Categories: Entertainment

Demi Moore Recalls Being Body-Shamed In Her 40s For Bikini Scene In ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Sequel

Demi Moore is opening up about catching flak for wearing a bikini on the big screen back in the early ’00s, when she was in her 40s.

Speaking with fellow actor Michelle Yeoh for Interview magazine, the Hollywood star, 61, got candid about how her skin-baring scene in 2003’s “Charlie’s Angel: Full Throttle” ignited “a lot of talk about how I looked.”

“What’s interesting is I felt [criticism] more when I hit my 40s. I had done ‘Charlie’s Angels,’ and there was a lot of conversation around this scene in a bikini,” Moore said in the story published Tuesday.

“And then I found that there didn’t seem to be a place for me. I didn’t feel like I didn’t belong,” she continued. “It’s more like I felt that feeling of, I’m not 20, I’m not 30, but I wasn’t yet what they perceived as a mother.”

The “Ghost” leading lady said she’d questioned whether Hollywood was still her true calling, adding, “It was a time that felt, not dead, but flat.”

“There was a moment, I have to say, where I started to wonder, is this really what I should be doing? Maybe that part of my life is complete,” she said. “Not even over, but complete.”

Yeoh chimed in adding, “Hollywood is cruel to women of that age, where you don’t find the scripts or the characters that resonate with you anymore. It’s either, you are the mother or you’re old enough not to be sexy in their eyes. It’s like, why can’t a 45-year-old, a 50-year-old, or 60-year-old, be sexy?”

Moore starred as a supporting role in “Full Throttle,” which featured Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu as the film’s titular Angels.

The film followed 2000’s “Charlie’s Angels,” which is based on the 1976 action series of the same name. The movie was met with lackluster reviews, earning a mediocre 41% score on Rotten Tomatoes.

Moore is slated to star in the upcoming film “The Substance,” which follows an aging celebrity who experiments with a black-market drug that promises to revert her to a younger version of herself.

In May, Moore explained to IndieWire why she “really connected” with the role.

“If we step back from [The Substance] being about an actor, [the film is more about] a desire to have validation, to be seen, to be appreciated, to belong, and what it is to feel rejected and to feel not-enough, that there’s something wrong with you,” she explained.

Moore added, “When you add into it the aspect of aging — which is really about our inability to control — [it becomes] an exploration of a lack of acceptance of self.”

News Today

Recent Posts

Kareena Kapoor’s Next Untitled Film With Meghna Gulzar Gets Prithviraj Sukumaran On Board

Kareena Kapoor is working with Raazi director Meghna Gulzar for her next film. The project,…

17 hours ago

Purdue basketball freshman Daniel Jacobsen injured vs Northern Kentucky

2024-11-09 15:00:03 WEST LAFAYETTE -- Daniel Jacobsen's second game in Purdue basketball's starting lineup lasted…

18 hours ago

Rashida Jones honors dad Quincy Jones with heartfelt tribute: ‘He was love’

2024-11-09 14:50:03 Rashida Jones is remembering her late father, famed music producer Quincy Jones, in…

18 hours ago

Nosferatu Screening at Apollo Theatre Shows Student Interest in Experimental Cinema – The Oberlin Review

2024-11-09 14:40:03 A silent German expressionist film about vampires accompanied by Radiohead’s music — what…

18 hours ago

What Are Adaptogens? Find Out How These 3 Herbs May Help You Tackle Stress Head-On

Let's face it - life can be downright stressful! With everything moving at breakneck speed,…

18 hours ago

The new Mac Mini takes a small step towards upgradeable storage

Apple’s redesigned Mac Mini M4 has ditched the previous M2 machine’s SSD that was soldered…

18 hours ago