The feel-good story behind the 2009 blockbuster film The Blind Side was all a lie, retired NFL offensive lineman Michael Oher said in a lawsuit filed on Monday in Shelby County, Tennessee.
Oher was the subject of the movie, about a well-to-do white family that adopted a black teenager and gave him the stable home he craved.
ESPN, which reviewed the 14-page court filing, said that he never was legally adopted by Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy, but was tricked into agreeing to make them his conservators.
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Oher said, as a result, the Tuohys made business deals that put money into the bank accounts of the couple and their two now-adult birth children, shutting him out.
Oher went to live with the family when he was in high school, and in 2004, after he turned 18, unwittingly signed the conservatorship document, the court paperwork says.
“The lie of Michael’s adoption is one upon which Co-Conservators Leigh Anne Tuohy and Sean Tuohy have enriched themselves at the expense of their Ward, the undersigned Michael Oher,” the legal filing reads, according to the ESPN report.
“Michael Oher discovered this lie to his chagrin and embarrassment in February of 2023, when he learned that the Conservatorship to which he consented on the basis that doing so would make him a member of the Tuohy family, in fact provided him no familial relationship with the Tuohys,” the filing says.
The family did not immediately respond to ESPN’s request for comment.
Sandra Bullock won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Leigh Anne Tuohy in The Blind Side, which also was nominated for Best Picture.
The movie brought in US$309 million worldwide, Box Office Mojo says.
The court filing says Oher received no compensation for a film “that would not have existed without him,” ESPN reported.
Oher, now 37, played for the Ole Miss Rebels and was an All-American. The Baltimore Ravens selected him in the first round of the 2009 NFL draft, and he played 110 games — all starts — over eight seasons with Baltimore, the Tennessee Titans and the Carolina Panthers.
In his petition, Oher is seeking to end the Tuohys’ conservatorship and to bar them from using his name and likeness. He also wants an accounting of what the Tuohys have earned using his name, as well as his share of the profits and unspecified damages.
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