*630*849Authors write books. Filmmakers make films. Playwrights craft plays. And television writers, directors, and producers create television *850shows and put them on the air-or, in these modern times, online. The First Amendment protects these expressive works and the free speech rights of their creators. Some of these works are fiction. Some are factual. And some are a combination of fact and fiction. That these creative works generate income for their creators does not diminish their constitutional protection. The First Amendment does not require authors, filmmakers, playwrights, and television producers to provide their creations to the public at no charge.
Books, films, plays, and television shows often portray real people. Some are famous and some are just ordinary folks. Whether a person portrayed in one of these expressive works is a world-renowned film star-"a living legend"-or a person no one knows, she or he does not own history. Nor does she or he have the legal right to control, dictate, approve, disapprove, or veto the creator's portrayal of actual people.
In this case, actress Olivia de Havilland sues FX Networks, LLC and Pacific 2.1 Entertainment Group, Inc. (collectively FX), the creators and producers of the television miniseries Feud : Bette and Joan . In the docudrama about film stars Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, an actress plays de Havilland, a close friend of Davis. De Havilland alleges causes of action for violation of the statutory right of publicity and the common law tort of misappropriation. De Havilland grounds her claims on her assertion-which FX does not dispute-that she "did not give [her] permission to the creators of 'Feud' to use [her] name, identity[,] or image in any manner." De Havilland also sues for false light invasion of privacy based on FX's portrayal in the docudrama of a fictitious interview and the de Havilland character's reference to her sister as a "bitch" when in fact the term she used was "dragon lady." De Havilland seeks to enjoin the distribution and broadcast of the television program and to recover money damages.
The trial court denied FX's special motion to strike the complaint. The court concluded that, because Feud tried to portray de Havilland as realistically as possible, the program was not "transformative" under Comedy III Productions
*851FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. Feud airs and de Havilland sues
In March 2017, FX began airing its eight-part docudrama, Feud: Bette and Joan . The docudrama portrays the rivalry between actresses Joan Crawford and Bette Davis. The central theme of the program is that powerful men in Hollywood pressured and manipulated women in the industry into very public feuds with one another to advance the economic interests of those men and the institutions they *631headed. A secondary theme-as timely now as it was in the 1960's-is the poor treatment by Hollywood of actresses as they age.
Academy-Award-winning actress Catherine Zeta-Jones portrays de Havilland in the docudrama. The de Havilland role is a limited one, consuming fewer than 17 minutes of the 392-minute, eight-episode miniseries. The role consists essentially of two parts: (1) a fictitious interview in which Zeta-Jones-often accompanied by Academy-Award-winning actress Kathy Bates playing actress Joan Blondell-talks to an interviewer (a young man named "Adam") about Hollywood, its treatment of women, and the Crawford/Davis rivalry; and (2) scenes in which Zeta-Jones interacts with Academy-Award-winning actress Susan Sarandon playing Bette Davis. These scenes portray the close friendship between Davis and de Havilland. As played by Zeta-Jones, the de Havilland character is portrayed as beautiful, glamorous, self-assured, and considerably ahead of her time in her views on the importance of equality and respect for women in Hollywood. Feud was nominated for 18 Emmy awards.
On June 30, 2017, de Havilland filed this lawsuit. Her Third Amended Complaint, filed in September 2017, alleges four causes of action: (1) the common law privacy tort of misappropriation; (2) violation of Civil Code section 3344, California's statutory right of publicity; (3) false light invasion of privacy; and (4) "unjust enrichment." De Havilland asks for damages for emotional distress and harm to her reputation; "past and future" "economic losses"; FX's "profits gained ... from and attributable to the unauthorized use of [her] name, photograph,
2. FX's special motion to strike
a. FX's motion, declarations, and exhibits
On August 29, 2017, FX filed a motion to strike the complaint under California's anti-SLAPP
FX also submitted a declaration from Stephanie Gibbons, its president of marketing and promotion. Gibbons stated FX had not used de Havilland's photograph in any advertising or promotion for the miniseries. Six of 44 video advertisements included pictures of Zeta-Jones; none of these used de Havilland's name. Gibbons explained that Zeta-Jones is a famous actress whom FX thought viewers would want to watch.
