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Denzel Washington Reflects on Overcoming Alcoholism and Celebrates 10 Years of Sobriety

Milton Quintanilla

Oscar-award-winning actor Denzel Washington recently opened up about his past struggles with alcohol, which he has since left a decade ago. Washington, who recently starred in the sequel film Gladiator ll, explained what his alcoholism entails, including drinking two bottles of wine a day, Relevant reported. 

“Wine was my thing,” Washington wrote in a new Esquire piece, “and now I was popping $4,000 bottles just because that’s what was left. And then later in those years, I’d call Gil Turner’s Fine Wines & Spirits on Sunset Boulevard and say, ‘Send me two bottles, the best of this or that.’ And my wife’s saying, ‘Why do you keep ordering just two?’ I said, ‘Because if I order more, I’ll drink more.’ So I kept it to two bottles, and I would drink them both over the course of the day.

He added that he built a wine cellar that could contain about 10,000 bottles in his house in 1999 and would spend a significant amount of money as a way to disguise his addiction. 

“I had this ideal idea of wine tastings and all that, which is what it was at first,” the actor explained. “And that’s a very subtle thing. I mean, I drank the best. I drank the best.

“I’ve done a lot of damage to the body,” he continued. “We’ll see. I’ve been clean 10 years this December. I stopped at 60, and I haven’t had a thimble’s worth since. Things are opening up for me now – like being 70. It’s real. And it’s OK. This is the last chapter – if I get another 30, what do I want to do? My mother made it to 97.”

Back in 2017, Washington said that his mother was a major factor in achieving sobriety. 

“My mother said to me when I was 59, she said, ‘Denzel, you do a lot of good. You have to do good the right way, and you know what I’m talking about,’” he said. “I don’t drink anymore; I don’t do any of those things. I’m all about the message …You have to be unafraid and unashamed to share it in the way your millennial generation knows how.”

He likened his alcoholism with young people and their addiction to social media nowadays.

“We better understand that we are addicted to this [he said, holding up a phone],” he said. “It’s not its fault; it’s a magnification and a reflection of our own free will … I pray for your generation … What an opportunity you have! Don’t be depressed by it because we have to go through this; we’re here now. You can’t put that thing back in the box.”

Photo Credit: ©Getty Images/Alberto E. Rodriguez/Staff


Milton QuintanillaMilton Quintanilla is a freelance writer and content creator. He is a contributing writer for CrosswalkHeadlines and the host of the For Your Soul Podcast, a podcast devoted to sound doctrine and biblical truth. He holds a Masters of Divinity from Alliance Theological Seminary.