“Suddenly Blood”: Rachel Weisz speaks for the first time about her miscarriage

“Suddenly Blood”: Rachel Weisz speaks for the first time about her miscarriage

Daniel Craig’s wife Rachel Weisz has opened up about her miscarriage on a podcast for the first time. The experience still haunts her to this day.

It is an experience that has shaped her: For the first time, Rachel Weisz speaks about a miscarriage she had to suffer.

“A lot of women miscarry and I had a miscarriage too. You suddenly see blood coming out of your body and it’s all part of the woman’s experience of being alive,” she said on The News Agents podcast quoted by “Hello Magazin”.

However, the 53-year-old did not reveal how far her pregnancy had progressed or how old Weisz was. Most miscarriages happen within the first 12 weeks.

Rachel Weisz: Actress thinks miscarriages are still a taboo subject

But Weisz thinks that women still rarely talk about miscarriages. Many are not aware of how common they are. “I don’t think we’re used to it.” Even in films and series, miscarriages rarely occur, if they are discussed at all. “It’s still not normal for these things to be portrayed cinematically or fictionally.”

Weisz has rarely spoken about her relationship with Craig, with whom she has four-year-old daughter Grace. But on the podcast, she also revealed that she’s glad Daniel Craig is no longer playing the role of James Bond. She often worried because he shot almost all of his stunts himself and some of them were really tough, reports “Hello Magazine”.

“It was very dangerous. He injured himself a lot because he did all the stunts himself.” Since he stopped, potentially dangerous situations in his life have fallen sharply. “It’s a much less stressful time for him. I’m really proud of his time as Bond and I think he was really, really brilliant. But it’s a lot less stressful and dangerous now for sure.”

Rachel Weisz can currently be seen in “The Inseparables” on Prime Video. In the series, as a gynecologist, she and her twin sister want to revolutionize the subject of childbirth and confinement.

Source: “e”

Source: Stern

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