Daryl Hannah delivers a forceful rebuttal to Ryan Murphy’s FX series “Love Story,” warning that dramatized falsehoods about real people become permanent digital truths.
When Ryan Murphy‘s anthology series Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette premiered on FX, it sparked immediate controversy. Now, Daryl Hannah, the actress whose real-life romance with JFK Jr. is depicted in the show, is breaking her silence with a scathing guest essay in The New York Times. Her message is clear: the series’ fictionalized portrayal isn’t just artistic license—it’s a dangerous distortion that lives forever online.
In her essay, Hannah systematically dismantles the show’s characterization. She denies:
- Ever using cocaine in her life.
- Hosting cocaine-fueled parties.
- Pressuring anyone into marriage.
- Desecrating any family heirloom.
- Intruding upon anyone’s private memorial.
- Planting any story in the press.
- Comparing Jacqueline Onassis’ death to a dog’s.
“These are not creative embellishments of personality,” she writes. “They are assertions about conduct—and they are false.”
Hannah reveals that since the series aired, she has received hostile and threatening messages from viewers who believe the portrayal is factual. She warns that in the digital era, entertainment often becomes collective memory, and “a dramatized portrayal can become, for millions of viewers, the definitive version of a real person’s life.” She adds: “In the digital age, stories do not disappear, yesterday’s news isn’t tossed out with the morning paper, and lies live online forever.”
Producer Nina Jacobson, in an interview with Gold Derby, admitted the show did not consult with real people depicted, relying instead on Elizabeth Beller’s biography Once Upon a Time: The Captivating Life of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy. Jacobson said the crew “tried to be very mindful” but acknowledged that Hannah occupies “a space where she’s an adversary” to the John and Carolyn love story. “Given how much we’re rooting for John and Carolyn, Daryl Hannah occupies a space where she’s an adversary to what you want narratively in the story,” Jacobson explained.
The criticism extends beyond Hannah. Jack Schlossberg, JFK Jr.’s nephew, slammed the series as a “grotesque display of someone else’s life,” urging fans to watch with “one letter in mind, and that’s a capital F for fiction.” He also suggested Murphy donate profits to the JFK library: “Maybe he would donate some of that money to the JFK library to help keep President Kennedy’s memory alive, but he’s not. He’s making money. This is not a documentary.”
Despite the backlash, the series has been a streaming juggernaut. According to Variety, Love Story has become FX’s most-watched limited series ever on Disney+ and Hulu, with over 25 million hours viewed across the first five episodes.
This clash reveals a fundamental tension: when does dramatization cross into harmful misinformation? The show’s massive viewership proves the appetite for such narratives, but also amplifies the stakes for those living them. Hannah’s outcry underscores that for real people, false portrayals aren’t just storytelling—they’re threats to reputation and safety in an age where digital content never dies.
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