Demi Moore recalled the rigorous workout routine she put herself through after giving birth to her second daughter, Scout Willis, in 1991.
The actress, who was living in Malibu, California with her husband Bruce Willis at the time, decided to bike 30 miles to work every day while filming “Indecent Proposal.”
“I would feed her through the night, get up in the dark with my trainer, bike to Paramount, go to the location, and then shoot a full day, which is usually 12 hours, and then start all over again,” Moore said. He said in a new interview On “CBS Sunday Morning.”
“I think [Scout] “My daughter was about five or six months old at the time of filming,” she added.
Moore also admitted that she had unrealistic expectations about her post-pregnancy recovery.
“I was putting so much pressure on myself,” the 61-year-old “Ghost” star said in an interview Sunday.
“Yes, I have had experiences where I was told to lose weight, and all of those experiences may have been embarrassing and humiliating, but that's what I did to myself.”
“It's so crazy and so stupid to even think about what I've done to my body,” the Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle star continued.
She also added that it's “probably” “not that important” that your body will bounce back after giving birth.
Still, Moore said that getting back to her pre-baby body was “everything” to her “at the time.”
The Emmy-nominated actress has three daughters with Bruce, 69, during her 13-year marriage.
Rumer was born in 1988, followed by Scout in 1991 and Tallulah in 1994.
Moore and her ex-husband divorced in 2000, but the family still spends a lot of time together as Bruce battles frontotemporal dementia.
“Die Hard” actors Diagnosed with aphasia and dementia He retired from acting in March 2022.
Tallulah, 30, gave an update on her father in an interview with E! News in August.
“There's a lot of love in our visits and I feel that that means more than anything,” she told the outlet, explaining that Bruce does “the same thing” and that it's a “good thing” considering his situation.