FX submitted the declaration of James Berkley, a research analyst for FX's law firm, together with 59 exhibits. These included books, newspaper and magazine articles, and videos of de Havilland appearing as a guest on talk shows. In a number of the articles and video clips, de Havilland granted interviews and made statements about other actors, including her sister Joan Fontaine. In a July 2016 Associated Press interview-on the occasion of her one hundredth birthday-de Havilland said this about her sister: "Dragon Lady, as I eventually decided to call her, was a brilliant, multi-talented person, but with *853an astigmatism in her perception of people and events which often caused her to react in an unfair and even injurious way."
b. De Havilland's opposition, declarations, and exhibits
De Havilland filed an opposition on September 15, 2017. She asserted Feud was a "commercial production." De Havilland attached a declaration from Mark Roesler, the chairman of Celebrity Valuations. Roesler declared he had represented many celebrities over the years, including Richard Nixon. Roesler calculated the fair market value of FX's "use" in Feud of de Havilland's "rights" to be between 1.38 and 2.1 million dollars. This works out to between approximately $84,000 and $127,000 per minute of time that Zeta-Jones appears on screen.
De Havilland also submitted declarations from David Ladd and Cort Casady. Both men stated they have many years of experience in the entertainment business. In nearly identical language both Ladd and Casady declared the "standard practice" in the film and television industry is to obtain consent from any "well-known living person" before her or his "name, identity, character[,] or image" can be used in a film or television program.
c. FX's reply
FX filed a reply on September 22, 2017. FX submitted a declaration from Casey LaLonde, Joan Crawford's grandson. LaLonde stated an actor portraying him as a child appears in Feud . LaLonde neither granted consent nor received any compensation for this portrayal. LaLonde described the experience of seeing an actor *633portraying him in the docudrama as "a wonderful surprise." LaLonde also made available to Feud 's producers home movies of Crawford. He stated the producers did not pay any compensation to Crawford's family for their portrayal of her. LaLonde declared that de Havilland's attorney's statement to USA Today that Feud 's producers had compensated Crawford's family for the use of her identity was untrue.
d. The hearing on the motion and the trial court's ruling
On September 29, 2017, the parties argued the motion. The superior court issued a 16-page written decision. The court denied the anti-SLAPP motion *854as to all four causes of action. The court first found the docudrama constitutes speech in a public forum, involving an issue of public concern. Noting the burden then shifts to the plaintiff to show a probability of prevailing on her claims, the court concluded de Havilland had sufficiently met her burden of proof. The court stated de Havilland had to show only that her lawsuit had minimal merit.
The trial court said de Havilland had met her burden on her right of publicity claims "because no compensation was given despite using her name and likeness." The court, citing Ladd's declaration, stated, "[I]t is standard in the industry, according to Plaintiff, to negotiate compensation prior to the use of a person's likeness." The court said there was "nothing transformative about [Feud ]" within the meaning of Comedy III because FX admitted it "wanted to make the appearance of [de Havilland] as real as possible."
On de Havilland's false light claim, the court noted de Havilland asserted (1) she had not given an interview at the 1978 Academy Awards; (2) she had not referred to her sister Joan Fontaine as "my bitch sister"; (3) she never told a director she didn't "play bitches" and he should call her sister; and (4) when asked where the alcohol in Frank Sinatra's dressing room had gone, she never said "Frank must have drunk it all." Rejecting FX's argument that these portrayals are not defamatory, the court said, "[I]n considering the show as a whole, the Court finds [de Havilland] has sufficiently met her burden of proof in that a viewer of the television show, which is represented to be based on historical facts, may think [de Havilland] to be a gossip who uses vulgar terms about other individuals, including her sister." Citing the Casady declaration, the court stated, "For a celebrity, this could have a significant economic impact."
