Genteel-looking British actress Jenny Seagrove distinguished herself as a sensitive heroine during the 1980s in plush TV romances such as
The Woman in White (1982),
Diana (1984) and, in particular, the adaptations of
Barbara Taylor Bradford's
A Woman of Substance (1984) wherein she played Emma Harte, and
Hold the Dream (1986) as Paula Fairley. In later years she would be highly recognizable for her role as Jo Mills, QC in the British crime mystery series
Judge John Deed (2001).
Jenny enjoyed a privileged childhood though it was marked with sadness. Born Jennifer Ann Seagrove on Independence Day, 1957 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, her father ran an import-export firm and her mother was a British aristocrat who suffered a debilitating stroke when Jenny was less than a year old. At age 9, Jenny attended a girls' boarding school in England and appeared in school plays.
Initially interested in a culinary career, she opted for acting instead and trained at the Bristol Old Vic. After leaving school, Seagrove met Indian-born
Madhav Sharma, a little-known actor-director, but the marriage was not a happy one (1984-1988). She also had a long term relationship with director
Michael Winner of "Death Wish" fame, whom she met on the set of the
Agatha Christie mystery
Appointment with Death (1988).
Jenny is known fondly respected for her superb theatre work in England. Playing the title role in "Jane Eyre" at Chichester Festival Theatre in 1986, she returned there to play Bett in "King Lear in New York" in 1992. Other roles have included Ilona in "The Guardsman" (1986); "Present Laughter" opposite
Tom Conti (1993); Annie Sullivan in "The Miracle Worker" (1994); "Dead Guilty" with
Hayley Mills (1995); "Hurlyburly" (1997); the Parisian thriller "Vertigo" (1998); "Brief Encounter" (2000); a female version of "The Odd Couple" (2001-02); the title role in
W. Somerset Maugham; "The Constant Wife" (2003);
David Hare's "The Secret Rapture" (2003); "The Night of the Iguana" (2005); "The Letter" (2007); "Absurd Person Singular" (2007); "Murder on Air" (2008); "The Country Girl" (2011);
Noël Coward "Fallen Angels" (2014); and as distraught mother Chris MacNeil in "The Exorcist" (2017). Many of these plays were in association with her long-time partner, theatre impresario
Bill Kenwright.
To date, Jenny's film career has not match her impressive stature on stage or TV. Nevertheless, she made her British film debut as "Anna" in the
Jeremy Irons Polish political vehicle
Moonlighting (1982) directed by
Jerzy Skolimowski. She subsequently appeared as a quirky Scottish lass in the film
Local Hero (1983) starring
Burt Lancaster, and then was given the top female role as Sophie in the period adventure comedy
Nate and Hayes (1983) (aka Nate and Hayes) starring
Tommy Lee Jones and
Michael O'Keefe as O'Keefe's fiancée.
She was part of an all-star suspect line-up in the
Agatha Christie whodunnit
Appointment with Death (1988) starring
Peter Ustinov as sleuth Hercule Poirot and followed that with the
Jeremy Irons starrer
A Chorus of Disapproval (1989). In the United States, Jenny was seen in an unsympathetic light as the evil nanny in
The Guardian (1990), directed by
William Friedkin and appeared in the comedy caper
Bullseye! (1990), filmed in England and Scotland.
In later years, Jenny was given several starring film roles. She played the title missionary in
Miss Beatty's Children (1992); co-starred with
Anthony Edwards in the romantic comedy
Don't Go Breaking My Heart (1999); played an eccentric widow who forms a bond with a teenage runaway in
Zoe (2001); and played a woman who hid an escaped Russian POW during World War II in
Another Mother's Son (2017).