Jane Seymour Celebrates Aging With Playful Revelations

  • By Imani
  • Dec. 31, 2025, 2:25 p.m.

Jane Seymour: Embracing Life with Vibrancy

Jane Seymour, the legendary actress known for her roles in classics like Wedding Crashers and Live and Let Die, is proving that age is just a number. In a candid interview with People, published on December 7, the 74-year-old star opened up about her love life, revealing a zest for romance and energy that defies her years.

Bold Confessions from a Hollywood Icon

Reflecting on her sultry role as Kathleen Cleary in the 2005 hit Wedding Crashers, Seymour shared a candid confession: "I turn 75 next year, and I'm very sexually active." Her statement is a refreshing reminder that romance and passion don't have an age limit. Seymour's current beau, John Zambetti, is certainly keeping up with her dynamic spirit.

Aspirations Beyond the Screen

Seymour noted that many of her characters are designed to inspire women of a certain age, emphasizing that "it's never too late to fall in love" and that "you can be sexy for as long as you feel like it." Her approach serves as a beacon for those who might feel constrained by societal expectations around aging.

Jane Seymour, 74, Says, ‘70 is the New 50’

Jane Seymour, 74, Says, ‘70 is the New 50’

“I have to actually wake up in the morning and remind myself how old I am because inside of me, I would say I still feel like I'm maybe about 40 or 50.”

The Youthful Spirit Within

Beyond her romantic life, Seymour describes a youthful energy that belies her chronological age. "I don't know where all that time went, but I have the energy that I had when I was 40," she mused. Her ability to maintain such vigor is as much about mindset as it is about lifestyle, offering inspiration for those looking to live life to the fullest regardless of age.

Imani
Author: Imani
Imani

Imani

Imani follows the money: payouts, contracts, lawsuits, and platform enforcement. With a background in entertainment PR and paralegal work, she breaks complex stories into plain-English playbooks for creators. Her series Follow the Money connects drama to data - who benefits, who pays, and what to do next. Calm, sourced, and courtroom-ready; DTLA is her second office.