Former Bond girl Jane Seymour has opened up about a health-related incident that could have killed her in the 1980s, revealing she “saw the light” during the ordeal.
The 72-year-old actress, who is known for her role as Solitaire in the James Bond film Live and Let Die (1973), contracted bronchitis while filming a movie, but also went into anaphylactic shock.
As a result, she was treated with antibiotics, however, they weren’t administered correctly and it could have killed her.
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Instead of being injected into a vein, it was injected into a muscle, with severe consequences for her health.
“I have no idea, I do know that I left my body [after the near-lethal antibiotics],” Seymour told the Sunday Times magazine when asked if she knows what happens to humans when they die.
“I did see the white light and I did look down and quite clearly see and hear everyone screaming and trying to resuscitate me, which they were able to do.”
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Seymour added: ”But when you’re out of your body, everything goes very calm.”
Although Seymour says she does have many regrets in her life, the aforementioned incident isn’t one of them.
The Wedding Crashers star often is open about her life to the public, recently opening up about her decision to pose for Playboy when she was 67, becoming the oldest model to do so.
“I just thought, ‘What? Why would they want a woman in her mid to late sixties to do Playboy?’ I was never going to be naked, but they were going to be celebrating being a woman at my age,” Seymour told The Mirror.
The actress continued: “And I just thought, ‘Well, you know, that might be inspirational to some women who kind of give up.'”
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