When you consider that over the past 50 years actress Jane Seymour has starred in about 100 TV movies, television shows, and feature films, it seems kind of odd to hear that she doesn’t consider herself a celebrity. Certainly not in the traditional way that people in the United States tend to do, which she says isn’t quite the same in England.
“I’m just me,” she says matter of factly on an episode of the online InnerVIEWS. “Whether I’m acting or I’m talking to you you or doing the dishes and try to get the kids off to school, I’m just me. But you sort of get used to people knowing who you are and know you. And you just don’t have the privacy that you used to. You kind of get used to it.”
After all this time, one would certainly hope so.
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She was born Joyce Penelope Wilhelmina Frankenberg on February 15, 1951, in Uxbridge, Middlesex, England. Although she was educated at the Tring Park School for the Performing Artists in Hertfordshire, her first love was actually classical ballet. As she describes it, she was born with flat feet and a speech impediment, but she danced everywhere, her mother telling her that she had a tendency to dance in the kitchen where she knocked over pretty much every pot and pan. Finally, her mother sent her to ballet class where she says she learned how not to have flat feet.
“I became obsessed with it to the degree that by the time I was 13, I was insisting to my parent that life would be over unless they let me go to the Royal Ballet school or a professional ballet school,” Jane explains. “We had no money, but my father [a gynecologist] had answered an ad in a British medical journal to switch gynecologists’ daughters with a Hungarian doctor’s to experience a different lifestyle. So I went off to Hungary, an Iron Curtain country.”
Jane was there for a while and was approached by a woman who offered her a place at the Hungarian ballet school. Once her parents heard that, they went to Hungary to bring her home, her father saying that she could go to a ballet school in England if that was something she was truly passionate about. The school she eventually attended taught not only ballet, but acting, singing and a number of other things. Then she suffered an accident that “made me become an actress by default.”
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Over the years people have told her how well she does in period pieces — indeed, below you’ll see just how many she’s appeared in — which she credits to her ballet background. “I know how to stand up straight,” she told journalist Ernie Manouse, “and use a fan and how to curtsy. I can do all those minuets and dances and waltzes. You know, every time I dance with a male actor from this country [America], they think they have three feet — and they do; they’ve somehow managed to tread on two of mine at the same time. It’s astounding. If I do a period piece, the women have no idea how to do needlepoint or any of the things women from early days did. It’s about movement. Riding horses, even driving antique vehicles. I mean, these are things I learned to do and I’ve become very handy. i always tell people who are trying to act to do a bit of the gym, certainly study, but do a lot of physical stuff. Sword fighting, dancing movement — I mean, you just can’t get enough of it.”
The way Jane sees it, life is like a giant wave: “It grows, it swells, it crests, the wind takes it to this sort of spectacular moment, and then it crashes magnificently and it doesn’t stop. It doesn’t crash and stop and look back at itself. It crashes and is immediately going back into being the next wave. I always feel life is like that. You’re always in motion. You’re always in movement.”
Jane’s first role was an uncredited one in the 1969 movie Oh! What a Lovely War, followed a year later by The Only Way, Young Winston (1972) and The Best Pair of Legs in the Business (1973). In 1972, she appeared on episodes of the British shows The Pathfinders, The Strauss Family, and The Onedin Line — being cast in 10 episodes of the latter — which nearly ruled out her first really big movie role, as James Bond girl “Solitaire” in the eighth 007 film Live and Let Die, and the first to star Roger Moore.
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“I was doing television with the BBC, a period drama series called The Onedin Line,” Jane explains in an exclusive excerpt from the James Bond oral history book Nobody Does It Better. “I was playing the villainess who was a virginal woman in the 1880s who had inherited her father shipping line.”
Bond producers Albert R. “Cubby” Broccoli and Harry Saltzman became aware of her and pursued her for the role. “My agent and I had a conversation with the BBC and the guys there were not going to let me out of my contract,” says Jane. “My agent kept saying, ‘Don’t you realize if she does the Bond film, she’ll be a star? And if she’s a star, you’ll forever be famous for being the one that discovered her.’ And the producer was not buying that. My agent said, ‘Look, talk to your wife tonight and speak to me in the morning. Just think about it.’ So apparently what happened is he went home and he told his wife. And his wife said, “Of course you can move scenes around. And then she can do your thing and the other thing, and then your thing will be worth more, because she’ll now be starring in a Bond film.’ Then I went away for two weeks in New Orleans to shoot scenes from the film. I came back and I finished the series, then I did everything in England for the Bond film.”
Being in the spotlight thanks to Live and Let Die, finding work was no longer a problem. As she related to NPR, “I met Renee Valente, who was a casting director at the time. And she said, ‘If you can lose your English accent, you would do very well in America.’ I came to America with no work permit, no agent, nowhere really to live, and within six weeks I got my first role in [the 1976 mini-series] Captains and the Kings. I became labeled as the ‘queen of the mini-series,’ because I did one mini-series after another. Basically, I worked consistently and usually with a different American accent every time.”
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Before the whole mini-series and TV movie thing kicked in fully, Jane found herself cast in one of the big television events of the 1978 to 1979 season — Battlestar Galactica, about the remnants of humanity traveling through space looking for the lost colony of Earth. She was in a total of five episodes, the three-hour pilot, and two additional shows.
“I was only supposed to be in the pilot,” says Jane in an exclusive excerpt from the oral history of Battlestar Galactica, So Say We All. “And I died in the pilot. But then they reshot the whole thing without telling me and then wanted me to stay for the whole show, because I tested higher than the other girls that they’d hired to be regulars. I said I’d do another two-hour special. I just didn’t see myself doing a series.”
In 1980, Jane co-starred with Christopher Reeve, who had amazed audiences with his portrayal as the Man of Steel in 1978’s Superman: The Movie, in the time travel romance Somewhere in Time (more details of which can be found in the guide to her career below). Only a modest success in its initial release, it’s a film that has only grown in popularity over the decades.
“It was a wonderful, small movie when it came out that captured the imagination and dedication of millions of viewers globally,” Jane told The Lady. “It’s such a special, timeless story and the quintessential romance of the idea of finding love and of it being somewhere in time. That it’s not necessarily in your time and that it can travel through time and space, but that this kind of love can exist. It was one of my favorite movies that I’ve ever done and certainly something that people stop and talk to me about pretty much every day of my life wherever in the world.”
From 1980 to 1993, Jane starred in 27 films, TV movies, mini-series, and TV shows, but by 1993 she was ready to “settle down” with her first series, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, in which she played Dr. Michaela “Mike” Quinn, a doctor in the Old West. For her, it was a genuine highlight of her career.
She told Ability Magazine, “I feel Dr. Quinn is a role model for many reasons. She’s a mother of an extended family and she’s trying to help people in the town she’s in to not be bigots, to not be racist, to help them ecologically — she’s very much a modern woman in the 1870s. She’s a very educated woman who is open-minded to other people’s ideas and other people’s beliefs, which include Cloud Dancer, who is a Native American character on the show who has healing methods and spiritual beliefs that are unlike those of the town’s people. She’s based on a compilation of people. There were, of course, women doctors during this period out in the West. However it isn’t based on any particular one. It’s more of a ‘What if?’ What one hopes is that a woman could have had this kind of influence.”
“I’m very proud of it,” she added to smashinginterviews.com, “because even when you watch it today, it hasn’t aged at all and stands up. Of course, it was set back in the 1870s anyway, so it doesn’t age at all. The subject matter that we were discussing each week is still relevant today. Everything from pollution of the water to different medical practices, being tolerant of other religions and people.”
Incredibly, Jane’s life and career have never slowed down since Dr. Quinn. She has been in dozens of different projects, the most recent of which is 2020’s Friendsgiving. On top of that, she’s written no less than 10 self-help and inspirational books and has teamed up with Kay Jewelers to design the “Open Heart Collection.”
In her personal life, Jane has been married four times, to Michael Attenborough from 1971 to 1973, Geoffrey Planer from 1977 to 1978, David Flynn from 1981 to 1992, and James Keach from 1993 to 2015. She is the mother of four.
For over 50 years, Jane has been celebrated as an actress for all of her varied performances, yet for her, nothing has really changed in terms of her view of self. “Especially with all these reality shows, everyone wants to be a celebrated person, but it’s not where I started at all. I never imagined for a minute that my name would ever be anything but somewhere in the program, if I was lucky,” she’s admitted. “I’m most proud of being an artist in many disciplines. I feel that art is about communicating, whether it’s acting, writing, painting, sculpting, music, etc. Art infuses my life and enables me to communicate every aspect of the human condition as I have been exposed to. However, my proudest achievement is in being able to continue to do all of these things while raising an amazing family of very creative, loving and thoughtful children.”
