Updated at 8:30 a.m. ETEditor's note: This story includes explicit language describing alleged sexual assaults.Actor Dustin Hoffman and director Brett Ratner are the latest Hollywood figures to be accused of sexual misconduct.In a column that appeared in Wednesday's The Hollywood Reporter, writer Anna Graham Hunter said that when she was a 17-year-old intern on the set of a TV adaptation of Death of a Salesman, Hoffman repeatedly groped her and "talked about sex to me and in front of me." Her detailed account relies on a diary she kept at the time that records numerous specific incidents.The 80-year-old Hoffman, a two-time Oscar winner, has apologized, saying "anything I might have done could have put her in an uncomfortable situation. I am sorry. It is not reflective of who I am."Later, TV writer Wendy Riss Gatsiounis told Variety that Hoffman propositioned her during a meeting in 1991. Riss Gatsiounis says she had been speaking with Hoffman and Tootsie about a potential film adaptation of one of her works when Hoffman, then 53, asked the significantly younger Riss Gatsiounis whether she had "ever been intimate with a man over 40.""Then Dustin Hoffman gets up and he says he has to do some clothing shopping at a nearby hotel, and did I want to come along?" she told the magazine, adding that she repeatedly rejected the invitation. "He's like, 'Come on, come to this nearby hotel.' "Hoffman's spokesperson declined to comment to Variety, and Schisgal said he has "no recollection of this meeting or of any of the behavior or actions described."Separately, six women, including actress Olivia Munn, have accused Ratner of sexual misconduct, according to the Los Angeles Times. In a 2010 collection of essays, Munn wrote that when she was an aspiring actress visiting the set of After the Sunset, the director masturbated in front of her in his trailer. She did not name Ratner in the essays.The Times writes: