The moment she arrives in her bungalo, Jane Seymour tosses off her travelling clothes, slips into a bathing suit and wraps a cheerful red pareo around her petite waist. Now this is more like it, she beams as she slowly inhales the warmth of the beautiful tropical island of Morea in French Polynesia. It's been 5 years since her popular series Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman ended and yet this busy mother says her days are busier then ever. So busy in fact, that this holiday with her husband director/actor James Keach and two of their children, seven-year old twins John and Kristopher, is exactly what the doctor ordered. And as the trip coincided with their tenth wedding anniversary, Jane and James decided to celebrate with a recommitment wedding ceremony filled with ancient Polynesian traditions and folklore. Tribal elders watched over the holy
ceremony, as the groom dressed in formal ceremonial costume and draped
in a white pareo, canoed in to meet his bride. The couple were then enveloped
in a traditional blanket to symbolize the two becoming one. Vows were
exchanged followed by crowns and flowers as symbols of unending love.
A petite beauty at 52, Jane is still able to turn heads when she strolls along the beach in a bathing suit. She is also quite comfortable in her role as mother, wife, artist, designer, and champion of worthy causes. Though her schedule is always full, she says her most important committment is to her family. "That is one of the reasons for taking this trip", she says. I need to have some time with the children and more importantly- James and I really needed to relax. Apart from the twins, she has, from her previous marriage to David Flynn, a son, 18-year old Sean, who still lives at home with her, and a daughter, 21-year-old Katie. She is also close to Flynn's daughter, Jennifer 23, and James' 26-year old son, Kalen. Keen for her twins to experience the richness of the tropical
paradise during their holiday, Jane took them to Dolphin Quest, a hands-on
conservation and exploratory program designed to allow humans to interact
and swim with dolphins in their natural habitat. There, John and Kris
delighted in swimming alongside Lokahi, a nine-year-old bottlenose dolphin.
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