attends the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at The Shrine Auditorium on January 21, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. 27522_010

Though the Golden Globes and Met Gala might seem like rowdy awards shows, according to Margot Robbie, nothing is more wild than Australia’s own Logies, something the Oscar-nominated actress found out firsthand when she attended the awards show during her time acting on Neighbours aged 19.

Of course, when you take a teenager to her first-ever red carpet event, filled with free alcohol and the drinking culture Australia is famous for, there’s going to be trouble. In Robbie’s case, perhaps more than most: in a new interview, the 29-year-old revealed she was quite certain she’d died during the night and gone to purgatory after passing out in one of the toilet stalls. 

During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live to speak about her role in the upcoming film Bombshell, Robbie detailed what happened, revealing she had to still go to work to film the next day. 

“The Logies are the funnest award shows ever,” she explained. “I haven’t been for a decade now. It’s like the Wild West … everyone gets absolutely hammered.”

“People are drunk the next day going to work,” Robbie continued. “You have to work the next morning after the Logies, we work year-round, so people show up in their gowns, people show up still drunk.”

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA – MAY 02: TV personality Margot Robbie arrives at the 52nd TV Week Logie Awards at Crown Casino on May 2, 2010 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Don Arnold/WireImage) *** Local Caption ***

“It’s held in a casino… and I passed out in one of the toilet stalls and I woke up and I came out and it happened to be the one hour that the casino closes to clean,” Robbie revealed.

“I didn’t know it ever closes — usually just full of thousands of people,” she made a point to mention. “I came out and it was such a weird, surreal experience because there was no one around … for a second in my drunken state, I was like, ‘Did I die? Is this purgatory? Am I in between heaven and hell right now? This is so weird.'”

Robbie went on to say she found a cleaner who reassured her that she was, in fact, still alive, adding that when arrived at work the next day, she was administered oxygen from the on-set nurse.

Happens to the best of us, Margot. Happens to the best of us.