Jane Seymour dined with John Wayne on airplane before her rise to stardom
Published in Entertainment News
John Wayne dined with Jane Seymour on an airplane before she shot to global stardom.
The star - who got her first big role as Bond girl Solitaire in 1973's Live and Let Die - was flying first class on her first trip to Los Angeles, California, as a young actress, when a stewardess approached Jane and said that the legend of Hollywood westerns wanted to spend time with her.
Jane - who is still shocked by that experience with The Longest Day actor - recalled to People: "I came to Hollywood on an airplane, obviously, and while I was sitting there in first class, the stewardess said, 'Mr. Wayne would like you to dine with him.'
"Who comes to Hollywood as a young actress and actually sits down in a dining area on - not a 747 - but on a big jet to Los Angeles next to John Wayne?"
Jane - who, after Live and Let Die, went on to become a household name, starring in more films, including the 1980 romance-fantasy Somewhere in Time, and the 2005 comedy-romance Wedding Crashers - is currently writing an autobiography.
She added: "And I've got so many stories and so many extraordinary things that have happened that I keep thinking, 'How did that actually happen to me?'"
However, the Golden Globe-winning actress - who has also appeared in TV shows, including sci-fi Battlestar Galactica, and western Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman - is struggling to decide what to put in the book.
Jane, 74, admitted: "I'm trying to figure out what to do with all the material I can't put in the book. I'm actually trying to think out of the box.
"I'm just thinking while I'm doing it, I want to make sure that the book is great and it has a purpose, but then I'm trying to figure out what to do with the rest of the stories."
Some other stories include Hollywood star Gloria Swanson asking Jane to play her in a movie about her life, as well as meeting legendary actor-and-director Laurence Olivier right at the start of Jane's acting career.
Speaking of meeting Olivier, she remembered: "I remember him telling stories about school days and then going the next day on the set and watching him literally play that character. That was amazing."












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