Please scroll down for a look back at Jane Seymour’s long, fruitful career.
Jane is Lillian Stein, part of a Jewish family in Denmark while it’s being occupied by the Nazis during World War II, determined to try and escape.
This British TV series follows the adventures of seven kids who use an abandoned double-decker London bus as their clubhouse. There’s dancing, singing, lots of fun and guest stars like Jane, who plays Alice in the episode “Scooper Strikes Out.”
The adventures of the young Winston Churchill (Simon Ward) who is en route to becoming the future British leader. Jane plays Pamela Plowden.
Set in the 19th century, the focus is on the Strauss family of Vienna. Jane appeared in four episodes in the role of Karoline. In 1972 she also appeared in the “Fly There, Walk Back” episode of the series The Pathfinders.
James Onedin (Peter Gilmore) is determined to start a shipping line in 1860s Liverpool no matter what it takes. Jane appeared in 10 episodes as Emma Callon.
A middle-aged female impersonator (Reg Varney) tried to keep his debilitated holiday camp alive while struggling in his relationship with his wife and son. Jane portrays Kim Thorn.
Hosted by Orson Welles, this anthology series was designed as a show similar to the old Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Jane appears in the episode “The Leather Funnel” alongside Christopher Lee, known for his roles in Dracula, The Lord of the Rings, and the Star Wars Prequel Trilogy.
The eighth James Bond film and the first to star Roger Moore as 007. Jane is Solitaire, a woman who gets glimpses of the future which are used by bad guy Dr. Kananga (Yaphet Kotto). The only threat to her abilities is if she sleeps with someone. Uh-oh-7.
A much closer adaptation of the Mary Shelly novel than even the classic Universal film starring Boris Karloff was. This Frankenstein monster (played by The Reincarnation of Peter Proud‘s Michael Sarrazin) starts off human, but gradually decomposes into a more horrific figure. Jane plays Agatha. In 1975 she was in the “Ring of Return” episode of The Hanged Man.
Jane is Bella Wilfer, one of a number of women after a man who stands to inherit a great deal if he marries a woman he’s never met. Based on the Charles Dickens novel of the same name.
Jane is Majorie Chisholm Armagh, who is married to Richard Jordan’s Joseph Armagh, an Irish immigrant in the late 1800s that pulls himself up from poverty to great wealth.
Sinbad the Sailor (Patrick Wayne) and Princess Farah (Jane) are among those attempting to deliver a cursed prince to an island while dealing with an angry witch and various creatures she brings to life to stop them.
Jane is one of the people aboard a cruise ship who find their lives threatened by a deadly virus. That same year she also appeared on “The Great Taxicab Stampede” episode of Dennis Weaver’s mystery series McCloud.
This miniseries is all about the rise in the garment industry of Al Blackman (Kristoffer Tabori). Jane plays Eva Meyers.
Official Summary: When British Lieutenant Faversham resigns his commission rather than fight in the 1882 Sudan war, his army pals present him with the four white feathers of cowardice. Beau Bridges plays Faversham with Jane as Ethne Eustace.
Bewitched star Elizabeth Montgomery is frontierswoman Sayward Luckett, who fights to stay alive in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Jane is Genny Luckett, with Hal Holbrook, William H. Macy and Wilford Brimley.
Created in the aftermath of the original Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica was about a surviving group of humans on a desperate bid to escape from the robotic Cylons in space as they search for their fabled homeworld of Earth. Jane appeared in three episodes of the show as Serina.
Newspaper reporter Laura Cole (Jane) is sent undercover to get the inside story on what really goes on behind the scenes of life as a member of the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders.
After Detective Browning (Chevy Chase) is murdered, he finds himself reincarnated as a dog (played by a relative to big-screen star Benji). Determined to solve his killing, he works with Jane’s Jackie.
The very definition of a cult classic. Christopher Reeve, between the first two Superman films, is Chicago playwright Richard Collier, who falls in love with the woman in a portrait and is shown a means of transporting himself back in time where he meets Elise McKenna and the two fall in love.
Based on John Steinbeck’s novel, it begins shortly after the Civil War and tells the story of the Trask family. Timothy Bottoms is Adam Trask and Jane is Kate Trask. In 1981 she was in the “Last Summer’s Child” episode of the BBC2 Playhouse.
