Late-night talk shows are supposed to be fun, relaxed, and welcoming — especially for beloved TV stars.
But according to The Good Doctor’s Freddie Highmore, one backstage experience was anything but.
In a surprisingly candid revelation, Highmore shared that an unnamed talk show host prefers not to see guests before the cameras roll — a rule so strict that, at one point, the actor was forced by the host’s team to hide in a broom closet just to avoid an accidental encounter.
Yes. A broom closet.

Why This Story Shocked Fans
Freddie Highmore has built a reputation as one of Hollywood’s most polite, thoughtful, and low-drama actors. He’s not known for complaints, call-outs, or viral confessions.
Which is exactly why this story landed so hard.
This wasn’t bitterness.
It wasn’t a rant.
It was a matter-of-fact anecdote — delivered with dry humor — that quietly exposed just how rigid and bizarre some talk show traditions can be behind the scenes.
The Unwritten Rules of Late-Night TV
According to Highmore, the host in question insists on never interacting with guests off-camera before the interview begins. The idea? Keep the conversation “fresh” and spontaneous for the audience.
But in practice, that meant production staff scrambling to physically hide a guest rather than risk a polite hello in the hallway.
For fans, that raises an uncomfortable question:
At what point does “professionalism” cross into something… unnecessary?
Why This Feels So On-Brand for Freddie Highmore
Perhaps the most telling part of the story isn’t the closet — it’s Highmore’s reaction.
He didn’t sound offended.
He didn’t name names.
He didn’t escalate.
Instead, he treated it like an absurd footnote in an otherwise grateful career — which somehow made the situation feel even more awkward.
The contrast between Highmore’s calm demeanor and the extreme measures taken around him only highlights how strange the environment must have been.
Fans Are Now Guessing — And Debating
Unsurprisingly, social media quickly lit up with speculation about which host enforces such a rule. But Highmore’s decision to keep the name private has shifted the focus away from blame and toward a bigger conversation:
Should talk shows feel this impersonal?
Or is this just another reminder that TV friendliness doesn’t always reflect reality?
Some fans see it as harmless routine.
Others see it as cold — even disrespectful.
A Reminder That Hollywood Isn’t Always Glamorous
This moment doesn’t expose scandal.
It doesn’t cancel anyone.
But it does peel back the curtain.
Behind the laughter, applause, and carefully timed interviews, Hollywood can still be awkward, rigid, and occasionally ridiculous — even for stars as respected as Freddie Highmore.
And sometimes, the most revealing stories happen not under the spotlight…
…but next to a mop and a bucket.