DECEMBER 2021 - The Prince Charles Cinema James Bond Season is Back
in 2022! |
|
16 December
2021
The JAMES BOND SEASON is back at the Prince Charles Cinema in
January 2022! Once again the PCC will screen every
official James Bond film from Dr. No (1962) to Spectre
(2015), and will also include
Casino Royale (1967) and Never Say Never Again
(1983). The season begins on Saturday January 15, 2022 - and
will continue through the first half of the year, culminating in
August. Each film will have one afternoon screening each week on
Thursday and Saturday, with You Only Live Twice having an
additional screening on Sunday June 16, 2022 to celebrate its
55th anniversary. |
The Living
Daylights will also receive an additional 35th anniversary
screening at 18.00 on Monday June 27, 2022. Thanks to
Park Circus Films, the PCC have secured these 26 James Bond
films for this epic season. Booking is now open to PCC Members,
and available to everyone from 10am Thursday December 16, 2021.
Book now to enjoy a twice-weekly serving of James Bond on the
big-screen, where he belongs! |
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DECEMBER 2021 - Doug Robinson (1930-2021) |
|
16 December
2021
Doug Robinson, the stuntman and younger brother of actor Joe
Robinson [Peter Franks in Diamonds Are Forever (1971],
has died at the age of 91. Doug was born Douglas Bowbank
Robinson in Newcastle-upon-Tyne on February 8, 1930. Their father
Joseph Robinson Senior and grandfather John were world champion
wrestlers, and both brothers trained in wrestling and
body-building.
Doug's
showbusiness career began in the mid-1950s, and early film work
included Ben-Hur (1959). Doug was also one of the
Argonauts in Jason and The Argonauts (1963), and made
numerous British television appearances usually as a tough guy
in everything from The Avengers to Steptoe and Son.
Doug became one
of the cinema's most popular stuntmen, working on several James
Bond films. In 1965 Doug and Joe Robinson co-authored with
The Avengers and Goldfinger star, Honor Blackman's
Book of Self-Defence published by Andre Deutsch. Doug
Robinson held 7th Dan in judo and Wado ryu Karate.
Read more about
Doug Robinson's career |
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DECEMBER 2021 - The new James Bond novel by Anthony Horowitz title
and cover revealed |
|
16 December
2021
Jonathan Cape, Vintage and Ian Fleming Publications reveal
the title and cover of award-winning novelist and screenwriter
Anthony Horowitz's third official James Bond novel.
WITH A MIND TO
KILL opens with M’s funeral. One man is missing from the
graveside: the traitor who pulled the trigger and who is now in
custody, accused of M’s murder – James Bond.
Behind the Iron Curtain, a group of former SMERSH agents want to
use the British spy in an operation that will change the balance
of world power. Bond is smuggled into the lion’s den – but whose
orders is he following, and will he obey them when the moment of
truth arrives?
In a mission where treachery is all around and one false move
means death, Bond must grapple with the darkest questions about
himself. But not even he knows what has happened to the man he
used to be.
This book follows up Anthony Horowitz's best-selling James Bond
novels
TRIGGER MORTIS (2015) and
FOREVER AND A
DAY (2018). WITH A MIND TO KILL will be published on May 26,
2022 by Jonathan Cape in hardback and on the same day in
paperback by Vintage. |
|
DECEMBER 2021 - Diamonds Are Forever 50th Anniversary
(1971-2021) |
|
12 December 2021 As
Diamonds Are Forever celebrates its 50th anniversary, 007 MAGAZINE takes a look back at the production of the seventh James Bond film, which saw
Sean Connery return to the role of 007 after a four-year absence. Following the
disappointing box-office receipts for On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969)
when compared with the first five films in the series, and the
less than enthusiastic critical reception afforded newcomer
George Lazenby, distributor United Artists were keen to lure
Sean Connery back to the role which had made him an
international star...
Diamonds
goes gold! |
|
|
9 December 2021
ITV News Meridian report on
how the iconic Moon Buggy from a Diamonds Are Forever
(1971) was found rusting in a farmer's field in Kent by 007
MAGAZINE Editor & Publisher Graham Rye...
