Tom Holland talks sobriety, mental health for 'The Crowded Room' - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Tom Holland says TV gig helped him recognize mental health ‘triggers’ amid sobriety

Tom Holland smiles and fiddles with one cuff in a dark double-breasted blazer.
Tom Holland said his new TV series, “The Crowded Room,” helped him learn more about his mental health.
(Jordan Strauss / Invision / Associated Press)
Share via

Tom Holland has a lot to celebrate: a forthcoming Apple TV+ series, a better understanding of his mental health and more than one year of sobriety.

The “Spider-Man: No Way Home” star recently spoke with Entertainment Weekly to promote his new show, “The Crowded Room.” The psychological drama stars Holland as Danny Sullivan, a man who is arrested in a 1979 shooting in New York. He told EW that the role allowed him to explore a different side of his acting.

“I’m no stranger to the physical aspects of the job, doing the whole action-movie thing,” the “Uncharted” star said. “But the mental aspect, it really beat me up and it took a long time for me to recover afterwards, to sort of get back to reality.”

Advertisement

With ‘Uncharted’ and soon ‘The Last of Us’ for HBO, game studio Naughty Dog is ready for its Hollywood closeup. Gamer movie star Tom Holland sees the future.

Feb. 10, 2022

Holland said that preparation for “The Crowded Room” took a mental toll. After nine months of filming the series, he said it was difficult to disconnect from the character.

“I remember having a bit of a meltdown at home and thinking, like, ‘I’m going to shave my head. I need to shave my head because I need to get rid of this character,’” he recalled.

He added: “It was unlike anything I’ve ever experienced before.”

‘Spider-Man’ star Tom Holland made a ‘very, very brief return’ to Instagram this weekend to explain why he hasn’t been active on social media lately.

Aug. 15, 2022

To portray Sullivan, Holland said he worked with psychiatrists to get a better understanding of his own mental health. According to EW, Holland is 16 months sober and has incorporated the behind-the-scenes work into his own life, especially when it comes to what the actor describes as “recognizing triggers” and defining “things that stress me out.”

Advertisement

Holland, who is also an executive producer for “The Crowded Room,” has been vocal about his mental health. In August, he explained why he took time off from social media.

“I have taken a break from social media for my mental health because I find Instagram and Twitter to be overstimulating, to be overwhelming,” he said on Instagram. “I get caught up, and I spiral when I read things about me online, and ultimately, it’s very detrimental to my mental state.”

A plan to increase Los Angeles County’s psychiatric mobile crisis teams has faltered, often leaving people no choice but to turn to police during a mental health emergency.

April 13, 2023

Since then, Holland has returned to social media solely to promote his Brothers Trust charity organization, post the occasional red carpet photo and share news about “The Crowded Room.”

Advertisement

Holland has been less open about his sobriety. While staying home in April 2020 during the pandemic-related closures, Holland told Jimmy Kimmel about “drinking a lot” with his brothers and said he was hoping to limit his alcohol consumption.

“I actually said this weekend that I was gonna stop drinking for a week. I was gonna have a week off,” he said. “Literally, Monday morning ... Ryan Reynolds sent me a case of gin.”

Amy Schumer says she was making fun of herself, not Tom Holland, in a video that resembled the ‘Spider-Man’ star’s recent announcement about his mental health.

Aug. 18, 2022

Through “The Crowded Room,” Holland said he hopes viewers will “have more respect and more sympathy for people who are going through mental-health issues.”

“I hope that people will feel educated about the powers of mental health, the struggles [and] our incredible abilities to survive,” he added.

“The Crowded Room” premieres June 9 on Apple TV+. The series was created by Akiva Goldsman and also stars Amanda Seyfried and Emmy Rossum.

Advertisement