| Susan Sarandon recalls dolphin attack
Susan Sarandon was nearly killed when she was attacked by a jealous female
dolphin. In the 1970s the star was invited by writer Timothy Leary to
interact with dolphins in a San Francisco, California, lab and she struck up
a bond with a friendly dolphin called Joe. The Oscar-winning actress was
enjoying holding onto Joe's fin when the mammal's jealous mate suddenly
lunged, taking a chunk out of her wrist.
She tells PageSix.com, "After he trusted me more, I took hold of Joe's fin
and we glided around the tank together. Then Joe stopped swimming
horizontally and pushed up against me. I thought the whole experience was
just groovy until I felt this horrible pain on my wrist, which was holding
Joe's fin.
"I could hear them (researchers) shouting, 'No, Rosie! Don't!' I looked over
and Joe's mate, this huge dolphin I hadn't even noticed before, was
virtually standing up right out of the water, towering over me on its rear
fins. She seemed to be 12 feet tall, emitting this loud, high-pitched noise.
The attendants were screaming, 'We've got to get you out!' I was afraid I
was going to get my other arm broken."
Later, researchers told Sarandon that Rosie's bite, which took months to
heal, was a "warning nibble," and that "if she had made that plunge toward
me, I would have been killed instantly as surely as if Rosie had been a
shark.
"Apparently, an enraged, jealous dolphin is incredibly dangerous. What a way
to die! Who would have believed it?"
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