Jeremy Renner, Jamie Foxx, Ozzy Osbourne — And 8 Other Celebs Who've Discussed Their Experiences Of Dying And Being Brought Back To Life
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On New Year's Day 2023, Jeremy Renner was critically injured in a snowplow accident on his property in Reno, Nevada. To save his nephew from being crushed by the plow, Renner stepped onto the machine's moving wheel tracks and was subsequently thrown. His injuries included over 30 broken bones, a collapsed lung, a pierced liver, and his left eye being "squeezed out of its orbital socket."
While the actor has shared some details about his harrowing recovery, it wasn't until the release of his memoir, My Next Breath, that he revealed that while waiting for an ambulance, he temporarily died: “After about 30 minutes on the ice, breathing manually for so long, an effort akin to doing 10 or 20 push-ups per minute for half an hour…that’s when I died. I could see my lifetime. I could see everything all at once. In death, there was no time, no time at all, yet it was also all time and forever." He described death as an "exhilarating experience," but noted that a "force" told him not to let go of his life.
Renner noted that after glimpsing the afterlife, he "didn't want to come back. I remember, and I was brought back and I was so pissed off. I came back, I'm like, 'Aww!'"
In the end, "The Best Part of Me" singer said the accident gave him a new perspective on life: "It makes me — a man that didn't want to come back — really be able to be back here and live it on my terms as the captain of my own ship. And get on it or off it, I don't give a f*ck. I'm going to live life on my own terms and for nobody else. [It's] very clear. The white noise is ripped away."
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In March 1961, while filming Cleopatra, Elizabeth Taylor developed a life-threatening case of pneumonia, which led to her falling into a coma. While suffering from her illness, Taylor had to undergo a tracheotomy. As she explained on The Oprah Winfrey Show in 1992, she "was pronounced dead four times. Once, I didn’t breathe, and I had no vitals for five minutes. And that was the time that I had the near-death experience."
When Winfrey asked if the experience made Taylor unafraid of death, she replied, “Oh, absolutely. When I had the out-of-body experience and could see the people working around me, I tried desperately to move an eyelid, a finger, something to let them know that I could hear them." However, her efforts were for naught because the Cat on a Hot Tin Roof star recalled a doctor saying, "Well, I think we’ve lost her."
The then-60-year-old also remembered seeing her ex-husband and film producer Mike Todd, who had passed away in 1958, "Mike Todd was there. And I wanted to be with him more than anything in the world. He'd been dead about three years. And I was still mourning him. "He said, 'No, baby, you can't. It's not your time. You can't come over. You have to fight to go back.'"
When she eventually awoke, she told her medical team about the experience, "There were about 11 doctors in the room and I told them all what I'd experienced. Because I felt like I had to tell somebody, so I wouldn't later on think I was crazy. And then I thought that does sound so crazy. I don't think I'm going to tell anybody else."
It took the legendary actor decades to feel emboldened to share her story with the public: "I started reading about other people having the same kind of experience. They all vary slightly. Then I thought there's got to be something to it. There's just too many people who've gone through it. I know I did. Just because I haven't talked about it doesn't mean that it wasn't as real as the day it happened."
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On April 12, 2023, Jamie Foxx's daughter, Corinne, released a statement on Instagram telling fans that her father had faced a "medical complication," but was already on the mend. Fans were left in the dark as to what exactly had happened with the comedian's health until his 2024 standup special, Jamie Foxx: What Happened Was... Foxx revealed the extent of his "medical complication," telling the audience that he suffered a "brain bleed that led to a stroke."
“April 11, I was having a bad headache, and I asked my boy for a aspirin. I realized quickly that when you’re in a medical emergency, your boys don’t know what the f*ck to do,' He continued, "Before I could get the aspirin, I went out. I don’t remember 20 days." He explained that his friends took him to a doctor in Atlanta, who gave him a cortisone shot and sent him home.
Ultimately, it was his sister, Deidra Dixon, who "knew something was wrong." Foxx explained that Dixon drove him around Atlanta until they came to Piedmont Hospital, adding, "She [Dixon] didn’t know anything about Piedmont Hospital, but she had a hunch that some angels [were] in there." The Dreamgirls actor stated that after being informed of his brain bleed, his sister "knelt down outside the operating room and prayed the whole time."
On May 4, 2023, Foxx finally came out of his coma, recounting, "When I woke up, I found myself in a wheelchair. I couldn’t walk, in a wheelchair, and I was like, 'Why the f*ck am I in a wheelchair?' I’m just coming out of sh*t." Fortunately, he was able to make a full recovery.
In his acceptance speech for the Vanguard Award at the 2023 Critics' Choice Association's Celebration of Cinema and Television, Foxx explained how his harrowing incident affected him going forward: "I have a new respect for life, I have a new respect for my art. I watched so many movies and listened to so many songs, trying to have the time go by. Don’t give up on your art, man, don’t give up on your art. When you realize that it could be over like that…I got to tell you, don’t give up on your art and don’t let them take the art from you either."
