British actor Roger Moore, best known for his iconic acting roles like The Saint and James Bond, has had a few run-ins with the paranormal. While making the 1970 film The Man Who Bewitched Himself, Moore confessed to having a great interest in the supernatural.

Around 1960, Moore was staying at a hotel. One night, he suddenly woke up, his whole body covered in sweat. It was around 2:00 am. A strange odor assaulted his nostrils. Then he saw a mist pour in through the windows, across the bed, and finally take shape near his side. Moore simply lay rigid on the bed, staring in disbelief at this strange, wispy form, completely frozen in fear.

Then a logical part of his mind chided himself for not being such a fool. He then ventured out to ask the dim entity: “What do you want?”

Then, as suddenly and mysteriously as it had come, the mist vanished. Moore then gradually began to relax, until he finally sank back into sleep.

The following night, the strange incident was repeated. Not surprisingly, Moore was filled with trepidation when he went to bed on the third night. That night, Moore noticed that the Bible by his bedside had been left open to the twenty-third Psalm: “Yes, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will not feel bad, for even though he is with me.” That night, the fog did not come.

The next morning, a maid, a Jehovah’s Witness, asked Moore if he had seen the fog. When he told her that she hadn’t, she said, “I didn’t think you would.” She said that she would put the Bible by the bed. But Moore couldn’t say for sure if the presence of the Holy Bible had actually scared away whatever disembodied entity had slipped into his bedroom.