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Kevin Spacey makes surprise appearance at Oxford lecture on cancel culture, performs Shakespeare

Kevin Spacey received a standing ovation for his rendition of a Shakespeare monologue during a lecture he was invited to on cancel culture.

Kevin Spacey received a standing ovation on Monday night during a surprise appearance at a University of Oxford lecture where he performed a scene from William Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens."

The Oscar-winning actor, who was acquitted of sexual assault charges by a U.K. jury in July, came to the event honoring the late conservative philosopher Roger Scruton, according to Variety.

In a clip from the event, The Spectator associate editor Douglas Murray introduced Spacey at the Sheldonian Theatre. He discussed how students could learn more about cancel culture from Shakespeare's work.

'In an era of cancellation and defenestration, we sometimes forget that we both cannot go on like this and that we have been here before. We know this because our greatest writers and artists have addressed this question in their own times," he said, according to Variety.

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Spacey then delivered the monologue, working his way through the audience before shouting the closing line, "I am sick of this false world and will love it not!"

He then rushed out of the room. When Spacey returned, the crowd welcomed him back with a standing ovation.

Murray would later tell The Times that the scene performed by Spacey is about what happens when a society drops a person for "no reason."

"It's something that has been on Kevin's mind, as it was on Roger Scruton's mind, so I said I want him to be back on stage in the U.K.," Murray added.

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Spacey was previously accused of sexually assaulting four men in the U.K. between 2004 and 2012. However, he was acquitted in London after a four-week trial.

"I imagine that many of you can understand that there's a lot for me to process after what has just happened today," Spacey said following the trial, according to the Daily Mail. "But I would like to say that I'm enormously grateful to the jury for having taken the time to examine all of the evidence and all of the facts carefully before they reached their decision."

Spacey was also found not liable for sexual abuse in New York in 2022.

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The actor was famously pushed out of Hollywood and was dropped as the lead actor from Netflix's political drama "House of Cards" in 2017 after facing allegations of misconduct.

Spacey recently returned to the screen with roles in Italian director Franco Nero's "The Man Who Drew God," the biopic "Once Upon a Time in Croatia" and the film "Peter Five Eight."

For more Culture, Media, Education, Opinion and channel coverage, visit foxnews.com/media

Fox News' Lauryn Overhultz and Greg Norman contributed to this report.

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