Demi Moore Lets Her Guard Down
Dave Itzkoff 5 days ago
LOS ANGELES A few days after I visited Demi Moore in her home high above Beverly Hills, her daughter Tallulah Willis told me, My mom was not raised, she was forged.
© Ramona Rosales for The New York Times Theres nothing I have to protect, Demi Moore said of the candid depiction of her life and career in her book.
But the woman who greeted me from atop a staircase, in the boxy residence she calls her peaceful Zen treehouse, and asked if I was chilly or needed a jacket, was not the steely star whose movies, like St. Elmos Fire, Ghost and A Few Good Men, helped define the 1980s and 90s. She was not the stylized deity venerated on magazine covers, not the inadvertent pioneer for pay equity in her industry, nor the walled-off enigma who, by her own design, resisted most efforts to reveal the authentic person behind the adamantine roles she played.
© via Demi Moore Demi Moore in her garage, preparing for her 1990 movie Ghost.
Dressed in a long-sleeve T-shirt, moccasin boots and a pair of prescription glasses with transition lenses, Moore sat cross-legged on the floor of her living room that late August morning and told me the story of her life.
It is an exercise that she has already undertaken in a memoir, Inside Out, which Harper will release on Sept. 24. The book is a candid personal narrative, in which Moore fills in not only the details surrounding the most visible parts of her history her Hollywood career and her much scrutinized marriages to the actors Bruce Willis and Ashton Kutcher but the portions of her life that she once fought to protect, including the confusing and all-too-abrupt childhood that preceded her choppy show-business ascent, and a more recent relapse into substance abuse that nearly tore apart her family.
Click for Full Text!
Poster Comment:
Demi Moore was always a beautiful woman.