Jonathan Majors’ longtime manager has dropped the “Creed III” star as he faces domestic violence charges.
Multiple sources told Deadline Monday that Entertainment 360 parted ways with Majors three weeks after his arrest for allegedly assaulting his girlfriend in New York City.
The company cut ties with the “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” star over issues surrounding his personal behavior, the trade publication reported.
In addition to his management team, Majors’ PR firm, The Lede Company, reportedly also initiated a hiatus from the star within the last month.
Valentino and Majors also “mutually agreed” the actor wouldn’t attend Met Gala 2023 as one of the brand’s guests.
Entertainment 360 and The Lede Company did not return Pvnew’s requests for comment.
Majors, 33, already wrapped filming Season 2 of Disney+’s “Loki,” in which he portrays villain Kang the Conqueror, but isn’t expected to start working on “Avengers: The Kang Dynasty” for a while.
Deadline heard that currently there have been no conversations within the Marvel Cinematic Universe to drop the actor.
Majors was arrested in late March after being involved in a domestic dispute with a then-unnamed 30-year-old woman. Sources later told The Post that the victim was his girlfriend.
The woman, who had minor injuries to her head and neck, told police that she was assaulted. She was taken to an area hospital in stable condition, cops said.
Majors was taken into custody without incident and charged with strangulation, assault and harassment, according to police.
The “Devotion” star denied any wrongdoing in a statement from his now-former publicist.
“He’s done nothing wrong. We look forward to clearing his name and clearing this up,” the statement read.
The fallout over Majors’ alleged altercation began immediately, with the US Army pulling all recruiting ads featuring the actor from circulation.
Majors’ attorney, Priya Chaudhry, later said her client is “completely innocent” and would be working to have the charges dropped “immediately.”
Chaudhry subsequently told Pvnew that the victim allegedly sent Majors several text messages “admitting that she was the one who used physical force against him.”
In the messages — obtained by Pvnew — the woman purportedly took the blame for the alleged altercation, writing, “I told them it was my fault for trying to grab your phone.”