Read the full story and
watch the video
The complete Diamonds
Are Forever Moon Buggy Timeline
007 MAGAZINE presents the complete history of the iconic
Diamonds Are Forever Moon Buggy. Presented for the first
time, this is the full story of the rescue and restoration of
the one-of-a-kind 007 vehicle. From its construction in the USA
in 1971, through to filming in Nevada and Pinewood Studios, to
its TV appearances and promotional tours in Germany and the UK.
50 years of the James Bond Moon Buggy! |
|
|
5 December
2021
As Diamonds
Are Forever celebrates its 50th anniversary, 007 MAGAZINE
presents a new and exclusive article:
“The name's Gavin, John Gavin.”
Long before the
short-lived casting of Pierce Brosnan as James Bond in 1986,
only to be let down by the last-minute renewal of his
Remington Steele television contract, there was another
actor who was signed to play 007, but unlike Brosnan he never
got the chance to appear in front of the cameras. After George
Lazenby’s departure from the series in late 1969 before On
Her Majesty’s Secret Service had even been released,
producers Harry Saltzman & Albert R. Broccoli began another long
search for a new James Bond. After many British actors were
interviewed and screen-tested throughout 1970, with no one name
standing out, the producers began to reluctantly cast their net
a little wider and considered some American names...
CONTINUE READING |
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NOVEMBER 2021 - Sam Mendes Knighted at Windsor Castle by HRH
Princess Anne |
|
30 November
2021
Two-time James Bond director Sam Mendes was today Knighted
by HRH Princess Anne at an investiture ceremony at Windsor
Castle. The 56-year-old director of
Skyfall (2012)
and Spectre
(2015) was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 2020 New Years
Honours List for services to drama.
Sam Mendes
began his career in the theatre, and in 1990 was appointed
artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse, a Covent Garden
studio space previously used by the Royal Shakespeare Company.
One of his early successes was the 1993 revival of John Kander &
Fred Ebb's musical Cabaret, starring Jane Horrocks as
Sally Bowles and
Alan Cumming
as Emcee. 1994 saw Mendes stage a new production of
Lionel Bart's
Oliver! starring
Jonathan Pryce
as Fagin.
In 1999, Mendes
made his film directorial debut with the Oscar-winning
American Beauty, starring Kevin Spacey; followed in 2002 by
Road To Perdition, with Paul Newman, Tom Hanks and
Daniel Craig. |
|
NOVEMBER 2021 - Pinewood Studios name building in honour of Peter
Lamont |
|
Peter
Lamont's children, Neil Lamont and Mads Bushnell outside
the newly named building at Pinewood Studios. |
|
|
26 November
2021
Pinewood Studios has renamed their East Side Complex
building in honour of legendary Production Designer
Peter Lamont. A regular on
the lot throughout his 60-year career in the British Film
Industry. Peter was most noted for working on 18 James Bond
films starting with Goldfinger (1964) and working on all but one of the
films until Casino
Royale (2006).
Tomorrow Never Dies was the only James Bond film that
Lamont was unable to work on over 41 years due to his commitment
to Titanic. He was nominated for three Academy Awards for
his work on Fiddler on the Roof (1971),
The Spy Who Loved Me
(1977), and Aliens (1986), all were shot at Pinewood. His
fourth nomination, for Titanic (1997), won him the Oscar.
The tribute was hosted by the British Film Designers’ Guild and
Pinewood Studios and attended by family, friends and colleagues
from the industry including James Bond Producers
Michael G.
Wilson &
Barbara
Broccoli. Peter Lamont’s other credits at Pinewood and
Shepperton include: The Ipcress File (1965) and Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang (1968) and films from the Carry On
Series.
Andrew M. Smith, Corporate Affairs Director said:
“We are delighted to honour Peter Lamont at Pinewood Studios
and further celebrate the heritage of our Studios, which
celebrates its 85th anniversary this year. Peter Lamont was a
giant in the industry and a true gentleman to all those he met.” |
|
NOVEMBER 2021 - Burlington Arcade Launches Festive 007 Spectacle |
|
20 November
2021
Burlington Arcade in London's Mayfair launched its festive display this week, inspired by the
forthcoming 60th anniversary of James Bond in 2022.
Complementing this year’s gold and silver festive scheme, the 2021
Christmas spectacle from the renowned London landmark elevates the James
Bond installation that launched this Autumn with a 007 inspired OMEGA
clock counting down to the New Year which also marks the 60th Anniversary
of James Bond.