Sir Percy Blakeney (Anthony Andrews) dresses as the Scarlet Pimpernel and attempts to save as many aristocrats from the guillotine as he can in 1792 Paris. Jane is Marguerite St. Just.
It’s the latest (at least as of 1983) adaptation of Gaston Leroux’s novel, with Maximilian Schell as the Phantom and Jane as Maria Gianelli/Elena Korvin.
Jane’s Mary Yellan finds herself caught between a respected squire who actually leads a group of deadly pirates in an attack against passing ships. Based on the novel by Daphne Du Maurier.
Julie Evans (Jane) is haunted by dreams of an erotic lover that seems to become more real each time she dreams of him. This figment of her imagination comes to life and starts threatening those she’s closest to, including husband Dan (Gerald McRaney).
Tom Selleck is Nick Lassiter, a jewel thief extorted to steal millions in gems from a German Embassy or go to jail for the rest of his life. Jane is Sara Wells.
Leigh Cullen (Jane) is the lead suspect in the death of attorney Frank Girard (Hank Brandt), until her twin sister Tracy shows up, throwing the entire investigation into disarray.
War veteran Jake Barnes (Hart Bochner) travels to Paris, where he meets past lover Lady Brett Ashley (Jane), who is on the verge of getting a divorce from her husband. The intrigue begins there.
Tony Hammond (Tim Matheson) falls in love with Diane Putnam (Jane), a married co-worker. While she’s attracted to him, she won’t get a divorce because of the couple’s 10-year-old son. This doesn’t sit too well with Tony.
Insanity of the life of workers in a New York City home office of a multinational conglomerate. Jane stars alongside Judge Reinhold, Eddie Albert, Richard Masur, and Rick Moranis.
During World War II, Cheryl Ladd s Liane DeVilliers, the wife of a French Ambassador, who encounters an industrialist (Lee Horsley, married to Jane’s Hillary Burnham) on a transatlantic voyage. They meet again after she and her husband are forced to flee Nazi-occupied France and this time the two of them have an affair. As if things weren’t complicated enough, the question arises of whether or not her husband is a Nazi collaborator.
Maria Iribarne (Jane) is so moved by the work of artist Juan Pablo Castel (Peter Weller), that she begins an affair with him. She followed in 1989 with the film La Revolution Francaise.
Epic follow-up to director Dan Curtis’ (the creator of Dark Shadows) World War II miniseries The Winds of War. Jane portrays Natalie Henry.
The “keys” of the title refer to US passports for people of Hong Kong who are desperate to escape from communist China’s take over of the country, and the film focuses on a black market ring for them who can be deadly to deal with. Jane Seymour plays a woman named Gillian.
Britain’s Edward VIII (Anthony Andrews) leaves his royal life behind for the woman he loves, American divorcee Wallis Simpson (Jane).
For most people, the name “Onassis” triggers thoughts of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, but this is about the man himself (Raul Julia), his rise to wealth and power, and the women he loved. Jane plays Maria Callas with Francesca Annis as Jacqueline.
When Britain’s Inspector Frederick Abberline (Michael Caine) investigates the Jack the Ripper murders in 1888, he uncovers a vast conspiracy that has connections to the Queen. Jane plays Emma.
Gregory Harrison is Gary Nicholson, an escaped convict who finds himself obsessed with painter Laura Hendricks (Jane) and her 6-year-old son, Josh (Brian Bonsall from Family Ties).
Renowned pianist Hadley Norman (Jane) becomes romantically involved with her protege, Steven Harper (Chris Gartin).
Amnesiac Catherine Alexander Douglas (Jane) is desperately trying to regain her memory, unaware that if she does so, her life could be in danger. Costarring is Omar Sharif as Constantin Deminis. Jane also starred in the 1991 TV movie Passion.
Attempting to find her missing husband, the wealthy Adrienne Welles (Jane) hires private detective Mat Henderson (Parker Stevenson), who finds himself drawn to her romantically.
Teresa Winters (Jane) attempts to regain custody of her daughter following a bitter divorce but finds herself in a situation that involves blackmail and a mysterious stranger.
Don McAndrews (Barry Bostwick) believes his loneliness is over when he meets and falls in love with Linda Crandell (Jane), who is carrying with her a deadly secret.
In this adaptation of Johanna Spyri’s novel, Heidi (Noley Thornton) leaves her home in the mountains to live in Frankfurt. There she becomes friends with the wheelchair-bound Klara (Lexi Randall). Jane plays Fraulein Rottenmeier.