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While promoting his memoir, Sonny Boy, Al Pacino recalled his experience of "temporarily" dying from COVID. The Scarface star revealed the illness had left him severely dehydrated and that after developing a fever, he was feeling "unusually not good," which led him to ask for help: "I got someone to get me a nurse to hydrate me. I was sitting there in my house, and I was gone. Like that. I didn't have a pulse...My pulse was gone. It was so — you're here, you're not. I thought: Wow, you don't even have your memories. You have nothing. Strange porridge."
Unlike others who've had near-death experiences, Pacino saw nothing on the "other side": "I didn't see the white light or anything. There's nothing there. As Hamlet says, 'To be or not to be'; 'The undiscovered country from whose bourn, no traveler returns.' And he says two words: 'no more.' It was no more. You're gone. I'd never thought about it in my life."
The now-85-year-old luckily returned to the land of the living: "In a matter of minutes, they were there—the ambulance in front of my house. I had about six paramedics in that living room, and there were two doctors, and they had these outfits on that looked like they were from outer space or something. It was kind of shocking to open your eyes and see that. Everybody was around me, and they said: 'He's back. He's here.'"
When asked by People if the experience had changed his outlook on life at all, Pacino simply answered, "Not at all."
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In December 2003, Ozzy Osbourne was seriously injured after being involved in an accident while riding a quad-bike at his Buckinghamshire home. The "Crazy Train" singer was rushed to Wexham Park hospital to undergo surgery, with son Jack telling reporters that his father had suffered "a broken collarbone, [and] eight fractured ribs that were pinching crucial blood vessels and a damaged vertebrae in his neck."
Osbourne's wife Sharon told the Daily Mirror, "He [Ozzy] had stopped breathing for a minute and a half and there was no pulse. But thank God the security guard was there to revive him. He resuscitated him and got him breathing and his pulse going again." She continued, "He has got such horrendous injuries to his body. His whole body is traumatised. The doctors are hoping there hasn't been any lasting damage but until Ozzy can actually come round and get off the ventilator and talk then will they know."
The Osbourne family later learned that Ozzy's medication regimen, which he had been prescribed to cope with Sharon's cancer diagnosis, was partly to blame for the accident.
When asked if he had a "near-death experience," he recalled, "I did see a white light but I don't think it was the f*cking house of angels." In his 2009 autobiography, I Am Ozzy, he elaborated: "I didn't know where I was or how long I'd been there. I would drift in and out of consciousness. Other times there would be a white light shining through the darkness, but no f*cking angels, no one blowing trumpets and no man in a white beard."
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In the 1980s, Mötley Crüe was notorious for their drug usage, and it almost spelled the end for co-founder Nikki Sixx, as he wrote in a 2017 op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, "Heroin nearly killed me. As a matter of fact, it did: For two minutes in 1987 I was pronounced clinically dead from an overdose."
On December 23, 1987, after a drug-fueled evening of partying with fellow rock stars from Ratt and Guns N' Roses, Sixx was "shooting up between snorts of cocaine and shots of booze" when he was injected with one last dose of heroin and promptly passed out.
However, this overdose wasn't like previous ones (Sixx estimates he has "overdosed about half a dozen times"), because the now-66-year-old turned blue. In his memoir, The Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rock Star, he stated that Slash's then-girlfriend, Sally McLaughlin, desperately tried to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
Once paramedics were on the scene, they revived Sixx with two shots of adrenaline into his heart and rushed him to the hospital, which he wasn't pleased about. Sixx remembers of waking up, "There was a cop asking me questions, so I told him to go f*ck himself. I ripped out my tubes and staggered in just my leather pants into the parking lot, where two teenage girls were sitting crying around a candle. They had heard on the radio that I was dead and looked kind of surprised to see me." Amidst the chaos, word had gotten out that Sixx had, in fact, died. However, after the teens got over their initial shock, they gave Sixx a ride, a jacket, and a lecture about quitting drugs.
The incident inspired Mötley Crüe's 1989 hit, "Kickstart My Heart."
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On June 7, 2014, a Walmart truck collided with the back of a 10-seat limousine carrying Tracy Morgan and four other passengers on the New Jersey Turnpike. Morgan's friend and mentor, comedian James McNair, known as Uncle Jimmy Mack, was killed in the crash, while Morgan and the other three passengers suffered severe injuries. In his 2017 special, Staying Alive, the 30 Rock star stated, "I suffered some terrible injuries — traumatic brain injury. I broke every bone in my face, my ribs. I pulverized my femur. I'm from the ghetto, and after I came out the coma I was blind for a week..."
Morgan was in a coma for two weeks and claims that during that time, he saw a glimpse of the afterlife: "I went to the other side. This is not something I’m making up. Do you know what God said to me? He said, 'Your room ain’t ready. I still got something for you to do.” And here I am, doing an interview with you."
In a 2020 interview with Oprah Winfrey for Super Soul Sunday, the now-56-year-old explained that he'll never be "normal" again, but a few of the changes in his life have been for the better: “I told my wife that the other day, something’s different. The way I am with people, something’s just different. I find myself saying ‘I love you’ 200 times a day to strangers, I don’t care – I don’t gotta know you to love you, I love you!" He continued, "That’s how we’re supposed to be as human beings. We’re supposed to take care of each other. What we see sometimes down here on Earth, ain’t no room for that up in heaven! Ain’t no room for it.”
