Jeffrey Epstein Documents: Full List of A-List Actors Named So Far
The recent release of the Jeffrey Epstein files has once again put Hollywood under the spotlight, stirring up old controversies and drawing fresh attention to the entertainment world’s tangled history with scandal.
The Department of Justice recently made public a massive archive—millions of pages including emails, photos, and other documents—that mention all sorts of high-profile names from politics, business, and show business. In a February 14 update to Congress, officials shared what they called a “final list of 305 prominent figures.” This covers everyone from sitting presidents and business moguls to film stars, past and present.

Importantly, the DOJ has been clear: just because someone’s name shows up doesn’t mean they did anything wrong or even met Epstein. A lot of these mentions are casual, incidental, or from long before his crimes became public knowledge. The list even pulls in deceased icons like Princess Diana, Elvis Presley, and Michael Jackson—people who obviously couldn’t have been involved in any recent wrongdoing.
Hollywood has seen its share of dark chapters already—think Harvey Weinstein’s crimes, the long-running issues around Roman Polanski, or the tragic Rust shooting tied to Alec Baldwin. Now these Epstein documents are blurring the lines even more between Tinseltown gossip and real-world headlines.
The references stretch across decades and generations. Take Marilyn Monroe, the Golden Age legend whose name pops up even though she died long before Epstein’s era—this shows just how wide-ranging and sometimes random the archive can be.
One name that stands out is Kevin Spacey. The Oscar-winning actor appears in a 2002 photo alongside Ghislaine Maxwell and former President Bill Clinton during a visit to London’s Churchill War Rooms.
Spacey isn’t the only one. Filmmaker Brett Ratner and music legend Barbra Streisand also get mentions in the roughly 3.5-million-page collection.
Back in July, Spacey posted on X calling for the full release of the files, hoping it would set the record straight for him and others.
“Release the Epstein files. All of them. For those of us with nothing to fear, the truth can’t come soon enough. I hate to make this about me—but the media already has,” he wrote.
Then there’s Woody Allen. The files note that he and his wife, Soon-Yi Previn, were at a 2010 dinner party hosted by Epstein in New York. Other guests reportedly included Prince Andrew, publicist Peggy Siegal, journalist Katie Couric, and TV host George Stephanopoulos.
Records show Allen swapped some emails with Epstein—mostly chit-chat about other directors—and he’s brushed off the dinner as no big deal. Soon-Yi Previn also emailed Epstein, criticizing the #MeToo movement as having “gone too far.” In another message, she called the underage girl involved in Anthony Weiner’s sexting case “despicable and disgusting,” rather than pointing fingers at Weiner himself (who later went to prison for the crime).
Another figure drawing scrutiny is talent agent Casey Wasserman, whose agency has long repped huge names in music like Coldplay, Ed Sheeran, Kendrick Lamar, Joni Mitchell, Travis Scott, and Kenny Chesney.
The documents show Wasserman flew on Epstein’s private plane and traded flirty, personal messages with Ghislaine Maxwell back in 2003.
In one, he asked, “so what do I have to do to see you in a tight leather outfit?” In another from April 1 that year—while he was married—he wrote, “where are you, I miss you,” and suggested scheduling a massage.
Maxwell, of course, was convicted in 2021 for her role in Epstein’s abuse of underage girls from 1994 to 2004.
Wasserman hasn’t been accused of any crimes. In a statement to the Associated Press earlier this year, he said he regretted those old messages, noting they happened “over two decades ago, long before her horrific crimes came to light.”

A few more entertainment names surface in the files too: heavy-hitter Robert De Niro, comedian Amy Schumer, actor Chris Tucker (mentioned more than once), actress Alyssa Milano, Whoopi Goldberg, and Minnie Driver.
As people dig through these sprawling records, the whole thing has sparked a lot of curiosity, arguments, and speculation. But the officials keep repeating the same key point: showing up in Epstein’s documents isn’t evidence of criminal involvement.
Beyond Epstein and Maxwell herself, nobody named here has faced charges connected to his offenses. It’s a messy, ongoing story—and one that reminds us how easily fame, power, and scandal can overlap.

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