
Gwyneth Paltrow has reflected on life in the 1990s - a decade she says was "great" because you could do cocaine and not get caught. Of course, the sentence, for which there has been criticism, was said in the context of a joke.
Paltrow, now 50, rose to fame in the '90s thanks to early roles like Seven (1995) and Emma (1996) — or 1998 films like "Sliding Doors," "Perfect Murder" and "Shakespeare in Love", productions that have given the actress a number of awards.
The following year, she also appeared in The Talented Mr Ripley alongside Matt Damon and Jude Law, before starting the next era with The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) and Shalloë Hal (2001).
Off-screen, she also made headlines for her private life and relationships with the likes of Brad Pitt, from 1995-1997, to whom she later became engaged; or Ben Affleck, from 1997-1999, with whom he was connected shortly after the end of the movie "Bounce", where they were both protagonists.
These days, she's busy with her lifestyle brand Goop, while also being a mother of two with ex-husband Chris Martin.
But that doesn't stop him from reminiscing about the old days. Gwyneth waxed nostalgic about the time decades ago on The Late Late Show with James Corden.
Corden asked her what it was like to be "so famous," in a time when there was no social media, nothing.
Paltrow replied:
"It was wonderful. I mean, you can do cocaine and not get caught. You could just be in a bar, having fun, dancing on the table, no phones, no cameras.”
Source: Daily Mail