French actor Gérard Depardieu accused of rape
Film star denies allegations, says he will participate in investigation

Prosecutors in Paris have opened a preliminary investigation after a woman accused actor Gérard Depardieu of rape and sexual assault, a French judicial official said Thursday. A lawyer said the French film star denies the allegations.
The official said a woman filed a complaint against the French film star on Monday near the southern city of Aix-en-Provence. The case was assigned to Paris prosecutors on Wednesday.
The official requested anonymity in discussing the case Thursday because he was not allowed to disclose details about an ongoing investigation.
Depardieu's lawyer, Hervé Temime, said on France's BFM TV that the actor "absolutely denies any rape, any sexual assault, any crime."
Depardieu was "shaken" by the "groundless" accusations, Temime said. The lawyer declined to say if Depardieu was in France on Thursday or to give details on the actor's connection to the woman, who was identified by French media as a 22-year-old comedian and dancer.
"He will obviously participate in the investigation and answer the questions," Temime said.
Alleged assaults occurred this month
French newspaper Le Parisien and BFM TV said the young comedian alleged that Depardieu assaulted her on Aug. 7 and 13 at his Parisian home. The two met when Depardieu led a master class at her school, BFM TV reported.
Depardieu has appeared in 200 films over six decades and holds a rare position as a French actor who is known in Hollywood. He won a Golden Globe for his performance in Green Card, a 1990 English-language romantic comedy co-starring Andie MacDowell.
His first big hit in France was Les Valseuses, Bertrand Blier's classic farce about two wandering thugs.
Before he crossed the Atlantic, Depardieu played roles from Jean Valjean, the thief-turned-saint in Les Misérables, to Christopher Columbus.
In 2014, he had the leading role in Welcome to New York, the film inspired by the life of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former director of the International Monetary Fund who was accused in 2011 of sexually assaulting a hotel maid.