As to actual malice (de Havilland did not dispute she is a public figure),
DISCUSSION
1. California's anti-SLAPP statute and our standard of review on appeal
A special motion to strike under the anti-SLAPP statute, Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, " 'is a procedural remedy to dispose of lawsuits *855brought to chill the valid exercise of a party's constitutional right of petition or free speech. [Citation.] The purpose of the anti-SLAPP *634statute is to encourage participation in matters of public significance and prevent meritless litigation designed to chill the exercise of First Amendment rights. [Citation.] The Legislature has declared that the statute must be "construed broadly" to that end.' " ( Hawran v. Hixson (2012)
"Resolution of an anti-SLAPP motion 'requires the court to engage in a two-step process.' " ( Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche (2003)
*856To satisfy this prong-two showing, the plaintiff must present credible evidence that satisfies the standard of proof required by the substantive law of the cause of action the anti-SLAPP motion challenges. Generally, a plaintiff's claims need only have " 'minimal merit' " to survive an anti-SLAPP motion. ( Navellier v. Sletten (2002)
"An order denying an anti-SLAPP special motion to strike is appealable under [Code of Civil Procedure] sections 425.16, subdivision (i), and 904.1." ( Christian Research, supra, 148 Cal.App.4th at p. 79,
2. De Havilland concedes FX met the first prong of the two-step process
The trial court found that de Havilland's lawsuit arises from FX's exercise of its free speech rights on a topic of public interest in a public forum. De *857Havilland presented no argument on that issue in her opposition brief. At oral argument, her counsel conceded FX has met the first prong of the anti-SLAPP analysis.
3. The First Amendment protects FX's portrayal of de Havilland in a docudrama without her permission
a. We question whether a docudrama is a product or merchandise within the meaning of Civil Code section 3344
As noted, de Havilland alleges causes of action for violation of the statutory right of publicity, Civil Code section 3344, and for the common law tort of misappropriation. Section 3344, subdivision (a) provides, in part, "Any person who knowingly uses another's name, voice, signature, photograph, or likeness, in any manner, on or in products, merchandise, or goods , or for purposes of advertising or selling, or soliciting purchases of, products, merchandise, goods, or services , without such person's prior consent, ... shall be liable for any damages sustained by the person or persons injured as a result thereof." (Italics added.) Misappropriation is one of the four branches of the privacy tort identified by *636Dean William Prosser. (Prosser, Privacy (1960)
De Havilland's statutory claim raises a preliminary question of whether the portrayal of a real person in a television program (or a book, play, or film) constitutes the "use" of that person's name or "likeness" "on or in" a product, merchandise, or good. Books, films, and television shows are "things" but are they "merchandise" or "products"? Many of the cases in this area involve products and merchandise such as T-shirts and lithographs ( Comedy III , ante ), greeting cards ( Hilton v. Hallmark Cards (9th Cir. 2010)
*858Midler v. Ford Motor Co . (9th Cir. 1988)
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit addressed this question in a recent case, Sarver v. Chartier (9th Cir. 2016)
We need not decide this question, however, because Feud is constitutionally protected in any event.