FULL STORY AND IMAGES |
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NOVEMBER 2021 -John Pearson (1930-2021) |
|
13 November
2021
John Pearson, the author of The Life of Ian Fleming
(1966) and James Bond: The Authorized Biography (1973)
has died aged 91.
John Pearson
first met Ian Fleming whilst working for The Sunday Times
in 1955; eventually becoming assistant to the James Bond author
and taking over as the writer of the newspapers'
‘Atticus’ column, for which Fleming had assumed responsibility
two years earlier. Ian Fleming also suggested that the young
John Pearson act as ghost-writer for the exploits of BOAC
security chief Donald Fish, which was published as Airline
Detective: The Fight Against International Air Crime in
1962. Ian Fleming also provided the introduction for what was
effectively Pearson's first non-fiction book.
Following the
death of Ian Fleming
on August 12, 1964 Leonard Russell, the literary editor of
The Sunday Times, suggested that Pearson should consider
writing the biography of his old friend and boss. The resulting
biography
The Life of Ian Fleming was published in London by
Jonathan Cape in 1966, and then in
LIFE Magazine in a two-part
adaptation in the October 7th & 14th issues to coincide with the
release of the US hardcover published by McGraw-Hill.
In October 1973
John Pearson's James Bond: The Authorized Biography was
published in hardback by Sidgwick and Jackson. The book is a
fictional account of the life of James Bond, Secret Agent 007,
written from Pearson's point-of-view as he interviews the ‘real’
James Bond (now aged 53) in Bermuda. |
James Bond:
The Authorized Biography is not often regarded as an
official James Bond continuation story as was the case with
COLONEL SUN, and
the later John
Gardner and
Raymond Benson novels. Although originally conceived as a
spoof by publisher William Armstrong (1938-2006), the book was
sanctioned by James Bond copyright holders Glidrose Productions.
John Pearson knew Peter
Janson-Smith (1922-2016), the Glidrose chairman, who gave
permission for the work to be published. In 1978 John Pearson
followed up his James Bond novel with Biggles: The Authorized
Biography, which was written in a similar style to his
fictionalized 007 story. Pearson will be best-remembered however
as one of the UK's leading writers of contemporary biographies,
including Donald Campbell, published as Bluebird and the Dead
Lake (1965), The Profession of Violence: The Rise and
Fall of the Kray Twins (1972), and its two sequels - The
Cult of Violence: The Untold Story of the Krays (2001) and
Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins (2010).
His 1995 biography Painfully Rich: The Outrageous Fortunes
and Misfortunes of the Heirs of J. Paul Getty formed the
basis for the 2017 film All The Money In The World
directed by Ridley Scott. |
|
NOVEMBER 2021 - Brand new Double O series by Kim Sherwood coming in
2022 |
|
4
November 2021
HarperCollins Publishers acquire licence to thrill with a
fully authorised new James Bond trilogy from Kim Sherwood,
featuring the next generation of Double O agents.
HarperCollins
Publishers have acquired the UK & Commonwealth and US & Canadian
rights to three contemporary thrillers by Kim Sherwood set in
the world of James Bond that feature a new raft of Double O
agents for the 21st century. The deal was negotiated by Kathryn
Cheshire in the UK and David Highfill at William Morrow in the
US, with Jonny Geller and Viola Hayden of Curtis Brown, on
behalf of Ian Fleming Publications Limited. Kim Sherwood is
represented by Susan Armstrong at C&W Agency.
James Bond is
missing, presumed captured or even killed. All of Bond’s
contemporaries are gone and a new generation of Double O agents
has been recruited to replace them and battle a global threat.
At the same time, M and Moneypenny are searching for a mole in
MI6. Will the truth be uncovered in time – or is this the end of
the Double O section?
FULL STORY |
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NOVEMBER 2021 - Bellmans to sell The Lewis Gilbert Film Script
and Production Archive |
|
16
November 2021
Bellmans is pleased to
announce the auction of The Lewis & Hylda Gilbert Collection on
Tuesday, 16th and Thursday, 18th November 2021. The Gilbert Collection
from Sheldrake Place, Kensington, includes The Lewis Gilbert Film
Script and Production Archive as well as a substantial Asian Works of
Art collection, but also furniture, paintings, miniatures, porcelain and
some jewellery and accessories.
