Pamela Anderson opened up about how the lows in her career affected her mental health.
The 57-year-old actress attended the Zurich Film Festival to accept the Golden Eye Award and promote her new movie, “The Last Showgirl,” and admitted that she was depressed for a while after her role in “Baywatch” ended in the 1990s.
“I never thought I would be onstage, receiving an award like that,” Anderson told Variety at the festival in an interview published Saturday.
“I just want to keep working. I am excited to do more,” she continued. “I look at it now and it feels like I went from ‘Baywatch’ to Broadway. I don’t know what happened in between, it’s all a big blur.”
The blonde bombshell rose to fame from her role as C.J. Parker on “Baywatch” that lasted from 1992 to 1997.
Her career slowed after the series ended and she even moved back to her native Canada during a dark time in her life.
“A few years back, I kind of gave up at some point and needed a change,” she told Better Homes & Gardens in August. “I was not in a good space when I moved back to Canada.”
“I don’t know what happened over the last few decades, but I feel now so far removed from the image of who I was,” Anderson also said in the interview. “I felt very sad and lonely.”
However, Anderson enjoyed a career resurgence starting when she made her Broadway debut as Roxie Hart in “Chicago” in 2022.
Then, Anderson starred in her 2023 Netflix documentary “Pamela, A Love Story” directed by Ryan White.
As Anderson explained in Zurich, the emotional and inspiring project led to her being cast in Gia Coppola’s “The Last Showgirl.”
“Ryan made that doc and that’s how Gia saw me,” she told Variety at the film festival. “I always knew I was capable of more.”
“It’s great to be a part of pop culture, but it’s a blessing and a curse,” the “Home Improvement” star added. “People fall in love with you because of a bathing suit. It has taken a long time, but I am here.”
Anderson’s new movie premiered at the Toronto Film Festival last month. She plays a Las Vegas revue dancer who’s about to be out of a job and has to reevaluate her whole life.
The Post’s Johnny Oleksinski gave the film three out of four stars and praised Anderson’s “heartbreaking” performance in her “red-hot second act.”