New Delhi:
Charlie Sheen no longer feels drained by his work. The 46-year-old actor was sacked from his old TV show, Two and a Half Men, last year following his erratic behaviour and drug abuse but he insists he is now in a much better place, especially with his new series, Anger Management.
He said: "This whole thing is like a return to innocence for me. I feel younger. I feel like I'm finally involved with something that is nourishing and not debilitating, not draining."
After being fired by Two and a Half Men creator Chuck Lorre, Charlie initially slated him at every opportunity he had, but admits he's now learned that's not a wise idea.
He said: "I've turned it around where I didn't get fired, I got traded. I've learnt to stick with what you know and don't take your dirty laundry public. Out of respect, keep that s**t under wraps."
The father-of-five - who was replaced by Ashton Kutcher - says he was determined to get another TV comedy as he didn't want to be remembered for getting sacked because of his crazy lifestyle.
Speaking at a press conference in Beverly Hills, Charlie said: "My legacy could not be what happened at the end of Two and a Half Men. When it went icky at the end, I couldn't have that be what everybody remembered. I wanted to do something that was more about me, who I was as a person, as an actor, and just something that felt more like a warm hug than a snake bite."
He said: "This whole thing is like a return to innocence for me. I feel younger. I feel like I'm finally involved with something that is nourishing and not debilitating, not draining."
After being fired by Two and a Half Men creator Chuck Lorre, Charlie initially slated him at every opportunity he had, but admits he's now learned that's not a wise idea.
He said: "I've turned it around where I didn't get fired, I got traded. I've learnt to stick with what you know and don't take your dirty laundry public. Out of respect, keep that s**t under wraps."
The father-of-five - who was replaced by Ashton Kutcher - says he was determined to get another TV comedy as he didn't want to be remembered for getting sacked because of his crazy lifestyle.
Speaking at a press conference in Beverly Hills, Charlie said: "My legacy could not be what happened at the end of Two and a Half Men. When it went icky at the end, I couldn't have that be what everybody remembered. I wanted to do something that was more about me, who I was as a person, as an actor, and just something that felt more like a warm hug than a snake bite."