Film Director
Lewis
Gilbert (1920-2018), best known for his three 007 movies and Alfie, was
married to his wife Hylda (1919-2005) for 53 years. Born into an antique
dealer's family, Hylda was the quintessentially beautiful, elegant and
supportive film director's wife with a career in modelling, but as a
theatre lover she was actively involved in spotting potential future films
for her husband, a number of which ranked amongst Lewis' most successful
titles.
Lewis Gilbert made more
than 40 films during a directorial career spanning six decades, including
three Bond movies - You Only Live Twice (1967),
The Spy Who
Loved Me (1977) and Moonraker (1979). He had his international
breakthrough with Alfie (1966), which also launched Michael Caine's
international career. Unlike many other directors he preferred doing small
budget films he could produce himself to “secure in the right of final
cut” and only made big budget films when he had to.
FULL DETAILS •
CATALOGUE
|
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NOVEMBER 2021 - The never to be forgotten John Barry (3 November
1933 -30 January 2011) |
|
3 November
2021
On the 88th Anniversary of his birth, 007 MAGAZINE pays tribute
to the five-time Oscar-winner, and eleven-time James Bond
soundtrack composer - the never to
be forgotten John Barry:
With a dictionary’s
worth of superlatives already written about John Barry during his long
and distinguished career, where does one begin an attempt to
encapsulate or pay tribute to his unique contribution to the
relatively new art of film scoring, and the wider impact his music has
had on world culture? Important art should move us, and Barry’s music
has often moved us in spades. He is the only film composer ever whose
work has transcended a legion of fans to the wider public outside that
inner circle of hardcore Barry soundtrack aficionados. While many a
‘man or woman in the street’ may still be unable to tell you who it
was that composed much of what they’ve heard of his work, the fact
remains that Barry’s music will still be familiar to their collective
ear in a way that no other film composer’s work has ever been, or will
ever be.
FULL STORY |
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OCTOBER 2021 - Thunderball returns to the West End in Edgar
Wright's Last Night In Soho |
|
31 October
2021
Hot on the heels of the record breaking UK success of No Time To Die starring
Daniel Craig, comes another cinema release featuring the most successful
James Bond film of all -Thunderball! The fourth 007 adventure
starring Sean Connery, which premiered in December 1965, features
prominently in the time-travelling psychological horror film Last Night
In Soho (2021), directed by Edgar Wright, and released in cinemas this
weekend. Last Night In Soho stars Thomasin McKenzie, Anya
Taylor-Joy, former Doctor Who Matt Smith, and Sixties’ icons
Terence Stamp and Rita Tushingham. Last Night In Soho
also marks the final film appearances of Diana Rigg and Margaret Nolan.
FULL STORY - Get it Wright
Edgar! |
|
OCTOBER 2021 - Leslie Bricusse (1931-2021) |
|
19 October
2021
Leslie Bricusse, the British composer, lyricist and
playwright, best-known for writing two iconic 1960s James Bond
title songs, has died at the age of 90.
Born in London
on January 9, 1921, Bricusse went on to have a long career in
musical theatre, including with a successful partnership with
singer/songwriter and actor Anthony Newley, which began with
their 1961 hit stage musical Stop The World - I Want To Get
Off. Bricusse and Newley later teamed with composer
John
Barry to write the title song for the 1964 James Bond film
Goldfinger, sung by
Shirley
Bassey (pictured left with Leslie Bricusse and Anthony
Newley [right]). Although Newley recorded a demo version of the
song, it would be Shirley Bassey's rendition of ‘Goldfinger’
that became the standard by which all other Bond songs would be
judged. Leslie Bricusse would also write the lyrics for ‘Mr.
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang’, originally intended as the title song for
Thunderball
(1965). Recorded by Dionne Warwick and Shirley Bassey, the song
would ultimately be replaced by
Tom Jones’
recording of ‘Thunderball’ with lyrics by
Don Black. |
Leslie Bricusse re-teamed with John Barry to write the
title song lyrics for You Only Live Twice
in 1967. A title track was originally recorded with English pop
singer
Julie Rogers,
but a completely different alternate version was finally used,
sung in the film by American pop star
Nancy
Sinatra. In the same year Bricusse wrote the screenplay and
music & lyrics for the American musical comedy film Doctor Dolittle
directed by Richard Fleischer, which also starred Anthony
Newley. Although
Doctor Dolittle turned out to be a box-office
disappointment, the Leslie Bricusse composition ‘Talk To The
Animals’ sung by Rex Harrison won the Academy Award for Best
Song in 1968. Also nominated that year was ‘The Look of Love’
from the James Bond spoof
Casino Royale
(1967) sung by
Dusty
Springfield, with lyrics by Hal David. Bricusse later told
Hal
David that he thought ‘The Look of Love’ should have won as
it was 10 times better than his own song. Bricusse followed his
Oscar-winning success with songs and music for Goodbye Mr.
