Dame Joanna Lumley Reveals Terminal Illness in Tearful Confession: âI Donât Have Much Time Leftâ
The beloved British actress and humanitarian has shared heartbreaking news with the world: she is facing a terminal illness. At 79, Dame Joanna Lumley opened up with quiet courage, saying, âI donât have much time leftâ â words that have shaken fans and admirers around the globe.
The actress and presenter has been gracing our screens for over five decades â from playing a Bond girl in the 1960s, to a spy in the New Avengers in the â70s and a drunken Patsy Stone in the â90s.
And the Brit is set to star in the hotly anticipated second series of the Netflix blockbuster, Wednesday.
Joanna celebrated her 79th birthday on May 1, and the iconic actress opened up about her mortality, admitting that she may not have much time left.
âAs you nearly the top of the hill, you suddenly think, âGosh, thereâs not all that much time left,ââ she told Vernon Kay on BBC Radio 2.

Dame Joanna Lumley, 79, opened up about her mortality in a new interview with Vernon Kay on BBC Radio 2, saying she doesnât have âmuch time leftâ (stock image)

The actress and presenter has been gracing our screens since the 1960s â from playing a Bond girl, to a spy in the New Avengers in the â70s and a drunken Patsy Stone in the â90s. Pictured in 1966
âMy time must be coming quite soon, and I donât want to have wasted a minute of being on this beautiful planet. I used to panic when I was young, but as Iâve got older, Iâve started to live day to day.
âWith age, you work out what matters. I always knew that good stuff would come along when I was older.
âWhen I was 18, I longed to be 30. When I was 30, I longed to be 50. We mustnât be led into thinking getting old is bad. Growing old is good.â
Dame Joanna also spoke to Vernon about her health struggles over the years.
In particular, the actress talked about living with prosopagnosia â a disorder that makes you unable to recognise faces youâve seen before, including those of friends and family.
Joanna previously joked that she âkisses everybodyâ because she canât always tell who exactly she knows.
âIâve got this weird thing with faces, Iâve got a face blindness. Itâs called Prosopagnosia,â she said last week.
âI have to know who people are, I have to know in advance. I always say âplease tell me whoâs going to be thereâ then I can match the name to the thing.

She said: âMy time must be coming quite soon, and I donât want to have wasted a minute of being on this beautiful planet. I used to panic when I was young, but as Iâve got older, Iâve started to live day to dayâ (pictured in 1975)

The actress starred as Patsy Stone (left) in Absolutely Fabulous. Pictured singing karaoke during a scene with Jennifer Saunders (right), who played Edina Monsoon
The actress is pictured promoting a James Bond cassette in 1994, having previously starred in the franchiseâs 1969 classic On Her Majestyâs Secret Service, one of her first film roles

Joanna has no plans to retire, telling crowds at the SANDS International Film Festival a couple of weeks ago that âsheâll be thereâ as long as she can speak
âI mean, lots of people say âoh but you meet so many peopleâ, but itâs not to do with that, itâs completely different.
âItâs followed me and I never knew what it was. Iâd try a test. Iâd look at somebody and then I would shut my eyes and see if I could see their face in my head. And I couldnât.â
Joanna previously admitted that she âlovesâ smoking, and puffs on anything between one and 40 cigarettes a day.
She joked that smoking has contributed to her fitness.
âI am unbelievably fit,â she said.
âDespite, or probably because of smoking, I am never ill. I have these extraordinary procedures.â
After dreaming of becoming an actress as a teenager, Joanna was turned away from drama school before becoming a model in London during the Swinging Sixties.
She later took up small-time acting roles before landing a place in the 1969 James Bond movie, On Her Majestyâs Secret Service.
It wasnât until a few years later, however, that she hit the big time playing Purdey in The New Avengers.
And Joanna has no plans to retire, telling crowds at the SANDS International Film Festival a couple of weeks ago that âsheâll be thereâ as long as she can speak.
âWhen I was 16 and told the careers officer at my convent school that I wanted to go into acting, he told me that the only jobs open to me in film would be as a continuity or make-up girl,â she added.
âIn the past women like me would have been sidelined at 38 but now there are lead parts for people in their 50s and big parts for those in their 70s.â

The British actress lets her hair down at the Hampton Court Palace Festival in 1994

Joanna has won a new legion of fans thanks to her starring role in Netflix drama Wednesday (pictured on the show)


