Sunday Times

CHARLIE'S ANGELS

I told them, says Sheen

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ON May 20 1998, Charlie Sheen was rushed to Los Robles medical centre in California after injecting himself with cocaine twice in rapid succession — because, he later explained, the first shot did not seem to be working.

As he collapsed from the resulting stroke, he told his bodyguard to phone 911. On the way to the hospital the paramedics were selling their story to the highest bidder.

So many things about that story are troubling that it is hard to know where to start, but let’s begin with the bodyguard. If you are hired to protect someone’s body, perhaps waiting around for them to have a stroke before calling an ambulance is not the most proactive way to approach your job. But that’s Hollywood. It’s a story we have heard so many times that we are shocked to find it is still true.

Sheen’s life has always been turbulent. Raised on location — including, when he was 10, the Philippine­s set of Apocalypse Now, where he watched his actor father Martin fall off the wagon and have a heart attack on camera — he was a star by the age of 23, washed up at 33, the comeback kid at 40 and now, at 50, says he is grateful finally to announce that he is HIVpositiv­e because the freedom from hiding the truth might help him stop drinking.

The problem he will have is that Hollywood has no interest in helping anyone stop doing anything as long as they are making money.

Mega-star actors may become multimilli­onaires before their school friends have paid off their college loans. From the instant of their first success they are surrounded by a system that needs them to remain frozen exactly in that moment for years to come, endlessly repeating the role that signalled their earning potential.

Sheen’s first word on screen

MELTDOWN: Charlie Sheen and former girlfriend Natalie Kenly in 2011. Kenly is one of several former lovers who claim not to have known about his HIV-positive status was “drugs”, in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. He had a reputation for being a bit of a bad boy — even among his notorious Brat Pack peers including Robert Downey jnr and Kiefer Sutherland — which chimed well with his onscreen rebellious roles in the ’80s.

“With Charlie, there’s never been a problem when he’s work- ing,” his manager Mark Burg told Vanity Fair in 2011. On the set of his sitcom Two and a Half Men, according to the crew, he was a friendly, profession­al actor who knew everyone by name.

The trouble started in the hiatuses — around Christmas in particular, when filming stopped for almost a month and he started to fill the void with drink, drugs and prostitute­s.

We all have a friend who gets a bit too drunk every time the booze comes out. In Hollywood, industry parties are full of those people. Hollywood, as River Phoenix, Heath Ledger and Philip Seymour Hoffman all found, is what the addiction industry calls an “enabler” — and the addiction industry itself, of course, is part of the game. When CBS suspended Two and a Half Men in 2011 because of Sheen’s behaviour, his managers were bombarded with e-mails from rehab clinics across the US, desperate for some of that Sheen glamour to sell on to future clients.

That glamour may be wearing thin. A hot young actor going off the rails is one thing; and even a fortysomet­hing man has a certain “save me” quality — when Sheen’s life appeared to unravel in 2009 and 2010 the resulting headlines boosted ratings for his show. But a 50-year-old man’s midlife car crash, culminatin­g in telling the world that he has HIV, is not so sexy for an industry built on glamour.

The good news for Sheen and his steadfast legion of fans is that he has spoken the truth about his secret four-year battle with HIV. The outpouring­s of support from fellow celebritie­s have been much louder for this revelation than for the news, over the years, that he has been in drug rehab clinics.

Some stars — Johnny Depp, Elizabeth Taylor — pull themselves through self-destructiv­e behaviour. Others are not so lucky. In a town where even bodyguards and paramedics are part of the circus of addiction and shattered lives, few will go out of their way to make this stop. FRESH-FACED: Charlie Sheen in the 1986 film ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ ROCKY MOUNTAIN LOW: An Aspen police mug shot in 2009 after Sheen was arrested on charges of attacking his wife, Brooke Mueller

A 50-year-old man’s midlife car crash is not so sexy for an industry built on glamour

RISKY BEHAVIOUR: Sheen kisses porn star Brett Rossi after a sail on a yacht during a vacation in Los Cabos, Mexico, last year. She claimed this week he did not divulge his HIV-positive status to her

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