Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Gary Oldman apologises to Demi Moore for ‘unprofessional’ behaviour on set of The Scarlet Letter

The Slow Horses star reflects on his behaviour on set with Demi Moore

Esme Hewitt
Thursday 01 May 2025 06:44 BST
Comments
Gary Oldman wins Oscar for best actor in a leading role

Gary Oldman has called his behaviour on the set of the 1995 romantic tragedy The Scarlet Letter “unprofessional” and apologised to his co-star Demi Moore.

In the film, Oldman played Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale in the adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel, starring opposite Moore’s Hester Prynne in a story of forbidden love and its harrowing consequences.

Speaking in an interview with the Radio Times, the Oscar winner recalls how his “intermittent bouts of boozing” during filming left Moore “disappointed in him”.

“I’m in my alcoholic period,” he says, admitting to having a drinking problem at the time. He recalls: “I was in a very dark place. I drank too much in the lunch hour. It was such a destructive thing. I got back on the set to do quite a big scene and I got through it.”

He remembers the guilt and embarrassment the next day, apologising to Moore, saying: “I’m so sorry, you must hate me.”

Moore responded: “I don’t hate you. It’s OK. I’m just disappointed.” The 67-year-old actor, now 28 years sober, says he has “no desire to even take a sip.”

(Getty)

He gave up alcohol in 1997 after coming close to death, he recalls and credits his sobriety with transforming both his life and his career. Since then, he’s earned three Oscar nominations and won Best Actor in 2018 for his portrayal of Winston Churchill in The Darkest Hour.

“The achievement of one guy who could write all that, paint those pictures, take on the Nazis, smoke that many cigars, drink that much in his life – I had great admiration for him,” Oldman said of Churchill.

This week, he returns to the big screen as another complicated figure, American author John Cheever in A24’s Parthenope. Like Oldman, his character battled the bottle for decades before finally getting sober at 65.

Oldman told Radio Times: “I think the worst thing you can do is inspire disappointment.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in