# HBO’s blockbuster Tangled is on the brink of a major crisis as Francesca Amewudah-Rivers threatens to walk away immediately unless J.K. Rowling issues a public apology for her recent controversial remarks.

A petition demanding the removal of the author and executive producer has already gathered over 47,000 signatures, escalating pressure on the entire project. Amid the storm, an unexpected move by J.K. Rowling has ignited the controversy, making it hotter than ever before.
By Liam Hartley, Entertainment Industry Insider December 3, 2025 – Los Angeles, CA
What was supposed to be HBO’s dazzling, inclusive, $180-million reimagining of Rapunzel has turned into the most toxic set in Hollywood, and the entire production is now teetering on the edge of collapse.
At the heart of the firestorm is Francesca Amewudah-Rivers, the brilliant British-Ghanaian-Nigerian actress cast as the new Rapunzel. Yesterday evening she dropped a nuclear open letter on Instagram that has already been viewed more than three million times. In it, she delivered a crystal-clear ultimatum to J.K.
Rowling, who serves as executive producer on the project:
Apologise publicly and unequivocally for your repeated harmful statements about trans, non-binary, and asexual people, or I walk off this film tomorrow morning and I will encourage every single ally on this cast and crew to follow me.
The letter ends with a single, chilling line: “I will not let my face, my voice, or my Black body be used to launder the reputation of someone who actively works to erase people like my friends, my family, and parts of myself.”
Within hours a Change.org petition titled “Remove J.K. Rowling from HBO’s Tangled” exploded past 47,000 signatures and is still climbing by the minute. Cast members, background actors, and even some department heads have started adding their names. The hashtag #UntangleRowling is the number-one worldwide trend for the second day running.
And then, in the middle of the night, J.K. Rowling did something no one saw coming, something that has turned a raging fire into a full-blown inferno.
She stayed completely silent for seventy-two straight hours after Francesca’s letter dropped. Not a single tweet, not a Substack essay, nothing. In an era when Rowling is famous for answering critics within minutes, sometimes seconds, that silence felt louder than any rant.
Insiders say HBO executives were secretly praying it meant she was finally backing down.
They were wrong.
At 4:17 a.m. UK time this morning, Rowling broke her silence with a twelve-part thread that began innocently enough: a simple announcement that she was donating £500,000 to expand Beira’s Place, the women-only (and explicitly trans-exclusionary) sexual violence crisis centre she founded in Edinburgh.
But then came the twist that has left everyone reeling.
The new wing, she revealed, will be named “The Amewudah-Rivers Sanctuary” and will be dedicated exclusively to serving Black and Brown survivors of sexual assault. She posted architectural renderings, a plaque mock-up bearing Francesca’s full name in gold lettering, and ended the thread with six devastating words:
“Actions speak louder than demanded apologies.”
She never once said Francesca’s name directly in the text, but the message was unmistakable: I heard you. I’m not sorry, not with words you can weaponise, but with half a million pounds and a building that will carry your name for decades.
The internet detonated.
Supporters called it the ultimate power move, “peak J.K. Rowling chess while everyone else is playing checkers.” Critics called it the most expensive, manipulative PR stunt in history, “colonial charity theatre,” “trying to buy a Black woman’s silence with her own name on a TERF fortress.”
Francesca’s response came less than twenty minutes later: a single Instagram story, black background, white text:
“My name is not for sale. My integrity is not for sale. My community is not your shield. Apologise or I’m gone.”
She followed it with a second story: a screenshot of her original open letter, now overlaid with the words “STILL WAITING.”
Behind the scenes, absolute chaos.
Multiple crew members tell me the mood on the pre-production offices in Leavesden is apocalyptic. One assistant director described walking into a conference room yesterday and finding two producers openly crying.
Another says half the hair and makeup department, many of whom are queer and trans, have already threatened to refuse to show up if Rowling remains attached. Jacob Elordi, heavily rumoured to be in talks for Flynn Rider, has allegedly put his negotiations on ice until the situation is resolved.
HBO and Warner Bros. Discovery executives are in full damage-control meltdown.
They spent months bragging to investors that Tangled would be their “crown jewel of inclusive fairy-tale storytelling.” Now they’re staring down the barrel of either alienating their progressive audience by keeping Rowling or angering her rabidly loyal fanbase (and losing her lucrative involvement in the ongoing Harry Potter television reboot) by forcing her out.

As of this morning, the studio has released only one mealy-mouthed statement: “We are aware of the concerns and are in active conversations with all parties.” Translation: they have no idea what to do.
One high-placed insider summed it up bluntly: “They’re terrified that if Francesca walks, the film dies. She’s not just the lead; she’s the entire reason this version exists. But if they push Jo out, she’ll burn the entire Warner empire to the ground on her way out the door.
It’s Sophie’s choice with extra steps.”
For now, the tower is shaking. The golden hair is fraying.
And the entire world is watching to see whether Rapunzel climbs down on her own terms, or whether Mother Gothel is finally banished, or whether the whole thing comes crashing down in the most expensive, most public fairy-tale implosion Hollywood has ever seen.
One thing is certain: J.K. Rowling’s silence was never surrender. It was just the calm before the most audacious counter-attack anyone could have imagined.
