Sela Ward
Sela Ward
Sela Ann Wardis an American actress, author and producer, best known for her roles on television. During the 1980s, she played supporting roles in films The Man Who Loved Women, Rustlers RhapsodyNothing in Commonand Hello Again, before her breakthrough role as Teddy Reed in the NBC drama series Sisters, for which she received her first Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 1994...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionTV Actress
Date of Birth11 July 1956
CityMeriden, MS
CountryUnited States of America
The proceeds of the book are going to the kids at Hope Village, so anyone who needs a Christmas present know that it's helping the kids.
I think Stacy is like a window into him, his vulnerability, his heart, because he does have one somewhere.
No not at all... it is rare for shows to make it as long as Once and Again... It was a pretty good run.
As for ABC you can't take it personally. We had three good years.
It's about, I did talk about my life in broad strokes and what home meant to me in order to really explore the subject of home and can you go back and what that means for people in that sense of community that we've lost.
For example, when my mother died, the people who showed up just to put an apron on to cook, people who really do the right thing, so to speak, as my momma would always say to show that they care, a sense of community that we've lost so much in our country.
Well I started studying to help me with these commercial auditions and I just loved it.
You do become very close like a family but because you see each other for such an intense period of time on the set everyday. You really don't end up socializing that much.
Which is a wonderful irony, I have property there. I go back every chance I get. One of the main reasons I actually wrote the book, agreed to write it having never wanted to do that in my life, very intimidating by the way to write a book.
Oh, definitely and I talk about all the things that I really needed to make me happy at that point in time were outside of Mississippi, and now all the things that I need to make me happy are back there.
I loved the challenge of doing something I had never done. I'd never done a medical show, a procedural show. ... There is not much time to really delve into the emotions. It's very quick-paced and clipped. It's not about sitting on a sofa and talking about how we're feeling.
I'm thrilled to be a part of Mississippi Rising, ... as it will raise much-needed funds for the recovery efforts that lie ahead. Mississippi's gown may be torn and tattered, but she will prevail.
So far, my forties have been the best time of my life. If I can hold a banner for women in their forties that says life isn't over and sexiness isn't over, then great.
A celebrity can help put a spotlight on a problem, a crisis and a need, ... I'll be sending a check to the Salvation Army. I'm going to do whatever I can.