Why Raven-Symoné Told Demi Lovato She Was Not "the Nicest" on Set

Originally appeared on E! Online

Raven-Symoné and Demi Lovato are putting the past behind them.

In the new Hulu documentary Child Star, the former Disney Channel alums got candid about meeting back in 2010, with the That's So Raven actress admitting she had a less than positive experience as a guest star on Demi's show Sonny with a Chance.

"When we first got on the phone to talk about this project," Demi said in the documentary—which she also directed and produced—"I was like, 'I watched you on That's So Raven. Such an inspiration.' You were like, 'B---h, I was on your show.' I was like, 'Oh my god, she was.'"

But as Demi explained, she has a hard time remembering much of that period in her life due to her dissociation (a disorder that can cause forgetfulness due to past trauma, per the American Psychiatric Association).

However, the 32-year-old does remember "how difficult I was to work with, because I was in so much pain and I was hurting."

And Raven witnessed that firsthand while appearing as Amber Algoode on Sonny with a Chance.

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"I mean, you weren't the nicest person," she recalled. "You weren't like, 'Welcome!' You weren't doing that."

But as a child actor herself, Raven knew there had to be an explanation for Demi's behavior.

"Being the type of person I am and that I've been in the industry for as long as you, and I understand the glaze over the eyes," the 38-year-old shared, "I didn't hold it against you. I just was like, ‘Something's going on there.'"

Demi Lovato, Raven-Symoné
Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Demi has been candid about the trauma she experienced while growing up a child star and the difficulties she had connecting with her fellow actors, which she discussed with her Camp Rock costar Alyson Stoner in the documentary.

Noting that her career "exploded" after the first movie in 2008, Demi felt a shift in the power dynamic on Camp Rock 2, saying that she originally felt validated because she "had been leveled up." But that career high came at the expense of her relationships with the cast.

As Demi explained, "I was trading connection for success."

And Alyson was one of the friendships that was sacrificed along the way.

"It felt so hard to access you in that way," the 31-year-old recalled. "We had lost that thread of trust, we had lost that closeness."

Alyson added, "The last few years of working together felt really challenging. I do remember a sense of walking on eggshells. There was definitely a lot of fear of a blowup."

And while Demi knows that everyone on the set was "going through" their own stuff, the "Confident" singer is aware that "it still didn't give me an excuse to treat anyone poorly."

Alyson Stoner, JoJo Siwa, Demi Lovato, Raven-Symoné
Kevin Winter/Getty Images

"I just want to genuinely, deeply apologize for any stress or any walking on eggshells, any hurt feelings," Demi told Alyson. "I'm genuinely so sorry for that. And I look back at that time and I have profound sadness because I'm like, 'How many people did I treat poorly?'"

Making the documentarywhich also includes interviews with fellow kid actors Drew Barrymore, Kenan Thompson and JoJo Siwa—has given Demi a new perspective, especially when it comes to what she hopes for her own kids one day.

"If I was talking to my future children, I would say 'practice, practice, practice,'" Demi recently told E! News at a screening for Child Star. "Then, when you're old enough, you can follow and pursue your dreams. But it's important to remember to have a childhood when you can."

The "Heart Attack" singer—who has been engaged to fellow musician Jordan "Jutes" Lutes since December—also shared that one of the biggest takeaway from working on the documentary was wanting to "protect my kids from social media and being in the public eye."

She added, "But if music is their calling, they can do that when they turn 18."

Child Star is produced by Demi as well as Michael D. Ratner, Scott Ratner, Miranda Sherman and Kfir Goldberg for OBB Pictures.

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