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Val Kilmer’s heartbreaking final words have been revealed from his final interview prior to him losing his voice.
The Hollywood star, who passed away from pneumonia aged 65 on Tuesday, was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and underwent surgery, including a tracheotomy which created an artificial hole in his neck to help him breath.
However this significantly impacted his ability to speak and permanently damaged his vocal cords and forever altered his speaking voice.
His last interview prior to the life-changing surgery was with Norwegian television at Val’s Malibu home, thought to be recorded in 2014.
During the reflective interview, Val made the heartbreaking admission that he wished he had ‘loved more’ and been a ‘better person’ when he was younger.
Confessing that he was a nightmare to work with he said: ‘I was a dumb actor. I complained quite a bit when I was younger.

Val Kilmer’s heartbreaking final words before he lost his voice revealed in interview with Norwegian television in 2014 – after throat cancer left him using voice box
‘I didn’t appreciate the business that afforded me the lifestyle that I very quickly enjoyed. Very quickly. I starred in my first movie. I was the lead in the first play I did professionally.
‘And now that I don’t have that privilege, I wish that I loved more. I want to be a better person. I try to figure that out every day, how to be more grateful.’
Val was once one of Hollywood’s most prominent leading men in the 1990s after his iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman and The Doors.
However numerous spats with directors and co-stars and a series of flops dented his career and over the years, he gained a reputation as temperamental, intense, perfectionist and sometimes egotistical.
Asked by the reporter in his final interview in what way he was so full of himself, Val jokingly replied: ‘In every way.’
He continued: ‘I had ideas, I had insecurities about myself that I projected on to the movie business. Just the sounds from my mouth. So absurd. Absurdly unrealistic. Apparently, I had an evil twin.’
‘Do you think that people found it difficult to work with you,’ the journalist asked.
‘Yeah, what’s the one past difficult…impossible,’ he admitted, again laughing at himself.

During the reflective interview, Val made the heartbreaking admission that he wished he had ‘loved more’ and been a ‘better person’ when he was younger

Confessing that he was a nightmare to work with he said: ‘I was a dumb actor. I complained quite a bit when I was younger.
Speaking about how his career dried up the star explained: ‘Yeah, I’m kind of blacklisted. I haven’t gotten a studio job in 15 years.’
Asked whether he wanted to get into the industry, Val confirmed: ‘Yeah, I’d always watched movies and wondered what I’d be like in that part.’
‘If you get back, will you behave in another way?’ the interviewer asked, as he admitted: ‘Yes. In the way that gets me hired.’
Val’s voice was left forever changed after he was forced to undergo an emergency tracheotomy following his throat cancer diagnosis.
After coughing up blood in 2014 he was rushed to hospital and had two emergency tracheotomies – where a hole is created in the neck and windpipe for a tube to be inserted to breathe – as well as chemotherapy and radiation.
The cancer caused his tongue to swell and block his lymph passages and after the surgeries, he had to put a finger to the aperture in his throat to speak and be understood.
The star revealed he had been free of cancer for four years in 2020, but the tracheotomies permanently affected his ability to speak.
He lost his natural voice and had to use an electronic voice box to communicate, opening up about his struggles in his 2021 Prime documentary, Val.
A voice box device is most commonly a battery-operated machine that produces sound to create a voice, and is used to help those suffering with throat cancer communicate.
After stepping back from the public eye, he emotionally admitted it was ‘difficult to talk and be understood’ amid his lengthy recovery from throat cancer, which also saw him fed meals through a tube.
‘I’ve tried to see the world, as one piece of life,’ Val said using his voice box during his documentary.
Though communication became more difficult for him, the Batman star insisted it was just like any other challenge he had to tackle in life.
‘I’m doing great. I feel a lot better than I sound,’ he told Good Morning America in a 2020 interview.
Incredibly, Val’s voice was recreated using AI technology, which was used when he emotionally returned to screens for the Top Gun sequel in 2022.
London-based firm AI company Sonantic recreated his voice in a lifelike yet artificial mock-up, which Val was able to use to help him communicate in everyday life.
Praising the results, the star shared: ‘I’m grateful to the entire team at Sonantic who masterfully restored my voice in a way I’ve never imagined possible.
‘As human beings, the ability to communicate is the core of our existence and the effects from throat cancer have made it difficult for others to understand me.
The chance to tell my story, in a voice that feels authentic and familiar, is an incredibly special gift.’