As an agent in the series “Alias,” Jennifer Garner has shown that she has strong nerves – and she also had them when she was stuck in an elevator for over an hour. She shot videos while singing and sweating.
She sweats, sings, keeps her cool and makes funny videos: US actress Jennifer Garner (52) is stuck in an elevator for more than an hour and shares this experience with her Instagram followers.
“Hey guys, we’re trapped in this elevator,” Garner says in the first video recording two minutes after the breakdown. She could use Wolverine or Deadpool or anyone to rescue her, she jokes in the clip. The second of a total of seven videos has a time stamp of 11 minutes. It’s warm, she’s sweating, the actress comments with a grin.
After 35 minutes she sits on the floor and explains that she once heard on a TV show that this is the best thing to do in such a situation.
In the next video (41.5 minutes) she starts singing a song, in the fifth clip (45 minutes) the camera pans to other people in the elevator who are making an emergency call. After an hour Garner hums the Madonna song “Like a Prayer” and lights flash in the elevator. After 1 hour and 12 minutes the rescue comes: the door opens, a fireman appears and there is loud cheering.
Numerous followers admired Garner’s humor and her composure. “Oh my God, how can you stay so calm,” wrote actress Gwyneth Paltrow on the video posts.
According to Garner, the elevator breakdown happened during her first visit to Comic-Con in San Diego, California. At the film fair over the weekend, the actress was promoting “Deadpool & Wolverine” with colleagues such as Ryan Reynolds and High Jackman. In the third “Deadpool” film, the mother of three has a small role as the antiheroine Elektra.
Source: Stern

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.