*859b. Assuming a docudrama is a "use" for purposes of the right of publicity, the First Amendment protects Feud
Assuming for argument's sake that a television program is a "product, merchandise, or good" and that Zeta-Jones's portrayal of de Havilland constitutes a "use" of de Havilland's name or likeness within the scope of both the right of publicity statute and the misappropriation tort, we come to FX's First Amendment defense. Nearly 40 years ago, the Chief Justice of our Supreme Court addressed this issue in Guglielmi v. Spelling-Goldberg Productions (1979)
In a concurring opinion joined by three other justices, the Chief Justice framed the issue as whether the use of a celebrity's "name and likeness in a fictional film exhibited on television constitutes an actionable infringement of that person's right of publicity." ( Guglielmi , supra , 25 Cal.3d at p. 862,
The Chief Justice wrote, "Valentino was a Hollywood star. His life and career are part of the cultural history of an era. ... His lingering persona is an apt topic for poetry or song, biography or fiction. Whether [the producers'] work constitutes a serious appraisal of Valentino's stature *638or mere fantasy is a judgment left to the reader or viewer, not the courts." ( Guglielmi, supra, 25 Cal.3d at pp. 869-870,
Feud is as constitutionally protected as was the film in Sarver , The Hurt Locker . As with that expressive work, Feud "is speech that is fully protected by the First Amendment, which safeguards the storytellers and artists who take the raw materials of life-including the stories of real individuals, ordinary or extraordinary-and transform them into art, be it articles, books, movies, or plays." ( Sarver ,
De Havilland also contends the fictitious interview "is structured as an endorsement of [Feud ]." The miniseries itself does not support this contention. Nothing Zeta-Jones says or does as de Havilland in the docudrama suggests-much less constitutes-an "endorsement" of the work by de Havilland. De Havilland's argument seems to be that, whenever a filmmaker includes a character based on a real person, that inclusion implies an "endorsement" of the film or program by that real person. We have found no case authority to support this novel argument.
Nor does the use of de Havilland's name-along with photographs of Zeta-Jones-in social media promotion for the miniseries support de *862Havilland's claims for violation of her right of publicity. Constitutional protection for an expressive work such as Feud " 'extends to the truthful use of a public figure's name and likeness in advertising [that] is merely an adjunct of the protected publication and promotes only the protected publication.' " ( Montana v. San Jose Mercury News, Inc. (1995)
c. In any event, Feud's portrayal of de Havilland is transformative
The parties spend considerable time discussing the "transformative" test set forth in Comedy III . There, a company that owns the rights under Civil Code section 990
To resolve this "difficult issue" ( Comedy III, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 396,
Comedy III 's "transformative" test makes sense when applied to products and merchandise-"tangible personal property," in the Supreme Court's words. Lower courts have struggled mightily, however, to figure out how to apply it to expressive works such as films, plays, and television programs.
We disagree. The fictitious, "imagined" interview in which Zeta-Jones talks about Hollywood's treatment of women and the Crawford/Davis rivalry is a far cry from T-shirts depicting a representational, pedestrian, uncreative drawing of The Three Stooges. The de Havilland role, performed by Zeta-Jones, constitutes about 4.2 percent of Feud . The docudrama tells the story, in nearly eight hours, of the competition between Hollywood's leading ladies of *864the day, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, for film roles, attention, awards, and acclaim. The miniseries tells many stories within the story as well: Jack Warner's demeaning and dismissive treatment of director Robert Aldrich; Crawford's and Davis's struggles with their personal relationships: husbands, partners, and children; the obstacles faced by capable women like Aldrich's assistant Pauline Jameson who want to direct motion pictures; and the refusal of powerful men in the entertainment business to take women seriously, even when their movies make money.
