Mira Sorvino recalls “Three Days Odyssey Through the Underworld” with Charlie Sheen in the 90s.
While promoting his Broadway debut in an exclusive interview with Page 6, Sorvino asked the actor “please ask him to marry him in the car.”
She said, “When I said ‘I don’t like this’, he had a high crack, so he said, ‘Okay, can I light it?” He had a cracked pipe in the car and I was like, ‘No’. ”
The Oscar winner also explained that he begs the “two and a half men” alum.
Sorvino, 58, and Sheen, 60, were longtime mates who had nursed crashes for many years.
The actress’s recollections are very different from those offered in his memoir “The Book of Sheen,” published earlier this month.
The “Platoon” star writes that while riding a ram from the police in 1998, he visited the house of guitarist Slash and randomly came across Sorvino.
Sheen claimed that 60-year-old Slash had pleaded with the troubled actor to go into rehab, but Sorvino took it a step further.
“Listen to me, you’re a crazy, beautiful man,” he claimed that Sorvino said after pulling him aside. “I understand that you don’t want to go, but you have no choice. …Look at me, Charlie, look at me. I’ll sleep with you – if you promise to go to court this morning.”
Sorvino, who hasn’t read the book yet, laughs when he hears the story.
“I don’t think it actually fell that way. I’d beg for something different,” she told us, adding that she incredibly liked the candidate Emmy.
“He was very loved by me,” explains Sorvino, who set the record straight that she didn’t say she would sleep with Sheen. “We had worked together before. Our father was a dear friend.”
A Sheen spokesperson did not request comment.
Meanwhile, the “Romy and Michele High School Reunion” star has been busy these days starring as Roxy Hart in “Chicago.”
“It was so amazing. It’s so cuuntful, it’s very intense,” she blew through the Broadway experience. “I love it, I’m so happy… I love playing Roxy. She’s an amazing character.”
Sorvino is bullying her version of Roxy “seems to be very different from the rest” because she “brings something new to a venerable 30-year show.”
She explains: “I see her more, in a way, like a child… I play her, a little more innocent and vulnerable than the character was played.
She acknowledges that a fierce schedule, including five weekend shows, means that “sometimes (her) feet feel like jelly before the show.”
Sorvino also shows off her vocal talent for “bending name” in the Fox celebrity version on Monday, playing for End Human Traffic, an organization worthy of her heart that she learned after filming a miniseries about human trafficking.
“My life has changed because I spoke to these women who were trafficked in America and took everything from them,” the “Sam Summer” star tells us.