 and is looking to prove what he has left. Paul and Chavez share a common opponent in former UFC champion Anderson Silva, with different results. In 2021, Silva shocked the boxing world when he won a split decision against Chavez Jr. after eight rounds. In 2022, Paul defeated Silva by unanimous decision in an eight-round fight. When does the Jake Paul vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. card start? The Paul vs. Chavez Jr. lineup consists of seven fights, with the undercard getting underway at 8 p.m. ET. Jake Paul vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. walkout time As the main event, Paul and Chavez Jr. are expected to make their walks to the ring at approximately 11 p.m. ET (8 p.m. locally in Anaheim). The fight streams on DAZN at a price of $59.99 in the U.S.


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘Squid Game' finale lays bare a reality: The wealthy win and nice guys finish last
Rich people suck. The message was loud and clear when Netflix's Korean thriller 'Squid Game' arrived in 2021. Imagining wealth and class disparity at the heart of a high-stakes competition, it featured cash-strapped contestants playing a series of children's games to the death while uber-wealthy spectators bet on their odds of survival. The show's masked elites watched the carnage from a luxe, concealed spectator box, chomping on cigars and chortling as player after player met a gruesome death. The Korean-language show became the streamer's most watched series ever. Comeuppance for the hideously affluent seemed imminent and likely at the hands of protagonist Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae). The winner of Season 1's 'Squid Game' deserved vengeance after surviving a series of horrific scenarios — a hopscotch-type match played on a fragile glass bridge above a deadly chasm, a red light-green light contest where players who moved at the wrong time were 'eliminated' by machine gun fire. He watched as good people were killed by pink guards, other contestants and their own stupid actions. But no. The last six 'Squid Game' episodes, now streaming on Netflix, did something entirely unsatisfying. They veered from the prospect of timely, eat-the-rich vengeance porn to unflattering commentary about the rest of us, the other 99% who aren't Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg or Jeff Bezos. What did we ever do to deserve a lethal game of double dutch with two giant mechanical children swinging a 10-ton metal rod in place of a jump rope? A lot, apparently. 'Squid Game' shows that under the right circumstances, regular folks are just as greedy and morally corrupt as the obscenely prosperous, no matter if their money problems stem from unforeseen medical bills, wanton gambling or generational poverty. Press the little guy or gal hard enough and they're just as ruthless as the mogul that's suppressing them. Season 3 picks up exactly where 2 left off. Gi-hun, who'd found his way back in the clandestine gaming complex (situated inside a mountain on a remote island), is Player 456 again among a new round of contestants. He'd planned to infiltrate the operation from inside, staging a coup against the VIPs and Front Man (Lee Byung-hun) who run the games. But now it's clear he's failed. He's cornered by guards, the players who fought alongside him are dead, and he's thrown back in with the remaining players, many of whom survived because they're the most craven of the group. Free and fair elections are at the heart of every democracy, or so 'Squid Game' reminds us each time the bedraggled players are asked for their vote regarding the next round: Continue to compete and thin the herd for a larger reward or stop and split their winnings with their fellow contestants? Majority rules, and each time the group opt to sacrifice their lives — and everyone else's — in pursuit of money. Series creator Hwang Dong-hyuk has spoken about his dwindling faith in humanity as it relates to his concerns about South Korea's democracy, and you'll hear him loud and clear in Season 3: Voting is power, but look what happens when the population increasingly puts its own self-interest above that of the greater good. It's a scenario that should be recognizable to Americans by now. 'Squid Game' Season 3 takes that idea to the extreme, and quite fearlessly, Hwang puts the series to bed without punishing the rich. Instead he dares to lay bare a truth that's become all too apparent of late: Wealth wins over morality and money trumps accountability. Nice guys not only finish last, they wind up pulverized like everyone else below a certain tax bracket, no matter their dedication toward humanity. The Korean show's run has ended, but not before a finale that alludes to a Hollywood sequel. The episode, set in Los Angeles, shows a familiar scene. A down-and-out man is approached by a mysterious, well-dressed figure who uses a simple kid's game to test his want of money against his tolerance for pain and humiliation. Those who've watched 'Squid Game' will recognize it as the beginning of Gi-hun's journey, which ended with a sliver of redemption in an abyss of darkness. The mysterious figure appears to be a recruiter for a new, English-language 'Squid Game.' She's played by an A-list celebrity — Cate Blanchett — operating in a city renowned for its self-involvement and privilege. 'Squid Game' has a whole new playing field.