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In February 1984, on the first day of filming for City Heat, Burt Reynolds' jaw was fractured by a stuntman who accidentally grabbed a metal chair to smash him over the head with instead of the prop chair that had been specifically designed not to injure the Smokey and the Bandit star.
Reynolds told TV Guide in 1992, "I broke my jaw and shattered my temporomandibular joint. The pain was worse than a migraine. It is like having an army of people inside your head trying to get out through ears, eyes, your nose. It never stops." He tried many methods to alleviate the pain, even having his bottom teeth removed. However, he eventually turned to Halcion, a sleep aid, admitting that he was taking "up to 50 a day."
After realizing that he was addicted, Reynolds attempted to quit cold turkey instead of checking into a rehab center because he noted, "it was very important to me not to be portrayed as a drug addict." However, the shock to his body caused him to lapse into a coma for "eight or nine hours" in a Los Angeles hospital.
He remembered doctors telling his then-wife and actor Loni Anderson, "we’re losing him" while instructing her to say her final goodbyes. Fortunately, the actor recovered and revealed in his 2015 memoir, But Enough About Me, "I never took another Halcion."
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Guns N' Roses, like many rockers of the day, were known for their excessive lifestyles. However, this excess momentarily killed guitarist Slash in the early '90s. Slash, born Saul Hudson, had gotten sober from his heroin addiction years prior to the band's Use Your Illusion tour; however, during the tour, he relapsed.
When asked about the incident, the guitarist nonchalantly asked, "The one where I died in San Francisco? I remember exactly what happened." He continued, "These drug dealers came to my hotel room at 5am. They had everything, and I took all of it. I started down the hallway, and I ran into a maid, and I asked where the elevator was, and then bam! I collapsed...When you overdose, there's a certain kind of scene where everybody is just moving really quickly and there's noise from radios and everything; I've experienced it a bunch of times..."
In an episode of Behind the Music, one of the band's tour managers recalled, "I got a call from management saying, ‘Mr. Reese, one of your band members, is passed out in the hallway.' I throw on a pair of jeans and go upstairs, and Slash is dead. Blue dead. He had no pulse."
When asked if he had any recollection of the incident, Slash claimed, “I remember everything up to that moment. And everything after that was just waking up with the paramedics, and I was still in the hotel. I mean, that happened in the hallway of the hotel...So, up into that point, I remember blacking out, and I remember…there’s a thing that happens when paramedics wake you up out of death like that, where it’s just, like, this huge shock of energy and lights, voices, and pandemonium, and it’s an unmistakable feeling. I’ve had it a few times, and I remember that."
In 2001, Slash was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy due to addiction. However, the star has been proudly sober since 2006, writing in his autobiography, Slash, "Early in the morning of July 3, 2006, I checked into rehab. I did a full thirty days, I fully surrendered…I learned more about myself than I ever thought was possible. And I've been sober ever since."
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In a 2015 article for Smithsonian magazine, Donald Sutherland recalled briefly dying due to a bout of bacterial meningitis, writing, "In '68 I'd picked up the pneumococcus bacterium in the Danube and for a few seconds it killed me."
The M*A*S*H star remembered the beginning of his journey to the afterlife, "Standing behind my right shoulder, I'd watched my comatose body slide peacefully down a blue tunnel. That same blue tunnel the near dead always talk about. Such a tempting journey. So serene. No barking Cerberus to wake me. Everything was going to be all right. And then, just as I was seconds away from succumbing to the seductions of that matte white light glowing purely at what appeared to be the bottom of it, some primal force fiercely grabbed my feet and compelled them to dig my heels in." He continued, "The downward journey slowed and stopped. I'd been on my way to being dead when some memory of the desperate rigor I'd applied to survive all my childhood illnesses pulled me back. Forced me to live. I was alive. I'd come out of the coma. Sick as a dog, but alive."
When the incident occurred, Sutherland was in Yugoslavia, shooting Kelly's Heroes, but had to be flown to England because Yugoslavia "had none of the necessary antibiotic drugs." Thanks to a six-week hiatus that was built into his contract for the film, he was able to recuperate at Charing Cross Hospital before returning to set.
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In 1988, during filming for Onassis: The Richest Man in the World, Jane Seymour developed pneumonia; however, the ailment wasn't what led to her near-death experience, but rather an antibiotic injection that was placed into her vein instead of muscle, causing her to go into anaphylactic shock.
When asked in a 2023 interview with The Times if she believes in life after death, the Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman star stated, “I have no idea. I do know that I left my body [after the near-lethal antibiotics]. 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. But when you’re out of your body, everything goes very calm."
At the end of the day, Seymour noted that she learned a lesson from the experience: "And after that, I realized that you take nothing with you in this life. It was a wonderful moment really; it made me realize how simple it is. It's all about loving and being loved. End of story — and the difference you may have made along the way. It simplified things for me. It stopped me from worrying about dying or death or anything like that. I realized there's no pain or panic attached. Your life is incredibly worth living and I don't want to waste a moment of it."
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Celebrity Stories America Death
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