- Matthew Perry died at 54 years old
- He has found lifeless in his pool
- A new report sheds an eerie light on him
Matthew Perry alleged he was clean and sober for 19 months leading up to his shocking death. However, a new report claims that wasn’t the case. In a jaw-dropping twist worthy of a Hollywood thriller, Perry's name is now at the center of a scandal that's rocking Tinseltown to its core. Sources close to the star have dropped bombshell allegations about his turbulent final years, and we've got the inside scoop!
Did we really know Matthew?
Matthew Perry allegedly physically assaulted many women in the years before his death, sources close to the late Friends actor have revealed. One of the women he allegedly assaulted was his ex-fiancée Molly Hurwitz, at whom he “threw a coffee table” in 2021 when she confronted him over cheating.
It's a tale of rage and betrayal that's sending shockwaves through the celebrity world. The charming actor we thought we knew is now painted in a starkly different light, as insiders reveal a pattern of physical outbursts. The claims suggest that Perry's ex-fiancée, Molly Hurwitz, a literary talent manager, and his live-in sober companion, Morgan Moses, bore the brunt of his fury.
Picture this: Valentine's Day, 2021, a day of love turned nightmare. Hurwitz confronts Perry about a romantic gift to another woman, and what does he do? Allegedly, he hurls a coffee table at her in a fit of anger! "He hated that she dumped him and he had terrible abandonment issues," sources claim.
Fast forward to March 2022, and the scene gets even darker. Perry, in a reported meltdown, is said to have shoved Moses into a wall and flung her onto a bed. This explosive behavior led Moses to quit and cut ties with the star a year before his memoir hit the shelves.
Speaking of his memoir, 'Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing,' Perry claimed to be sober and hailed Moses as his lifesaver. But sources are now calling bluff on his sobriety and their friendship, alleging that the truth was far more tumultuous.
Drugs can make you do crazy things.
In his memoir, Perry claimed that he proposed to Hurwitz while in a rehab facility and later went on to forget about it. "I bought her a ring because I was desperate that she would leave me," Perry wrote without taking Hurtwitz’s name.
"I didn’t want to be this injured and alone during Covid. I was high on 1,800 milligrams of hydrocodone when I asked her to marry me. I had even asked for her family’s blessing. Then I’d proposed, high as a kite. And on one knee," he added.
After coming back to Los Angeles, and after he was sober, Perry said he was shocked to find out that he was engaged and living with her. "I was slowly beginning to realize that I was engaged, lived with a woman and two dogs," he wrote. "Needless to say, I was not ready for any of this. You live with me? We live together?"
Matthew was a different person...apparently
Who knows who Matthew really was off camera? Three sources told 'US Weekly' this week one or two things about Perry that the public may not believe. "He wanted to sell books," one source said. "Everything was crafted and manipulated; the truth wasn’t important."
The sources also told the outlet, "Apparently, he crashed his Aston Martin many times while high," noting that the alleged accidents happened during a time that Perry claimed to be sober. "He just damaged the car and no one was hurt, [but] he did not consider [that] he could have killed someone."
The source alleged that Perry would use the celeb dating app Raya to meet young women who would bring him drugs.
"He would do the FaceTime thing and get to know them. Then it would be like, ‘Let’s hang out,’ and he would say [to come to his house],” the source said. “He wasn’t out in public anymore. That’s how he snuck things past people. Addicts are smart, and Matthew was brilliant."
"The man those close to him knew and the man that the world saw were two very different people," the source added.
Also interesting:
In a candid confession, Perry admitted to proposing to Hurwitz while high on a staggering 1,800 milligrams of hydrocodone. But sources are challenging his narrative, suggesting that the proposal wasn't drug-fueled at all, and that Perry's account was a deliberate attempt to wound Hurwitz.
The world saw Perry as the funny guy next door, but those close to him knew a different man—a man grappling with demons that ultimately led to his tragic overdose in October.
As the dust settles on these shocking revelations, one thing is clear: the star's legacy is now under intense scrutiny, and the truth may be more complex than any script he ever performed.