Demi Moore still has the ‘Ghost’ clay pots she made with Patrick Swayze

Demi Moore claims she still has the clay pots she and Patrick Swayze made during their steamy scene in “Ghost.”

The 61-year-old actress stopped by “The Drew Barrymore Show” on Tuesday, where she reflected on meeting the late “Dirty Dancing” star just moments before they filmed the iconic scene in 1990.

“Well the first thing that just popped into my head was meeting Patrick Swayze for the first time going, ‘Oh you know trying to figure out his thing,’” Moore explained.

“And then he took his shirt off and I was like, ‘Oh got it. Get on behind me,’” she joked, adding, “I still have my little pots that I made, which are pitiful. They’re like the saddest looking things.”

The pair played lovers in the film, but it was their co-star Whoopi Goldberg who was showered with praise from the Academy, winning an Oscar for her role in the film.

“‘Oh got it. Get on behind me,’” Demi Moore remembered thinking when she saw Patrick Swayze shirtless before the pottery scene. ©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Col
Demi Moore and Patrick Swayze in “Ghost” in 1990. Everett collection

Swayze died in 2009 of pancreatic cancer at age 57.

Moore also told Barrymore on Tuesday about the “moving” experience she had while working with Jack Nicholson in “A Few Good Men” in 1992.

“In the big courtroom scenes when Jack Nicholson is up on the stand they were shooting the other direction all day. And here I’m watching this iconic actor, this actor that I’ve grown up with such respect for, do off-camera at full steam all day long,” she remembered.

“It was something that just moved me and stayed with me on the importance of how we show up for each other,” Moore added.

Demi Moore is seen in Midtown on Jan. 31, 2024, in New York City. GC Images
Swayze died in 2009 of pancreatic cancer.

Earlier this week, Moore reunited with her ex-husband Bruce Willis to celebrate their daughter Tallulah’s 30th birthday. The duo have remained friendly after the “Die Hard” actor was diagnosed with aphasia and frontotemporal dementia.

“I think the most important thing I could share is just to meet them where they’re at,” Moore told Andy Cohen during a recent SiriusXM Town Hall about their blended family coming together amid his diagnosis.

“When you let go of who they’ve been or who you think, or even who you would like them to be, you can then really stay in the present and take in the joy and the love that is present and there for all that they are –– not all that they’re not,” she added.

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