Chips (1969), Scrooge (1971) starring
Albert Finney
[for which Bricusse also wrote the screenplay], and the
ever-popular Willie Wonka & The Chocolate Factory
(1971) [once again teamed with Anthony Newley] starring Gene
Wilder and based on the novel by
Roald Dahl.
Bricusse would win a second Academy Award for Best Adaptation
and Original Song Score for Victor/Victoria (1982). |
|
OCTOBER 2021 - Many important James Bond props to be auctioned by
PROPSTORE |
|
Entertainment Memorabilia Live Auction
London - 9th - 11th November, 2021
Several
important James Bond props and costumes are featured in the live
auction including Sean Connery's grey Anthony Sinclair suit worn
in You
Only Live Twice (1967), a briefcase throwing knife featured
in From Russia With Love (1963), Timothy Dalton's dinner suit
from The Living Daylights (1987), a SPECTRE ring from
Thunderball (1965), and Famke Janssen's helicopter costume
from GoldenEye (1995).
Also offered is
a unique collection of 35mm footage from the production and
promotion Moonraker (1979). These film rolls and trims
were used by Maurice Binder to create the trailer, teaser
trailer and most memorably, the opening title sequence.
Among the many
pieces on offer are a collection of models, storyboards and
costumes from Octopussy (1983), and other items from the
films up to and including Spectre (2015).
PREVIEW OF IMPORTANT LOTS (and
prices realised)
FULL CATALOGUE
|
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OCTOBER 2021 - Daniel Craig honoured with a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame |
|
7 October
2021
The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce has honoured Daniel Craig with
the 2,704th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Wednesday,
October 6, 2021. The star is dedicated in the category of Motion
Pictures at 7007 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles.
“Daniel Craig
is a British cultural icon as is James Bond, the man he has
portrayed in five 007 films.” We are thrilled to place his
terrazzo Walk of Fame star next to the star of another famed
actor who also portrayed James Bond, Roger Moore. Fans will be
thrilled when they see that their stars are appropriately
located at 7007 Hollywood Boulevard!” stated Ana Martinez,
Producer of the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
The event took
place a day after ‘Global James Bond Day’, and two days ahead of
the US release of the eagerly-anticipated 25th James Bond film
No Time To
Die, which premiered in in London on September 30, 2021
- going on to break UK box-office records with the highest
weekend gross of any Bond film to date.
FULL STORY, IMAGES & VIDEO |
|
OCTOBER 2021 - Daniel Craig answers all the James Bond questions
fans really want to know |
|
Daniel Craig
answers all the James Bond questions fans really want to know |
Vs The Universe | British GQ
From the ultimate Bond gadget to on-set injuries, stunts, style
and his favourite James Bond actor to date, the reigning 007 Mr
Daniel Craig takes on all the questions fans really want to know
in #GQVsTheUniverse.
WATCH HERE |
|
OCTOBER 2021 - Charles ‘Jerry’ Juroe (1923-2021) |
|
1 October
2021
Charles ‘Jerry’ Juroe, the long-time Hollywood publicist and
former United Artists Head of European Publicity, has died at
the age of 97.
Jerry was
associated with the James Bond films from the very start, and
accompanied Sean Connery on a promotional tour to Italy in 1962.
As United Artists Head of European Publicity he publicized the
first five James Bond films starring Sean Connery, returning to
the series in 1974 to oversee publicity for The Man With
The Golden Gun, followed by The Spy Who Loved Me
(1977) and Moonraker (1979). Juroe was not formerly
acknowledged for his work on the series until For Your Eyes
Only (1981) when he was credited as Director of Publicity -
a role he repeated on Octopussy (1983) and A View To A
Kill (1985). He was then credited as Marketing Director on the
The Living Daylights (1987) and Licence To Kill
(1989), both starring Timothy Dalton. Jerry Juroe retired from
the industry in 1990 but returned to the James Bond series as a
consultant on GoldenEye (1995) out of loyalty to
Albert
R. Broccoli, in what would be his final film as solo producer.
Jerry Juroe also served as Senior Vice-President of Albert R.
