Elizabeth Taylor had multiple near-death experiences (Photo Credit – Instagram)

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Yes, four times. And one of those times, she didn’t breathe for five whole minutes. “Must be a record,” she joked. Taylor’s health scares were as dramatic as her career, and by the time she sat down to talk about Cleopatra for Vanity Fair, she had turned her brushes with death into part of her iconic narrative.

One of Taylor’s most terrifying health crises occurred in March 1961. Battling what her doctors called “Asian flu,” Taylor slipped into a coma in London. It could’ve been the end. But Taylor being Taylor, she not only came back from the brink—she did so with flair. Upon waking in her hospital room, she found herself surrounded by flowers, fan mail, and glowing newspaper obituaries. “I had the chance to read my own obituaries,” she asserted with a wry smile. “They were the best reviews I’d ever gotten.”

This moment of morbidity turned into a career highlight when she received what she called a “sympathy Oscar” for her performance in Butterfield 8. Though she believed her performance in Suddenly, Last Summer deserved the Oscar more, Elizabeth Taylor wasn’t about to pass up the golden statue.

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