In the words of the Comedy III Court, Zeta-Jones's "celebrity likeness [of de Havilland] is one of the 'raw materials' from which [the] original work [Feud ] is synthesized." ( Comedy III, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 406,
*642Johnson v. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, Inc. (1974)
4. De Havilland has not carried her burden of proving with admissible evidence that she will probably prevail on her false light claim
a. The allegations of de Havilland's complaint
In her third cause of action, de Havilland alleges false light invasion of privacy. Though not entirely clear,
b. False light invasion of privacy and de Havilland's required showing
" 'False light is a species of invasion of privacy, based on publicity that places a plaintiff before the public in a false light that would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, and where the defendant knew or acted in reckless disregard as to the falsity of the publicized matter and the false light in which the plaintiff would be placed.' " ( Jackson , supra , 10 Cal.App.5th at p. 1264,
To defeat FX's anti-SLAPP motion on her false light claim, de Havilland, as a public figure, must demonstrate a reasonable probability she can prove FX broadcast statements that are (1) assertions of fact, (2) actually false or create a false impression about her, (3) highly offensive *643to a reasonable person or defamatory, and (4) made with actual malice. ( Brodeur , supra , 248 Cal.App.4th at p. 678,
Accordingly, de Havilland must offer admissible evidence that the average, reasonable viewer of Feud , watching the scenes in their original context, would have understood them to convey statements of fact that she is "a hypocrite, selling gossip" and a person who "speak[s] in crude and vulgar terms about others." ( Couch , supra , 33 Cal.App.4th at p. 1501,
c. The fictitious interview and the light-hearted reference to Frank Sinatra's drinking are neither reasonably susceptible to a defamatory meaning nor highly offensive to a reasonable person
First, we question whether a reasonable viewer would interpret Feud -a docudrama-as entirely factual. Viewers are generally familiar with dramatized, fact-based movies and miniseries in which scenes, conversations, and even characters are fictionalized and imagined. (See Masson v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc. (1991)
*644*867In any event, assuming for argument's sake that the average, reasonable viewer would see the scenes in question as literal statements of actual fact, de Havilland's false light claim fails nevertheless because Feud 's depiction of her is not defamatory nor would it "highly offend" a reasonable person. Granting an interview at the Academy Awards is not conduct that would subject a person to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy. (Cf. Jackson, supra , 10 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1264-1265,
Zeta-Jones plays de Havilland as a wise, witty, sometimes playful woman. That wit is the same as that displayed by the real de Havilland when she appeared in November 1973 on Merv Griffin's talk show. When Griffin asked de Havilland whether the relationship between a talented director and a talented actress was like that of husband and wife, de Havilland responded, "No. It's like lovers. It's the next best thing to sex." (On the talk show, de Havilland also told Griffin that when she and Bette Davis were both at Warner Brothers Davis "got all the interesting parts" and that Davis deserved them.) De Havilland's wit and playfulness also are evident in her book Every Frenchman Has One , published in 1961 and reissued in 2016 with an added "Q and A" with de Havilland. De Havilland includes an entire chapter on the habit of French men of urinating by the side of the road, in public. Taken in its entirety and in context, Zeta-Jones's portrayal of de Havilland is overwhelmingly positive. Indeed, with possible exception of Aldrich's assistant, aspiring director Pauline Jameson (played by Alison Wright), Feud 's portrayal of de Havilland is the most favorable of any character in the docudrama. The work itself belies de Havilland's contention that Zeta-Jones portrays de Havilland as a "vulgar gossip" and "hypocrite."
Nor is Zeta-Jones's light-hearted, offhand remark as de Havilland to her good friend Bette Davis while they are alone in Sinatra's dressing room that he must have drunk the liquor defamatory or highly offensive to a reasonable *868person. FX submitted evidence in support of its motion that Sinatra's fondness for alcohol was well known, and Zeta-Jones's comment to Sarandon would not subject de Havilland to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy. ( Jackson , supra , 10 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1264-1265,
d. The "bitch" remarks-when de Havilland's actual words were "dragon lady"-are not highly offensive to a reasonable person and are, in addition, substantially truthful characterizations of her actual words
" 'California law permits the defense of substantial truth,' and thus a defendant is not liable ' "if the substance of the charge be proved true ...." ' 'Put another way, the statement is not considered false unless it "would have a different effect on the mind of the reader from that which the ... truth would have produced." ' " ( Carver v. Bonds (2005)
In Feud , Zeta-Jones uses the word "bitch" twice. In the fifth episode, Sarandon, as Davis, calls Zeta-Jones, as de Havilland, who is living in Paris. The two close friends have a private telephone conversation. Sarandon complains that Crawford "sets [her] off," and then refers to de Havilland's well-known estrangement from her sister Joan Fontaine. Zeta-Jones tells Sarandon her "bitch sister" has started telling the press that she broke Fontaine's collarbone when they were children. The second use of the word comes in the seventh episode when Sarandon and Alfred Molina, playing Robert Aldrich, call de Havilland in Paris to ask her to replace Crawford as cousin Miriam in Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte . Molina tells Zeta-Jones that the role is not a victim but a "villainess." Zeta-Jones responds, "Oh, no. I don't do bitches. They make me so unhappy." She then adds, "You should call my sister."