Broccoli's Warfield Productions Ltd. from 1979-1990. Founded in
1961, Warfield would later produce Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
(1968) based on the 1964 children's novel written by James Bond
creator Ian Fleming. |
|
SEPTEMBER 2021 - Bond Behind The Iron Curtain A new book by
Ian Fleming's nephew James |
|
30 September
2021
An astonishing new book just when you thought there was nothing
left to say about James Bond or his creator, Ian Fleming.
Bond Behind The Iron Curtain looks at the world's most
famous secret agent from a completely different angle, through
the eyes of the communist bloc.
Even before the
film of Dr. No was released, the Bond phenomenon was
being attacked as pornography, capitalist filth and
anti-socialist poison. Its popularity in the West only stoked
Russian derision. This book perfectly captures the political
face of Bond through rarely seen images and a variety of texts
translated into English for the first time. What makes it of
exceptional interest is that much of the Russian ridicule of the
figure of Bond in the 1960s has turned out to be extremely
accurate.
FULL STORY |
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SEPTEMBER 2021 - Daniel Craig Appointed Honorary Royal Navy
Commander |
|
24 September 2021
Daniel Craig has been
made an honorary Commander in the Royal Navy. Commander Craig’s
appointment as an honorary officer reflects his personal support for HM
Armed Forces and links it with the legacy created through the guise of
fictional British secret agent James Bond.
Honorary officers in the Royal Navy bring a breadth of experience and
contribute in their own distinct way to strengthen the navy’s ties with
the communities it serves. Commander Craig is keen to support personnel
with the Royal Navy, with a particular interest in service families.
Commander Craig said: “I am truly privileged and honoured to be appointed
the rank of Honorary Commander in the senior service.”
FULL STORY |
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SEPTEMBER 2021 - BOND IN MOTION: No Time To Die Exhibition at
The National Motor Museum |
|
Opens
October 15, 2021 -
National Motor Museum, Beaulieu
Featuring the iconic cars, gadgets and costumes from Bond's 25th
film, No Time To Die, the brand new exhibition opens at
the National Motor Museum just after the film's UK release on 30
September 2021.
ICONIC CARS
See cars from the highly anticipated No Time To Die,
including Bond's silver birch Aston Martin DB5, the Aston
Martin V8, Land Rover Series III and new Defender 110, plus many
more.
NEW GADGETS
Get a first look at new gadgets from Q Branch, including Bond's
Q-enhanced OMEGA Seamaster Diver 300M watch, alongside technical
plans for vehicle designs and DB5 weapons.
WORLD EXCLUSIVES
Be the first to see the No Time To Die folding-wing
glider. The full-size model will be suspended above Bond's
iconic silver birch Aston Martin DB5, complete with a new LED
number plate and machine guns.
Beaulieu Enterprises Managing Director Russell Bowman said:
“This entirely new exhibition will offer visitors an exclusive
chance to see cars, gadgets and costumes from the highly
anticipated No Time To Die, the 25th James Bond film. It
follows in the footsteps of our acclaimed
BOND IN MOTION exhibition, which opened ten years ago
showing 50 original vehicles from 50 years of Bond – and we know
this will be just as popular.”
BOOK TICKETS |
|
SEPTEMBER 2021 - BOND IN MOTION moves to the Petersen Automotive
Museum, Los Angeles |
|
September
25, 2021 - October 22, 2022
The Petersen Automotive Museum will present a new exhibit
celebrating the 60th anniversary of the James Bond film
franchise through a highly diverse selection of iconic
screen-used vehicles. Opening September 25, 2021, in the Mullin
Grand Salon gallery, BOND IN MOTION will be the largest official
Bond vehicle display to date in the U.S., and will feature more
than 30 cars, motorcycles, boats, submarines, helicopters and
even scale filming models of aircraft from an array of both
classic and contemporary Bond films.
Highlighted automobiles include the 1977 Lotus Esprit S1
Submarine from The
Spy Who Loved Me (1977), 1985 Aston Martin V8 from The
Living Daylights (1987), 1999 BMW Z8 from The
World Is Not Enough (1999), and the 2019 Aston Martin
DB10 from Spectre (2015).
