Sir Roger Moore’s daughter says late dad sends her signs from beyond the grave

Sep 15, 2019
It has been more than two years since Sir Roger Moore (pictured with daughter Deborah) passed away, following a short battle with cancer. Source: Getty.

James Bond legend Sir Roger Moore may have passed away in 2017, but the late actor’s daughter has now revealed that her beloved father still visits her from beyond the grave more than two years on from his death.

Arguably the most famous 007 of all time, Moore passed away in May 2017 aged 89 following a short battle with prostate cancer. At the time his family released a statement on social media, saying: “It is with a heavy heart that we must announce our loving father, Sir Roger Moore, has passed away today in Switzerland after a short but brave battle with cancer.

“The love with which he was surrounded in his final days was so great it cannot be quantified in words alone.”

Now, his daughter Deborah has opened up on the bond she shares with her late father, admitting she still regularly feels him around her. The 55-year-old actress – who made her on-screen debut alongside her dad in 1971’s The Persuaders – told UK newspaper The Sun there are often times where she thinks Roger is trying to make his presence known.

“There was no one in the street and this little Japanese man in his trainers came up to me with this mobile phone,” she told the news outlet. “He started pointing at it, going, ‘MI5, MI5, James Bond, James Bond, MI5?’

“I said, ‘Are you looking for the MI5 building?’ He went, ‘Yeah, yeah, James Bond, 007’.

“Now, of all the people to come up to in the street, it’s me. I was like, ‘Dad, this is you having a laugh’. So there’s all these little things which always make it feel as though he’s around me.”

The actress, who has starred in the likes of TV series Days Of Our Lives, Quantum Leap and 007 movie Die Another Day (2002), also revealed another occasion, telling The Sun that she felt her father close by during a trip to France for the christening of her brother’s children.

She added: “I was walking along the beach and there was this big Russian boat and when it moved the colours changed and the side said 007.” Deborah also revealed her father’s last ever words to her were ‘I love you too’.

Many people confess to still feeling the presence of a deceased loved one for days, months or even years after their death, while many also admit to seeing signs or feeling as if their relatives are still trying to communicate with them.

Starts at 60 previously spoke to world-famous medium John Edwards about connecting with a late loved one, and he shared some simple tips he believes people can follow to help bridge the gap between the living and the departed.

John explained the process begins with “recognising that you have to be 50 per cent of the equation” and added: “It means we can’t put the burden of connection solely on the person’s past, we have to be 50 per cent of that equation.

“The way to do that is to build a bridge, and the way you build a bridge is conscious communication. So whether that be sitting, praying and meditating, taking a walk on the beach where you feel connected, or sitting in a cemetery, whatever that place is.”

He went on: “But I also think you can use something very easy and subtle like creating a journal and writing letters to them. Getting your feelings [out] about your relationship with them, where you’re at in your life, how you’re feeling about your loss or just communicating with them like, ‘Here’s what’s taking place in my day’.”

Stories that matter
Emails delivered daily
Sign up