The hidden life of Matthew Perry: βHe would say: I need to stop and get helpβ
The actorβs publicist and manager worked with him for more than 30 years, before his death in 2023. They discuss the man behind the headlines β and why they are continuing his mission to help others struggling with addiction
Watch the third season of Friends, writes Matthew Perry in his memoir, and you can see how thin he had become by the end of it. βOpioids fuck with your appetite, plus they make you vomit constantly,β he writes. Look again, and yes β his fragile wrists emerge from a shirt that looks as if he has borrowed it from someone far larger, his trousers hang off him β and itβs unbearably sad now, with the knowledge that addiction would kill Perry nearly 30 years later, at the age of 54. At the time, most people watching probably wouldnβt have noticed, dazzled instead by Perryβs sharpness and immaculate comic timing as Chandler Bing, the showβs dry wit. He was having to take 55 Vicodin pills a day β an opioid - just to function and avoid terrible withdrawal symptoms, but he was never high while he was working, he writes in Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing, which came out in 2022. He just had to make it to the end of the season so he could get help. Had the series lasted for more than its 25 episodes, he thought it would have killed him.
That was the first time Perry went into rehab. He was 26, and one of the biggest stars in the world. There would be more than 65 attempts to detox from drug and alcohol addiction over the next decades until his death in 2023. Last week, a doctor was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison for supplying ketamine in the lead-up to Perryβs death (though not the ketamine that killed him); three others who have pleaded guilty will be sentenced in the coming months.
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Β© Photograph: NBC/NBCUniversal/Getty Images

Β© Photograph: NBC/NBCUniversal/Getty Images

Β© Photograph: NBC/NBCUniversal/Getty Images