Jane Seymour Says She Feels 'Pretty Comfortable' Being Able to 'Age Up, Down and Around' for Roles (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Jane Seymour attends AARP’s Annual Movies For Grownups Awards at the Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on February 08, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California

Michael Kovac/Getty

Jane Seymouris embracing flexibility in her career.

“I just feel comfortable in my skin,” Seymour says.

“I really love the roles I’m getting and if I’m playing character roles, which I am, but character roles that are still kind of sexy and fun,” she adds, joking, “I think at this point, I’m pretty comfortable just being able to age up and down and around.”

Seymour specifically referenced her 1978 miniseriesThe Awakening Land, as well as 1981’sEast of Eden, the latter in which she played character Cyrus Trask at different ages, from 13 to her 60s.

“So I’ve been jumping around ever since I was young,” she tells PEOPLE. “I played older and younger in everything.”

Jane Seymour speaks onstage during AARP’s Annual Movies For Grownups Awards at the Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on February 08, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.

During Saturday’s awards ceremony, Seymour presented the best documentary trophy forSuper/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story— a film that follows the life of her late friend who starred alongside her in 1980’sSomewhere in Time. Speaking with PEOPLE, she described Reeve, who died in 2004 at age 52, as a “real-life Superman.”

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“I think he teaches all of us that everyone in life will have challenges, some more than others,” Seymour says. “The hardest thing to do is to accept. And if you can accept, open up your heart, reach out to help someone else, you’ll have a purpose. And that is the secret to happiness. And if you have a purpose, then you can feel really good about yourself.”

“When you feel good about yourself, you are like a magnet,” she adds. “People want to be part of something good.”

Jane Seymour attends AARP’s Annual Movies For Grownups Awards at the Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on February 08, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California

In December, Seymour spoke with PEOPLE atThe Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment Gala, and sharedsome valuable advicefrom hermore than six decadesin the entertainment business.

“Don’t take it for granted. It isn’t easy,” she said at the time. “The balance of how you come across and how you conduct yourself is huge, sadly."

“But also I’ve never given up. I now have my own series again, and I’m in my 70s,” Seymour added. “So I say to women, ‘Don’t give up and be authentic.’ Don’t pretend to be 20 when you’re 70. Be 70.”

TheDr. Quinn, Medicine Womanstar also celebrated the progress women have made in film and television since she first entered the public eye.

“It’s a great honor, and it’s wonderful because I’ve been working in entertainment since I was 13, so that’s 60 years,” she said, “and to see how women are really having their moment now and telling their stories and telling stories that normally wouldn’t have been told is very empowering.”

As of late, Seymour — who will celebrate her 74th birthday on Feb. 15 — has been “enjoying life” as she films a movie in England and is hopeful for a fifth season ofher crime proceduralHarry Wild.

“I’ve got grandchildren, kids, an amazing extended family and there’s a lot of joy in my life right now,” she told PEOPLE in December.

source: people.com