Jane Seymour in ‘Live and Let Die’ in 1973 and in 2024.Photo:Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty; Amanda Edwards/Getty
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(748x295:750x297):format(webp)/jane-seymour-live-and-let-die-022625-1f9a50da61394caab499a85262cc4ab1.jpg)
Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty; Amanda Edwards/Getty
Jane Seymouris hopeful about the future of the James Bond franchise.
“I hope they’re good,” theDr. Quinn, Medicine Womanstar, 74, said at the Feb. 25 TIME Women of the Year Gala in West Hollywood. “I mean, it’s an end of an era, isn’t it?”
Roger Moore and Jane Seymour in ‘Live and Let Die’ in 1973.Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x0:751x2):format(webp)/jane-seymour-roger-moore-live-and-let-die-022625-084386eb2a0b49ed9604407e32049a75.jpg)
Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty
“I am sure it’ll do really well,” she said. “I think Bond will keep going. People love Bond. It’s a great franchise.”
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
So, would Seymour be up for revisiting the world of Bond in a potential Amazon-produced project?
Jane Seymour at the TIME 2025 Women of the Year Gala.Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(599x0:601x2):format(webp)/jane-seymour-100-women-of-the-year-022625-142ef7c6cc324e98a78d645421e1043f.jpg)
Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty
“I’ve always said I’d be very happy to be a part of it,” she told PEOPLE. “I’m very proud to have been part of that, but I was like a really early Bond when they actually did the books. Well, maybe. We’ll see.”
“I mean, I was very young when I did it. I was 20,” Seymour added.
Asked for her favorite memories of working onLive and Let Die, Seymour said she’s saving them for a book she’s currently working on.
“I give so many interviews, I give most of my stories away,” she joked. “I’ve got to keep some from my book.”
source: people.com