He had sex with young girls and knew they were young. That is predatory and counts as statutory rape. His treatment of the anti-Semitic woman shows that he had anger issues and that he had no respect for women. It was invasive and sick, and he was proud of it and said it felt good.
According to Natalie's friend Jackie Eastes, to whom she confided about the rape after it happened, "He said he liked young girls, and he always wanted to f***k a teenager. She probably wasn't the only one. It was really nasty and verbally abusive." Douglas also admitted to being angry and violent during intercourse.
The actor/producer who raped Natalie in 1955 (and Douglas was a producer at the time, having formed his production company, Bryna Productions, in late 1949) was said to be more than 20 years older than Natalie, and married (he married his second wife, Anne Buydens, the previous year) and was still living when author Suzanne Finstad wrote about the rape in her 2001 published biography of Natalie. Natalie was also placed on suspension by Warner Brothers for refusing to appear in the film The Devil's Disciple (1959); the reason she gave the studio is that she didn't want to be separated from Robert Wagner, whom she had married the previous year. However, her friends who knew about the rape (there were at least five of them) stated that the real reason she didn't want to make the film was that the actor who raped her was in the cast. The movie starred Burt Lancaster (who died in 1994), Kirk Douglas (who was still living at the time of the book's publication in 2001) and Laurence Olivier (who died in 1989). So yes, the man in question is definitely Kirk Douglas. This was something that was discussed among many Natalie Wood fans long before Lana Wood said anything.
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