“James Bond is an international pop culture icon and the
vehicles he drives are an integral part of his character,” said
Petersen Automotive Museum Executive Director Terry L. Karges.
“The Petersen is excited to showcase so many of the series’ most
well-known vehicles. We are sure that there will be something to
satisfy every generation of Bond fan.”
https://www.petersen.org/bond |
|
SEPTEMBER 2021 -Aston Martin reveal full-sized CORGI model of James
Bond's DB5 |
|
Aston Martin has revealed
a life-sized reproduction of CORGI’s famous 1965 die-cast model of the DB5
from the James Bond film Goldfinger.
The exhibit, which goes on display from August 31, 2021 at Battersea Power
Station, London, is intended to celebrate Aston Martin’s involvement with
the Bond franchise since 1964’s Goldfinger, right up until the
latest instalment, No Time To Die. The launch coincides with a
screening of Aston Martin’s No Time To Die TV slot.
FULL STORY &
IMAGES |
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SEPTEMBER 2021 - Being James Bond Retrospective Coming to
Apple TV |
|
Being James Bond will be available to stream exclusively
on the Apple TV app ahead of the theatrical release of the
upcoming 25th James Bond adventure, No Time To Die. In
this special 45-minute retrospective, Daniel Craig candidly
reflects on his 15-year adventure as James Bond. Customers in
over 30 countries and regions around the globe can rent the film
for free and stream it exclusively on the Apple TV app from
September 7 to October 7, 2021.
Being James
Bond includes
never-before-seen archival footage spanning from Casino
Royale (2006) to No Time To Die (2021). Daniel Craig shares his personal
memories in conversation with 007 producers, Michael G. Wilson &
Barbara Broccoli, in the lead up to his final performance as
the iconic secret agent.
“A lot of
people here have worked on five pictures with me,” Craig noted
during the conversation with the films’ producers in Being James
Bond. “…I’ve loved every single second of these movies, and
especially this one because I’ve got up every morning and I’ve
had the chance to work with you guys, and that has been one of
the greatest honours of my life.”
Read the 007
MAGAZINE review of
Being James Bond
|
|
JULY 2021 - Ewbank's James Bond 007 Auction |
|
Ewbank's
James Bond 007 Auction, 8th July 2021, 12:00pm
Hot on the heels of Ewbank's James Bond 007 auction in April
2021, comes another collection of posters and memorabilia
including items from all 25 official EON Produced James Bond
films, and
a two-piece midnight blue tuxedo believed to have been worn
by Peter Sellers in Casino Royale (1967)
[sold for £1,700].
Among the other
unique items included are
four original camera negatives shot by Burt Cann during
production of Dr. No (1962)
[sold for £220],
for press and publicity
featuring Sean Connery, Ursula Andress and Joseph Wiseman;
an original photographic contact sheet from On Her
Majesty's Secret Service (1969) starring George Lazenby
[sold for £150]; and
a
collection of transparencies and slides from films including
Dr. No (1962), Goldfinger (1964), On Her
Majesty's Secret Service (1969), and Live And Let Die
(1973) among others [sold
for £220]. Also included in the auction is the
original artwork used in the initial poster design for A
View To A Kill (1985), signed by the artist
Eric Pulford (1915-2005)
[sold for £1,800].
FULL CATALOGUE |
|
JUNE 2021 - GROWING OLD GRACEFULLY - For Your Eyes Only 40th
Anniversary (1981-2021) |
|
24 June 2021
To celebrate the 40th Anniversary of For Your Eyes Only,
007 MAGAZINE looks back at the production of Roger Moore's fifth
James Bond film.
With the spectacular
box-office success of Moonraker in 1979, distributor and
co-financier United Artists wanted more of the same, but
producer Albert R. Broccoli felt that to continue with that
style would make the films ever more outlandish by trying to top
the excesses of their predecessor.
A look back at the
production of the 12th James Bond film, and the one that
brought 007 back down to earth. Drawing largely on the
works of 007 creator Ian Fleming, For Your Eyes Only
adopted a more realistic style, and for many fans is still Roger
Moore’s strongest performance as James Bond.