In its motion to strike, FX submitted declarations from Ryan Murphy and Timothy Minear, who both wrote parts of Feud . Both men were familiar with *869the well-publicized life-long animosity between de Havilland and her sister Joan Fontaine. Murphy wrote the scene in which Zeta-Jones uses the words "my bitch sister" on the telephone with Sarandon. Ryan declared he used the word "bitch" "because, in [his] mind, the terms dragon lady and bitch generally have the same meaning, but 'bitch' would be more recognizable to the audience than 'Dragon Lady.' " Similarly, Minear declared Feud 's writers "thought 'bitch' was more mainstream and would be better understood by the modern audiences than 'Dragon Lady.' "
Had Feud 's creators had Zeta-Jones refer to Fontaine as "my dragon lady sister," the "effect on the mind of the reader" would not have been appreciably different. Nor would a line by the de Havilland character, "Oh, no. I don't do dragon ladies. They make me so unhappy. You should call my sister."
e. De Havilland has not demonstrated she can prove by clear and convincing evidence that Feud's creators acted with actual malice
De Havilland does not dispute that she is a public figure. Her attorneys describe her as "a living legend" and "an internationally-known celebrity." Accordingly, the Constitution requires de Havilland to prove by clear and convincing evidence that FX "knew the [docudrama] would create a false impression about [her] or acted with reckless disregard for the truth." ( CACI No. 1802.)
When the expressive work at issue is fiction, or a combination of fact and fiction, the "actual malice" analysis takes on a further wrinkle. De Havilland argues that, because she did not grant an interview at the 1978 Academy Awards or make the "bitch sister" or "Sinatra drank the alcohol" remarks to Bette Davis, Feud 's creators acted with actual malice. But fiction is by definition untrue. It is imagined, made-up. Put more starkly, it is false. Publishing a fictitious work about a real person cannot mean the author, by virtue of writing fiction, has acted with actual malice.
Recognizing this, in cases where the claimed highly offensive or defamatory aspect of the portrayal is implied, courts have required plaintiffs to show *870that the defendant " 'intended to convey the defamatory impression.' " ( Dodds,
As discussed above, we conclude Zeta-Jones's portrayal of de Havilland in Feud is not highly offensive to a reasonable person as a matter of law. Even if it were, however, de Havilland has not demonstrated that she can prove actual malice by clear and convincing evidence. In his sworn declaration, Murphy stated he intended Zeta-Jones's portrayal of de Havilland to be that of "a wise, respectful friend and counselor to Bette Davis, and a Hollywood icon with a unique perspective on the past."
5. De Havilland's cause of action for unjust enrichment cannot proceed
De Havilland's fourth cause of action, entitled "Unjust Enrichment," alleges FX has "received unjust financial and economic benefits at [her] expense," including "the value of the use of [her] name, image[,] and identity for [FX's] commercial purposes." De Havilland asks for FX's "gross revenues" and a constructive trust.
"Unjust enrichment is not a cause of action." It is "just a restitution claim." (Hill v. Roll Internat. Corp . (2011)
CONCLUSION
The trial court's ruling leaves authors, filmmakers, playwrights, and television producers in a Catch-22.
DISPOSITION
The order denying the motion to strike is reversed. The trial court is directed to enter a new and different order granting the motion and awarding defendants their attorney fees and costs. ( Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16, subd. (c).) Defendants shall recover their costs on appeal.