Moving from Boston to Colorado Springs, Colorado, Dr. Michael Quinn (Jane) seeks adventure in America’s Old West. The show ran for six seasons and 149 episodes.
Hazel Brannon Smith (Jane) is a newspaper publisher in the 1950s determined for her home town to move beyond racism and allow for integration.
When presidential candidate Senator Emmett Hunter (William Devane) is accused of sexual harassment, television reporter Alison Reid will have to betray her friend to expose the truth.
Traveling from Hong Kong to Australia, Jack and Jane Robinson (Stacy Keach and Jane), along with their kids, find themselves stranded on an island after their boat is destroyed in an accident. As they try to adapt to the situation, they encounter pirates.
Jason Whitney (James Brolin) discovers he has a son eight years after the boy’s mother passed away and guardianship passed to her sister (Jane). For the benefit of the child, and based on the recommendation of a judge, they decide to get married and actually find themselves falling in love.
Jane is back in an amnesiac territory as Rebecca Vega bumps into somebody who knows her and sends her to the town she’s from in the hopes of reuniting with her children, who her abusive husband (A Martinez) has had control of for the past eight years.
A new adventure for Jane’s title character, as she teams up with Byron Sully (Joe Lando) as well as a number of townspeople who head to Mexico to find his kidnapped daughter. There was an additional TV movie in the form of 2001’s Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman: The Heart Within.
Dr. Mary Kost Richland (Jane) is accused of her husband’s murder, and while the trial is being prepared for, she begins an investigation into the crime and discovers that he led a double-life.
Set in the 19th century, when British actress Fanny Kemble marries a U.S. plantation owner (Keith Carradine) and returns to the United States with him, she’s horrified to discover that he is the owner of multiple slaves. In response, she begins formulating a plan to set them free.
Jenny Cole (Jane) travels with her husband and kids to Ireland to uncover the secrets behind a dream she’s been having since she was a kid, which are suggesting that she’s been reincarnated from a previous life.
Jane plays a mother of two who finds themselves trapped in a mall during a massive power outage and while the police are hunting for a killer.
Jill Maddox is the recipient of a heart transplant, which, while successful from a medical point of view, is somehow completely altering her personality.
With an accident taking the lives of his sister and father, and his mother in a coma, a boy is sent to live with a reclusive aunt (Jane) on Sable Island, which has a preserve devoted to wild horses.
Between 2004 and 2005, Jane appeared on six episodes of Smallville (the TV series about the evolution of Tom Welling’s Clark Kent into his destiny as Superman). In 2004, she also appeared on the “Families” episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
John Beckwith (Owen Wilson) and Jeremy Grey (Vince Vaughn) are a couple of guys crashing weddings so that they can meet women. Jane plays Kathleen Cleary, wife of Christopher Walken’s Secretary Cleary, who comes to realize that these two guys just don’t belong.
Chris Pine (Captain Kirk from the rebooted Star Trek films) plays a blind guy who is falling in love with what he believes to be an Indian woman — but there are many obstacles in their way.
In this sitcom, three guys attempt to get their love lives in order by hiring a life coach, Jane’s Dr. Victoria Stangel. She appeared in six of the seven episodes.
Jane guest-starred in this legal drama in the episode “Filicide.” She also appeared in the “Aldrin Justice” episode of How I Met Your Mother and in the 2006 film comedy The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell.
Jane made three appearances on this sitcom as Donna Ventress, mother to David Arquette’s Jason. She also appeared in the 2007 TV movie, Agatha Christie’s Marple: Ordeal by Innocence and the feature film After Sex. In 2008 she was in the film Wake.
This one certainly sounds like the pilot for a potential TV series as it sees Jane playing Prudence McCoy, the host of a helpful hints TV show who discovers she’s pretty good at solving crimes as well.
Fed up of being seen as nothing but office grunts, a number of assistants to Hollywood executives decide to steal from their bosses to fund a movie they want to make. Jane plays a character named Sandy Goldman.
Jane is back as Prudence McCoy, but this time there are no crimes to solve. Instead, she’s desperately trying to keep her show and approach to it the same in the aftermath of a corporate takeover of the TV station she works at.
Mandy Moore, now of This is Us, plays a newlywed marriage counselor whose world is rocked when she learns that her parents (played by James Brolin and Jane) are getting divorced.
