Woody Harrelson’s wild ride
When he was 24 and just starting out on the hit TV series Cheers, Harrelson took full advantage of all the goodies that come with fame.
Woody Harrelson has had his fill of hedonism, says David Hochman in Playboy. In 1985, when he was 24 and just starting out on the hit TV series Cheers, he took full advantage of all the goodies that come with fame. “My brother took a picture of me in a Jacuzzi, holding a bottle of Champagne and a joint, and I think there was a bunch of money lying around,” he recalls. “Soon enough I was living that life for real.” When several hit movies truly put him on the celebrity map, Harrelson says, every day became “a mobile party, a whirlwind. Chasing girls, limos, groupies. I had some fan-f---ing-tastic unbelievable times that any young man would trade his life for. Girls would come up to me in bars and say, ‘You want to take a walk on the wild side?’ And we’d just go into the bathroom.” Now that he’s a bit older, Harrelson feels some remorse for this period of excess. “The truth is, it was kind of meaningless. I feel I wasted something. I mean … you take those hours—not to mention the money—I spent and apply it toward something meaningful. Christ, I could have learned 12 languages! I could’ve learned several martial arts. I mean mastered. I could’ve become an engineer and still had time to study acupuncture and the guitar, the flute, and the ukulele. I did have a frickin’ ball! Loved it! But did it help me or anyone around me?”
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