London
police are ‘reviewing’ video of Helen Mirren being called ‘an evil Zionist’
The Met
called the footage a case of “antisemitic verbal abuse.”
Helen
Mirren.
Helen
Mirren plays Golda Meir in the biopic about Israel's first female prime
minister. (Jaspar Wolf)
By Shira
Li Bartov May 29, 2026 6:22 pm
London
police are reviewing footage that showed actress Helen Mirren being called “an
evil Zionist b—h” by a person on the street.
The
video, which circulated widely online this week, records Mirren walking with
her husband Taylor Hackford when a person off-camera approaches and calls her
an “avowed Zionist.”
“She said
Israel should last forever because of the Holocaust, and she was very happy
that Palestinians’ houses were gone,” the person said, before cursing at Mirren
and Hackford. Hackford responded, “F—ck off,” while Mirren did not say anything
in the video.
The
confrontation is believed to have taken place “at the end of last year,” a
spokesperson from Metropolitan Police told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. It
was shared on Thursday by London & UK Street News, an X account that
aggregates crowdsourced citizen journalism.
Police
said they were “aware” of the video “showing a man and a woman being subjected
to antisemitic verbal abuse in Tower Hill,” an area near Mirren’s neighborhood
in East London.
“Officers
are currently reviewing the footage and making attempts to contact the victims
to establish whether they would like to report the incident,” the spokesperson
said. The official added that Metropolitan Police have made more than 90 hate
crime arrests since the end of March.
Complaints
from a victim are not always required to investigate a hate crime, depending on
the offense. The police did not confirm whether a report from Mirren was
necessary in this case.
Mirren,
who is not Jewish, has portrayed prominent Jewish figures, including former
Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir in the 2023 biopic “Golda” and Maria Altmann,
an art collector who fled the Nazis, in the 2015 film “Woman in Gold.”
Police
said that it’s possible for an incident to be investigated as an antisemitic
hate crime even if the victim is not Jewish.
While
Mirren was promoting “Golda” in August 2023, she said in an interview on
Israel’s Channel 12, “I believe in Israel, in the existence of Israel, and I
believe Israel has to go forward into the future, for the rest of eternity. I
believe in Israel because of the Holocaust.”
Mirren
also said that she believed Meir would be “utterly horrified” by Israel’s
current-day leadership in an interview with AFP at the Berlin International
Film Festival in February 2023.
Addressing
the Israeli government’s moves toward a judicial overhaul that was criticized
for undermining the country’s balance of powers, Mirren said, “It’s the rise of
dictatorship and dictatorship was what has always been the enemy of people all
over the world, and she would recognize it as that.”
Mirren
added that she visited Israel in 1967, shortly after the Six-Day War, and
worked at a kibbutz.
Mirren
has not publicly addressed the incident captured on the video.

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