Demi Moore’s daily diet: Red Bull, lettuce, a tablespoon of tuna
BY BILL ZWECKER February 2, 2012 6:46PM
Demi Moore | Jason Kempin~Getty Images
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Updated: May 9, 2012 10:13AM
Demi Moore is lucky to have attentive daughters — especially Rumer Willis — and several longtime friends who are really there for her as the actress struggles to face alleged drug problems and an eating disorder.
Yet, it’s clear Moore has a long way to go if she’s truly going to get well.
Two sources, long close to Moore, say the key problems for the actress, once the highest paid in Hollywood, are her dual obsessions with remaining young and being ultra-thin.
“She’s more obsessed with it than anyone I’ve ever seen, and this is Hollywood! Where everyone is nuts about dieting and staying young,” said a veteran agent and Moore pal. Apparently, Ashton Kutcher’s estranged wife’s recent daily diet has been “Red Bull for breakfast. Red Bull for lunch. Red Bull for dinner, with a lettuce leaf and a tablespoon — yes a tablespoon! — of tuna fish thrown in. … That’s it.”
A second source close to Moore and her family described her intense focus on remaining young as being “insane. … Demi got so she’d almost talk about nothing else than finding ways to keep young and pretty. … For a long time, it was clear she was doing it all to keep Ashton interested. Then, when she found out about his cheating, her world really spiraled out of control.” While Kutcher has called and checked in pretty regularly since Moore’s collapse and hospitalization last week, both sources stressed that ex-husband Bruce Willis has appeared far more concerned. “Bruce has been very worried about Demi for some time — like many of us — and he’s truly stepped up to the plate in the past week,” said one source.
Patitz, like Klum a German model, told InTouch magazine Seal “is not a nice person. He has anger issues … definitely not someone who I think of fondly anymore.”
First of all, the director is a Canadian, and he merely is moving his family to a gorgeous farm in New Zealand, where he plans to shoot much of the “Avatar” sequel over the next couple of years.
Money raised will support the Garrett scholarship for Columbia’s musical theater program, coordinated byAlbert “Bill” Williams. The fund was established in 1998 from proceeds of a Garrett show at Columbia, when she was here promoting her memoir, co-written by former Sun-Times man Ron Rapoport.





