Secret Week Together
Pamela Anderson has ended months of speculation by confirming that she and Liam Neeson briefly dated following their work together on The Naked Gun. Their chemistry first drew attention during the film’s summer press tour, when the pair appeared unusually close on red carpets and morning-show couches, fueling persistent romance rumors.
That speculation only intensified after Neeson publicly praised Anderson, though neither actor initially clarified the nature of their relationship. Now, Anderson is acknowledging for the first time that there was more to their connection than playful press-tour banter.
The Baywatch icon revealed that she and Neeson grew close after filming wrapped, spending what she described as a quietly intense week at his home in upstate New York. The time together was low-key but intimate — family members and assistants drifted in and out, and the pair slipped away for dinner at a small French restaurant where Neeson jokingly introduced her as “the future Mrs. Neeson.”
Still, despite the spark, their romance didn’t extend beyond that brief window. Both actors moved on to new projects, and their schedules pulled them in different directions. When they reunited months later for The Naked Gun press tour, the warmth between them returned, prompting more speculation as they held hands, shared cheek kisses, and leaned into the rumors with playful on-air antics.
Amid accusations that their closeness was merely a publicity stunt, Anderson pushed back, insisting their bond had been genuine. She emphasized that while the relationship didn’t evolve romantically, mutual admiration did. In her words: “If you must know, Liam and I were romantically involved for a short while but only after we finished filming The Naked Gun.”
Today, Anderson describes Neeson as a supportive friend — one who has cheered on her recent artistic reinventions and even surprised her backstage during a theater performance last August. Though their brief romance has long since ended, she suggests their connection isn’t going anywhere, just shifting into something steadier and more enduring.


