Julia Roberts Thinks the 'Huge Passage of Time and Cultural Shifts' Change How We See âPretty Womanâ 36 Years Later
- - Julia Roberts Thinks the 'Huge Passage of Time and Cultural Shifts' Change How We See âPretty Womanâ 36 Years Later
Victoria EdelJanuary 8, 2026 at 1:36 AM
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Richard Gere (left) and Julia Roberts in 'Pretty Woman'. -
Julia Roberts opened up about Pretty Woman and how she sees its story 36 years later
Roberts starred in the 1990 romance with Richard Gere
Roberts said she didn't think she could make the movie again now but that she doesn't think it's aged any differently than other stories have
Julia Roberts is looking back at Pretty Woman and thinking about how modern viewers might see it differently now.
Roberts, 58, opened up about the 1990 film in a Jan. 6 interview with Deadline. Asked if she would make Pretty Woman again today, she said, âOh, itâs impossible. I have too many years of the weight of the world inside of me now that I wouldnât be able to kind of levitate in a movie like that, right?â
She continued, âI mean, not weight of the world, like, negative, but just all the things that we learn, all the things that we put in our pockets along the lane. It would be impossible to play someone who was really innocent, in a way. I mean, itâs a funny thing to say about a hooker, but I do think that there was an innocence to her, a kind of⊠I guess itâs just being young.â
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Richard Gere (left) and Julia Roberts in 'Pretty Woman'
In the movie, Roberts played Vivian, a sex worker. Richard Gereâs Edward Lewis hires her to be his escort for the week and live a life of luxury. They ultimately fall in love. The movie celebrated its 35th anniversary in 2025.
Deadline asked Roberts about how perspectives on the story have changed, noting âmany have stopped seeing Pretty Woman as an affectionate fairytale.â
âWell, I think anytime you have a huge passage of time and cultural shiftsâŠâ the actress said âThink about all the movies and plays of the â20s and â30s and â40s â you would look at them now and just be like, âHow are people saying these things, doing these things?ââ She named Gone With the Wind as an example.
She explained, âI think these are the choices that we make as artists, as art appreciators and people that love to read books and go to the theater and yeah, times change, people change, ideas change.â
Pretty Woman was Robertsâ major breakthrough role and she received an Oscar nomination for it. She also received an Oscar nod for 1989âs Steel Magnolias. She reunited on-screen with Gere, 76, in 1999âs Runaway Bride which, like Pretty Woman, was directed by Garry Marshall.
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Richard Gere (left) and Julia Roberts in 'Pretty Woman'.
Back in 2019, Roberts reflected on the movie in its grittier, earlier version in an interview with Patricia Arquette for Variety. Arquette confessed she had auditioned for the film when it was called 3,000 and shared that the original ending was âreally heavy.â
Roberts remembered, âThrew her out of the car, threw the money on top of her, as memory serves, and just drove away, leaving her in some dirty alley.â
âI got the part in 3,000,â Roberts said. âI love that youâre asking me this question, but I had no business being in a movie like that. This small movie company folded over the weekend, and by Monday, I didnât have a job.â
But one producer, Disney, stayed with the script and Marshall was hired to direct it. âAnd because heâs a great human being, he felt it would only be fair to meet me, since I had this job for three days and lost it,â Roberts said. âAnd they changed the whole thing. And it became more something that is in my wheelhouse.â Of the original, grittier take, she said, âThank God it fell apart.â
on People
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