Jane Seymour has let her “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman” co-star Joe Lando and his family stay at her home in Malibu after his house was burnt down by the Palisades fire.
Lando — who briefly dated Seymour, 73, when they shot the pilot episode of the Western series in 1992 — opened up about Seymour’s act of service in an Instagram video on Saturday.
“The Lando family is intact, all of us, our dogs and our two birds. Thankfully, there are angels in this world,” Lando, 63, began in the clip.
“We’re left with nothing except each other. My friend Jane Seymour allowed us to come over to her house and opened it up for us without any hesitation and thank God gave us someplace to come and sleep,” he shared.
Lando and Seymour played an on-screen couple in “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,” which aired on CBS from 1993 to 1998. They reunited for two TV movies in 1999 and 2001, as well as in the 2022 Lifetime movie “A Christmas Spark.”
The actors had a brief relationship during the filming of the very first episode of the show in 1992.
“We obviously, clearly loved one another and realized we couldn’t be actually in real-life together. I think we just played it [off] as Michaela and Sully,” Seymour told Us Weekly in 2019.
The “Wedding Crashers” star also said that she and Lando didn’t get along when they filmed the rest of the show after their breakup.
“We didn’t actually talk to each other, other than in dialogue or making out for about six or seven years,” she recalled, calling it a “difficult” and “tough” time.
Lando and his family, which includes wife Kirsten Barlow and their four children, lost their Palisades home to the deadly wildfire that has spread to over 23,000 acres.
“I’ve never been through anything like this. It’s indescribable,” the actor said in his video.
“If it was just us, I’d be really OK with this. But it’s everybody. It’s everything. I’m just devastated and heartbroken for everybody, all the people we know. They don’t have houses,” added Lando.
Seymour had to evacuate her Malibu house due to the Palisades fire, but she was able to return home after it survived the blaze.
“My mother instilled in me from an early age that in times of great strife and struggle, reach out and help someone,” she said in a statement to Deadline. “Welcoming Joe and his family into our home while they try to make sense of the inexplicable is just what you do for family, and The Landos are our family.”
Like Seymour, other celebrities have opened their homes to fellow stars who are in need amid the wildfire crisis.
Hilary Duff and Matthew Koma took in Mandy Moore, Taylor Goldsmith and their three children after the latter couple’s Altadena home was destroyed.
Duff and her husband’s good deed was revealed by Taylor’s younger brother, Griffin Goldsmith, who also lost his Altadena home.
“They are currently housing my brother’s family. They’ve taken care of my entire family from the moment this began. I will never be able to thank them adequately,” Griffin, 34, wrote on Instagram.
The musician added, “This is the kindest act any human could do for another. They are the most beautiful, selfless people we’ve ever known.”
“Beverly Hills, 90210” alum Jennie Garth also had to evacuate her LA home with her husband, Dave Abrams. They found refuge at her ex-husband Peter Facinelli’s property.
“Peter and his family took us in and have been so kind,” Garth, 52, who has three daughters with Facinelli, 51, said in an Instagram video on Jan. 10.