2025-01-25
38 分钟In light of Demi Moore's recent "Best Actress" Oscar nomination, we are re-sharing an episode that we originally published on Sept. 14. The actress discusses how her relationship to her body and fame has changed after decades in the public eye.
Tennis teaches you not to be distracted from being in the very present at every moment that you're out there competing.
It's more important to be present in.
Life than even on a tennis court.
That's eight time Grand Slam champion Andre Agassi on everything and nothing to do with tennis.
Read more@nytimes.com UBS Agassi that's nytimes.com UBS A G A S S I.
Hi.
There, it's Lulu Garcia Navarro.
This week we're going to be re airing an interview I loved from last year, a conversation with Demi Moore.
When we talked, Moore's movie the Substance was just about to open in theaters.
At the time, I noted that she was already getting awards buzz for her performance,
and just this week she received her first ever Oscar nomination for Best Actress for that film,
making it a great time to revisit this conversation.
Don't worry, we'll have a new episode next week,
but for now, enjoy my interview with Demi Moore from the New York Times.
This is the interview.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
It is hard to describe Demi Moore's new movie, the Substance.
On the one hand, it's a dark comedy about the horrors of getting older as a woman in Hollywood,
but but it's also a literal body horror film.
The basic premise is that Moore's character takes this strange elixir that allows her to create a younger,