We concur:
EDMON, P.J.
DHANIDINA, J.
Comedy III Productions, Inc. v. Gary Saderup, Inc . (2001)
There seems to be only one photograph to which de Havilland could be referring. At the end of the miniseries, just before the credits, Feud displays side-by-side photographs of the real people who had some involvement in the story and the actor who played each. These include director Robert Aldrich (played by Alfred Molina), Jack Warner of Warner Brothers (played by Stanley Tucci), Joan Crawford (played by Jessica Lange), Victor Buono (played by Dominic Burgess), Bette Davis's daughter B.D. Merrill (played by Kiernan Shipka), and Hedda Hopper (played by Judy Davis), as well as Davis and de Havilland, played, as noted, by Sarandon and Zeta-Jones, respectively. A short blurb tells the viewer what became of each person. For de Havilland, the blurb states, "Olivia de Havilland made her screen debut in Max Reinhardt's A Midsummer Night's Dream in 1935. She retired from film acting in 1988. She continues to enjoy her retirement in Paris. On July 1, 2016, she turned 100 years old." De Havilland attached a copy of the side-by-side photographs of her and Zeta-Jones to her complaint.
On July 25, 2017, de Havilland filed a motion for trial setting preference. De Havilland submitted a declaration stating she lives in Paris and is 101 years old. She also submitted a declaration by a Los Angeles physician stating that any person of that age "will not survive for any extended period of time."
SLAPP is an acronym for strategic lawsuit against public participation. (Christian Research Institute v. Alnor (2007)
Casady stated consent "must be obtained." Ladd stated consent "should be obtained." Ladd added that, "[i]f consent could not be obtained," then the producers could use only "authenticated facts previously disclosed" by the person herself or himself.
De Havilland again concedes on appeal that she is a public figure.
De Havilland relies on Eastwood v. Superior Court (1983)
Civil Code section 990 has since been renumbered as Civil Code section 3344.1. Enacted in 1984, the statute essentially provides a descendible right of publicity. In language similar to section 3344 governing the rights of living persons, section 3344.1 gives a "deceased personality's" heirs and their assignees a cause of action against someone who uses the deceased person's "name, voice, signature, photograph, or likeness ... on or in products, merchandise, or goods, or for purposes of advertising or selling, or soliciting purchases of, products, merchandise, goods, or services, without prior consent."
Cf. Sarver,
Amici, 22 constitutional law and intellectual property law professors, note they "have serious reservations about the [Comedy III ] test [as the appropriate test for deciding the federal question of whether and when the First Amendment protects against right of publicity claims]-highlighted by the trial court's struggle to understand what was meant by a transformative use, and its ... reading of that test to devalue realistic uses in works of historical fiction and biography."
De Havilland's complaint blends the allegations concerning her right of publicity claims with those concerning her false light claim. For example, de Havilland alleges the "fake interview" "put[ ] false words [in her] mouth," "misappropriated [her] name, likeness[,] and identity without her permission and used them falsely in order to exploit their own commercial interests," and "create[d] the public impression that she was a hypocrite, selling gossip in order to promote herself at the Academy Awards." In her third cause of action for false light, de Havilland alleges that she "benefits financially from the authorized use of her own name, likeness, and identity" and that FX's "misappropriation caused" her harm, and she prays for a permanent injunction restraining FX "from continuing to infringe [her] right of publicity." To assist our analysis, we separate de Havilland's legal theories and address each one separately.
The "interview" segments consume fewer than seven minutes of the 392-minute miniseries, about 1.8 percent of the total work.
Aligheri, The Divine Comedy (1320).
De Havilland eventually accepted the role of cousin Miriam in Hush ... Hush.
Feud writer Minear notes the first part of de Havilland's telephone conversation with Aldrich was reported in Shaun Considine's book, Bette & Joan: The Divine Feud , first published in 1989 and reissued twice since.
Heller, Catch-22 (1961).
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
