Jenny Seagrove

TV Actress

Jenny Seagrove was born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on July 4th, 1957 and is the TV Actress. At the age of 66, Jenny Seagrove biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
July 4, 1957
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Age
66 years old
Zodiac Sign
Cancer
Profession
Film Actor, Stage Actor
Jenny Seagrove Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 66 years old, Jenny Seagrove physical status not available right now. We will update Jenny Seagrove's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Jenny Seagrove Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Hobbies
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Education
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Jenny Seagrove Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Madhav Sharma, ​ ​(m. 1984; div. 1988)​
Children
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Dating / Affair
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Parents
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Jenny Seagrove Life

Jennifer Ann Seagrove (born 4 July 1957) is an English actress.

She studied at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and first came to prominence as the lead in Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance (1984) and the film Local Hero (1983).

She appeared in the thriller Appointment with Death (1988) and William Friedkin's The Guardian (1990).

Louisa Gould appeared in Another Mother's Son in 2017. Jo Mills plays Jo Mills in the long-running BBC drama series Judge John Deed (2001–07).

A number of Waitrose television advertisements have earned her acclaim as a voiceover artist.

Early life

Jennifer Ann Seagrove was born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1957, to British parents, Pauline and Derek Seagrove. Her father owned an import-export business, which gave the family a luxurious life. Her mother had a stroke and was unable to care for her when Seagrove was less than a year old and was unable to care for her. Seagrove attended St Hilary's School in Godalming, Surrey, England, from the age of nine.

Seagrove began attending acting lessons and trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, despite her parents' wishes for her daughter to work as a chef. Seagrove bulimia in her early adulthood, but recovered: "I could feel myself tearing my stomach and I sort of pulled it out of it," she said. "It was a very slow process."

Personal life

Seagrove is a United Kingdom animal rights campaigner and an advocate for deregulation of the herbal remedy industry, and she advocates for a vegetarian diet.

Everton F.C.'s chairman, Bill Kenwright, has been her partner since 1994. The two appeared together as contestants on a charity edition of ITV1's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, winning £1,000. They appeared on a celebrity version of the BBC's Pointless, which aired on January 3, 2014.

Seagrove was previously married to British and Indian actor Madhav Sharma from 1984 to 1988, and then dated film director Michael Winner until 1993.

Mane Chance Sanctuary is a registered charity that provides assistance to rescued horses, based in Compton, Guildford. The charity's primary aim is to "provide sanctuary and protection for horses," while also promoting humane behaviour in all animals and building mutually beneficial relationships with people who need them."

Mane Chance Sanctuary was founded in 2011 by Seagrove, who stepped in to help a friend who was facing financial difficulties. Seagrove was able to purchase property on Monkshatch Garden Farm and has since expanded the charity, which now cares for more than 30 horses by using a unique system of equine welfare.

Sir Timothy Ackroyd Bt, an actor, is among the charity's trustees. Simrin Choudhrie, a philanthropist, and Simrin Choudhrie. James McCarthy is the chairman.

She appeared on The Main Chance with singer Peter Howarth in 2014 as part of a Mane Chance Sanctuary cause.

Source

Jenny Seagrove Career

Career

Seagrove's drama includes the title role in Jane Eyre at Chichester Festival Theatre (1986); Ilona in The Guardsman at Theatr Clwyd (1992); and Bett in King Lear in Chichester (1992).

She appeared in Present Laughter at the Globe Theatre (1993); Annie Sullivan in The Miracle Worker (1995); The Queen's Theatre (1995); Hurlyburly for the Peter Hall Company (1996); Robert Shaw in the Parisian drama Vertigo (1998); and then with Anthony Andrews (also Windsor, 1998).

She appeared in Brief Encounter at the Lyric Theatre in 2000, then followed by Neil Simon's The Female Odd Couple at the Apollo (2001). In 2002, she appeared in The Constant Wife, a sequel to David Hare's The Secret Rapture, and The Night of the Irma two years later.

In Maugham's The Letter at Wyndham's Theatre (2006), she appeared with Anthony Andrews in The West End of a UK tour.

Marion Brewster-Wright appeared in Alan Ayckbourn's dark, three-act comedy Absurd Person Singular in December 2007.

She and Martin Shaw appeared in Murder on Air in 2008 at the Theatre Royal, Windsor.

Georgie Elgin appeared in The Country Girl at the Apollo Theatre in 2011.

Julia appeared in a revival of No.l Coward's Fallen Angels in early 2014. Bill Kenwright's partner and Sara Crowe produced the film.

She and Martin Shaw appeared in an adaptation of Brief Encounter in 2015, staging an original radio script from 1947 and "a live broadcast from a BBC radio studio" at the Theatre Royal Windsor, playing Laura Jesson and Alec Harvey.

