“There are people right now who are ready to hire me the moment I am cleared of these charges in London,” Spacey said in a rare interview published this month in Germany’s Zeit magazine. He said the media had turned him into a “monster”.
The charges involving men now in their 30s or 40s date from 2001 to 2013 — covering most of the decade when he lived in Britain and served as artistic director of the Old Vic Theatre until 2015.
Jurors were to be selected on the first day of the trial and opening statements are scheduled Friday.
The actor, who is free on bail, arrived at London’s Southwark Crown Court about two hours before the trial was due to start.
Spacey’s downfall came amid the #MeToo movement in the United States when allegations led to him being written off the Netflix political thriller House of Cards, where he played lead character Frank Underwood, a ruthless and corrupt congressman who becomes president. He was cut from the completed film All the Money in the World, and the scenes reshot with Christopher Plummer.
Spacey became one of the most celebrated actors of his generation in the 1990s, starring in films including Glengarry Glen Ross and LA Confidential. He won his second Oscar, for best actor, in the 1999 movie American Beauty.
Spacey recently had his first film roles in several years, appearing in 2022 in Italian director Franco Nero’s The Man Who Drew God, and playing the late Croatian President Franjo Tudjman in biopic Once Upon a Time in Croatia. He also stars in the unreleased US film Peter Five Eight.
Italy’s National Cinema Museum in Turin gave him its lifetime achievement award in January. He also taught a masterclass and introduced a sold-out screening of American Beauty in what were billed as Spacey’s first speaking engagements in five years.
Spacey saluted organisers for “making a strong defence of artistic achievement” and for having “le palle” — the Italian word for male body parts synonymous with courage — to invite him.