Former “Three’s Company” star Suzanne Somers had a truly terrifying experience on Friday, when a home intruder interrupted her as she was doing a makeup video on Facebook Live.

Somers and her husband of 43 years, Alan Hamel, managed to keep their cool as the man walked in and said he was dropped off on the property by his friends and was “terrified” because there were “ghosts following” him.

“You shouldn’t be here. You don’t scare me…,” Somers fired back at him. “But I’m not used to having people on my property and we’re doing a show.”

The camera kept rolling as the man apologized and Somers looked on with wide eyes. She and her husband encouraged him to leave their property the same way he came onto it. The man said he had a gift for Somers at one point, but she respectfully declined it.

“You seem like a nice person, but you shouldn’t be here,” she said as he was escorted out. Somers then looked at the camera and said, “Sorry about that. I’m as shocked as you are.”

The moment in question happens at around the 40:40 mark in the video below.

“All clear and safe! Thanks for your concern,” Somers wrote alongside the video. “Have a great weekend.”

This comes after Somers opened up to reveal the secret behind her decades-long marriage to the love of her life.

“We give each other a lot of attention. That seems simple, but you’d be amazed at how many couples don’t remember to give one another a lot of attention,” Somers, 74, told US Weekly. “It’s not, like, a chore for us. I love to hug him and rub his hair. He tells me I’m beautiful all the time and we hold hands while we sleep. It’s the most beautiful part of my life.”

She went on to say that she and Hamel will lock hands nearly “all night” long, adding, “I’ll wake up and we’re holding hands all the time!”

Somers explained that she and Hamel have still managed to spice up their relationship while in quarantine during the pandemic.

“We date every night. I think dates are really important, especially [in] long-term marriages,” she said. “So, here’s a date — it’s 5 o’clock and that’s when I stop working and he stops working, or if I do a Facebook Live show, I go to work from 5 to 6. But on the nights that I don’t do Facebook Live, we meet at Big Al’s bar — that’s the bar at our house — and he pours me a stiff tequila of clear because clear has little to no sugar and a lot of ice.”

“We sip tequila, listen to music, sometimes we dance,” Somers continued. “Now that I have full mobility [after my neck injury], I love dancing and we dance. It’s not phony, really. It’s just what we do. During this quarantine, you can’t have people over, so it’s just the two of us and I look forward to it. Around 4 o’clock [every day], I start looking forward to it.”

Recommended
Join the Discussion

COMMENTS POLICY: We have no tolerance for messages of violence, racism, vulgarity, obscenity or other such discourteous behavior. Thank you for contributing to a respectful and useful online dialogue.

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
More Stuff