When a married woman and mother loses her memory, it starts to transform a dysfunctional family to the point where the new normal is kind of preferable. No, this is not Jane’s third turn as an amnesiac; she plays a character named Grandma Ilene (Grandma? How is that even possible?). She also appeared in a 2011 episode of the Castle TV series, “One Life to Lose.”
A group of — as the title says — freeloaders are about to lose their home base when the rock star who’s been allowing them to live in his house has decided to put it on the market. Jane plays a character named Carolyn.
Jane’s Vivian and her two daughters (played by Scottie Thompson and Madeline Zima) are brought back together following her husband and their father’s death, and through an adventure that follows they are able to put the differences that have separated them for quite some time away and reconcile themselves with the past.
The legal drama featured Jane in two episodes as Colleen, the mother of Mark-Paul Gosselaar’s Peter Bash.
Keri Russell plays Jane Hayes, a woman absolutely obsessed with the novel Pride and Prejudice who makes her way to a theme park based on the writings of Jane Austen. There she hopes to meet the perfect gentleman. Jane is cast in the role of Mrs. Wattlesbrook.
Grandma Mimi (Jane) steps in to inspire her granddaughter to make a difference when her art class has been cut from the school program.
Harper Hutton (Jane) never lived her dream of being a Broadway star, so she pushes her daughter, Mirabella (Sara Paxton), to do so. Rebelling, Mirabella goes to get married in Italy, while Harper gets her hands on a magic potion that makes her young again. Her first course of action is to fly to Italy and stop the wedding from taking place.
Jane has a supporting role as a magazine’s mega-successful fashion editor who fires reporter Daniella (Giulia Nahmany), who in turn sets off on a journey of personal discovery and romance.
Jane appeared on this 2014 sitcom in the episode “Gigo-Man.”
Another TV guest appearance, this one as a romantic interest for Judd Hirsch’s supporting character. The series is a cult favorite about an immortal living among us.
Queen Isadora of Cordina (Jane) is intent on disrupting her royal son’s plans to marry a woman who is a seamstress from Philadelphia. Stephen Hagan and Lacey Chabert play the couple.
Goth girl Scout Havers (India Ennenga) travels with the suicidal Sam Prescott (James Frecheville) in an attempt to find out the location of her sister. Jane plays Sam’s mother, Gloria.
Jane played Amanda Elaine, a guest star in three episodes of the series.
Yet another three-episode guest star appearance, but for a British series about a pair of adventurers. In it, she plays Lady Lindo-Parker.
Marlon Wayans has filled a huge part of his career with spoofs of various popular films, and this time he turns his attention to the Fifty Shades of Gray series. Jane plays a character named Claire.
A connection is immediately struck between hip-hop violinist Johnnie Blackwell (Nicholas Galitzine) and classical dancer Ruby Adams (Keenan Kampa), leading them to a competition that could impact their lives like nothing ever has. Jane plays Oksana. Followed two years later by the sequel, High Strung: Free Dance.
The focus is on ’90s talent manager Sandy Wexler (Adam Sandler) and his wacky clients, which include characters played by Jane, Jennifer Hudson, Kevin James, Terry Crews, and Colin Quinn.
Taking control of the story are Morgan Freeman and Tommy Lee Jones as, respectively, an ex-mob lawyer and FBI Agent who are the targets of an intended mob hit. Jane is cast as Delilah.
Veronica Malloy (Jane) lives her life as a mistress, avoiding genuine emotional involvement — until she comes to realize that best friend Brandon McKellan (Parker Stevenson) could very well be what she’s been missing.
The battle between a pair of fitness nuts who compete at the National Aerobatics Championships. Jane, a series regular, plays Janet.
While the pizza restaurants of a pair of families are battling for supremacy, their kids fall in love with each other. Consider it Romeo and Juliet … with sauce.
Jane appeared on five episodes of this Netflix streaming comedy from The Big Bang Theory‘s Chuck Lorre and starring Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin. Her character’s name is Madelyn.
Annoyed that he has to share his bedroom with his grandfather (Robert De Niro), Billy (Juliocesar Chavez) declares open warfare. It’s a comedy. Jane plays Diane.
All hell breaks loose when Molly (Malin Akerman) and Abby (Kat Denning) decide to host Thanksgiving for friends and acquaintances. One of them is Helen (Jane).
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