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JANE SEYMOUR VISITS GRAND RAPIDS

Actress and children's welfare advocate Jane Seymour is the essential speaker at Ferris State University's Foundation for Excellence Benefit.

The Big Rapids school holds the event starting at 5:30 p.m. Friday at the JW Marriott Hotel in nearby Grand Rapids.

The Ferris Foundation handles the university's donation funds. Proceeds from the advantage support the Foundation for Excellence Scholarship program, Exceptional Merit Grants program and other activities.
Seymour played the lead role in TV series 'Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman' and has acted in many movies including 'Live and Let Die'.

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JANE SEYMOUR

"I saw the white light and I saw, from the corner of the room, them trying to resuscitate me and I saw a syringe with blood in it. "It did change my whole life because, when you die, I realized you take nothing with you except for what you've done."

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Updated: Nov 07, 2009 | 11:05:20 EST

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Biography

The raven-haired daughter of a prosperous British gynecologist, Jane Seymour debuted onstage at 13 as a member of the London Festival Ballet, after training at the Arts Educational School. Five years later, she switched to acting, making her screen bow as part of a huge ensemble in Oh, What A Lovely War! (1968). She entered the fan-mag files with her portrayal of the enigmatic Solitaire in the 1973 James Bond epic Live and Let Die, following this with a ingenue turn in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1974). While her subesquent film appearances were well-received (as was her engagement in the 1980 Broadway production of Amadeus), Seymour's larger fame rested on her prolific TV work, notably on such miniseries as "East of Eden" and "War and Remembrance."



In 1988, she won an Emmy for her portrayal of Maria Callas in the TV miniseries "Onassis." Four years later, she landed one of her most successful roles to date, that of the title heroine of the TV series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. In subsequent years, Seymour sustained her career with longform soapers - such as the 1998 A Marriage of Convenience and the 2002 Heart of a Stranger - before making a most welcome return to theatrical features in 2005.



That year, she scored a neat comic turn as the wife of U.S. Treasury Secretary Christopher Walken (and the mother of some outrageously dysfunctional children) in the summer comedy smash Wedding Crashers. Two years later, ABC tapped Seymour to trip the light fantastic as one of the celebrity dancers on its blockbuster series Dancing with the Stars. On that program, Seymour danced opposite series vet Tony Ovolani.


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