Seagrove played Chris MacNeil in The Exorcist at the Phoenix Theatre in October 2017, returning to the West End.

In the Academy Award-winning short film A Shocking Accident (1982), directed by James Scott, Seagrove appeared alongside Rupert Everett. She made her first major film appearance in Local Hero (1983), in which she played a mysterious environmentalist with webbed feet. Roles appeared in a number of films, including Savage Islands (aka, Nate and Hayes, 1983), alongside Tommy Lee Jones and Appointment with Death (1988) followed. In The Guardian (1990), directed by William Friedkin, in which she played an evil babysitter, she was one of her leading roles. Louisa Gould, a lead role in Another Mother's Son, a member of the Channel Islands resistance movement during World War II, who bravely shielded an escaped Russian slave slave worker in Jersey and was gassed to death in 1945 at Ravensbrück concentration camp.

Seagrove appeared in a national television series based on an R. F. Delderfield book in which she portrayed adult Diana Gaylord-Sutton (the child was not present in Patsy Kensit's first two episodes). Seagrove appeared in two American-produced television miniseries based on Barbara Taylor Bradford's first books: Emma Harte in A Woman of Substance (1984) and Paula Fairley in Hold the Dream (1986). In Incident at Victoria Falls (1992), a UK made-for-television film, she played stage actress Lillie Langtry. Melanie James, the female lead in the film Magic Moments (1989), starred alongside John Shea, who portrayed the magician Troy Gardner with whom she fell in love.

Seagrove and Simon Cowell produced Wildlife SOS (1997), a documentary film about dedicated animal lovers who saved injured and orphaned wild animals that were brought into their sanctuary.

The bulk of Seagrove's film work since 1990 has been shot on television. She appeared in the series Judge John Deed from 2001 to 2007. When Michael Aspel surprised her on This Is Your Life in 2003, she was a participant in This Is Your Life.

In the episode "The Sign of Four" (1987) of the series Sherlock Holmes, she costarred with John Thaw. She appeared in episodes of Lewis ("The Point of Vanishing") and Identity ("Somewhere They Can't Find Me" (2010). In the episode "Rocket" (2013), she appeared in Endeavour (the precursor to the Inspector Morse series).

Source

Heroism of the first class on the Channel Islands. Untold accounts of the brave World War Two postal workers who risked death – or worse – are among the many of the survivors of the war against the Nazis on the Channel Islands

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 7, 2024
He waited for the tea urn to soften the edges of the envelope before leading the door to the empty canteen. As his heart throbbed, he delicately escorted the letter. Its treacherous contents tripped poison. 'I have a legitimate reason to believe that Mr Dark hears the English news very often,' it says. Watch him go. 'Yours, Helpful.' The letter had been written on flimsy tomato packing paper and daubed in kidish capitals, but it was enough to condemn Mr Dark of 9 Belmont Gardens, St Helier, Jersey, to the deadliest of deaths in a Nazi concentration camp. Fortunately, he was spared from this fate due to the tenacity of a patriotic wartime postman. The brave journalist was able to warn Mr Dark that he should not have to get rid of his forbidden wireless by steaming open the letter sent by an informant stationed on the island.

Bill Kenwright dies aged 78: Everton chairman and legendary West End theatre impresario behind Blood Brothers, Joseph and Fame passes away days after returning home from surgery on cancerous liver tumour

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 24, 2023
In August, Kenwright underwent surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his liver. Because of complications during surgery, he spent a lengthy time in intensive care before returning home two weeks ago. He was one of the country's top theatre designers and starred in Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Jesus Christ Superstar. However, the Scouser was perhaps best known for the long-running West End hit Blood Brothers, which lasted 24 years in the West End before playing for three years at the Music Box Theatre in Broadway. In 2022 (left), he was seen with Gareth Southgate (left); with his partner Jenny Seagrove (top right); and posing with Andrew Lloyd Webber at a party (bottom right).

In Falkland Sound, bringing back the years... to a 'Argy-bargy' bit

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 18, 2023
GEORGINA BROWN: Forty years after that unforgettable headline 'Gotcha! Brad Birch's latest play revisits the Falklands War, which is best known for its reconstruction of a financially struggling Mrs Thatcher's family. Birch was only six when his uncle, who was serving in the Navy, survived a sinking ship. The playwright went on the 8,000-mile journey to interview people in Port Stanley, the capital, with a close-knit population of 800 in 1982. It's no wonder that it seems like Ambridge. 'Gossip is a form of exercise,' says nice old Mrs H, who raises chickens and tomatoes.