FULL ARTICLE |
|
JUNE 2021 - SHOWMANSHIP & EXPLOITATION - United Artists - James
Bond.. and Beyond! |
|
24 June 2021
As an appendix to
London Calling! a major new article takes
a look
at the studio responsible for bringing James Bond to the big screen, and
examines some of the other films and spin-offs distributed by United
Artists that screened with the 007 titles in London and across the UK.
A Fistful of
Secret Agents, Pink Panthers... and much more!
This new and exclusive article takes an in-depth look at the
history of the studio that introduced cinema audiences to James
Bond in 1962. With some fascinating insights and background on
other United Artists films produced and distributed alongside
the blockbusting 007 series. From the Pink Panther to
‘The Man With No Name’, and a surprising link to the composer
responsible for the definitive sound of James Bond - John Barry!
FULL ARTICLE |
|
JUNE 2021 - Several important James Bond props and costumes up for
auction in Los Angeles |
|
Entertainment Memorabilia Live Auction
Los Angeles - June 29th, 30th, & July 1st, 2021
Several
important James Bond props are featured in the live auction
including
Sean Connery's screen-matched suit jacket from Diamonds
Are Forever (1971). The Anthony Sinclair tailored jacket was
originally offered in auction by
PROPSTORE in November 2020,
but the lot went unsold. Lot #139 now has an estimate: $20,000 -
$30,000, with a starting price of $10,000.
[unsold]
Also on offer
is a
Moonraker 6 Shuttle Model Miniature from Moonraker
(1979) [sold for $27,500], and a
metal buoy seen in the sequence of For Your Eyes Only
(1981) [unsold] where James Bond (Roger Moore) and Melina (Carole
Bouquet) are keel-hauled behind Kristatos’ (Julian Glover)
yacht. A pair of production-made
Sharper Image credit cards from A View To A Kill
(1985) [sold for $1,500]; Stacey Sutton's (Tanya Roberts)
Jeep License Plates and Background Vehicle Plates
[sold for $800], a Zorin
Industries (Christopher Walken)
flag [sold for
$1,200] and
other production memorabilia round out the Roger Moore era
props on offer [sold for
$1,800].
A set of
five Le Cercle Casino Plaques from Dr. No
(1962) [sold for $8,500], along with similar chips from
Casino Royale (2006)
[sold for $5,000], and
Skyfall (2015) are also offered in the auction
[sold for $7,000].
The
Pierce Brosnan films are represented by a set of Zukovsky (Robbie Coltrane)
casino plaques from The World Is Not Enough (1999)
[sold for $9,500],
and a series of
items from the Ice Palace seen in Die Another Day
(2002) [sold for $1,100].
FULL CATALOGUE
|
|
MAY 2021 - A third James Bond novel by Anthony Horowitz to be
published in May 2022 |
|
28 May 2021
To mark Ian Fleming’s birthday (born 28 May 1908), Jonathan
Cape, Vintage and Ian Fleming Publications are delighted to
announce that
Anthony Horowitz, the award winning novelist and
screenwriter, has been invited to write a third official James
Bond novel.
Anthony Horowitz says: “I am very excited to have started my
third Bond novel with the continuing support of the Ian Fleming
estate. FOREVER AND A DAY
looked at Bond’s first assignment.
TRIGGER MORTIS was
mid-career. The new book begins with the death of Scaramanga and
Bond’s return from Jamaica to confront an old enemy.”
Corinne Turner, Managing Director of Ian Fleming Publications
Ltd says: “We’re delighted and excited that Anthony is writing
his third Bond novel. From the nuggets we’ve seen so far, we are
confident it will be another best-selling episode in the
adventures of 007.”
Michal Shavit, Publishing Director at Jonathan Cape, says: “We
are incredibly excited to be announcing the news on Ian
Fleming’s birthday that we have a new James Bond novel by
Anthony to look forward to next year. We can’t wait to share
more details with readers of the iconic spy’s latest adventure
under Anthony’s masterful tenure.” |
Anthony’s third Bond novel will be
published in May 2022 by Jonathan Cape in the UK, Commonwealth
and EU and by Harper Collins US in the United States. |
|
MAY 2021 - Amazon acquires MGM for $8.45-billion |
|
26 May 2021
Amazon and MGM today announced that they have entered into a
definitive merger agreement under which Amazon will acquire MGM
for a purchase price of $8.45-billion. MGM has nearly a century
of filmmaking history and complements the work of Amazon
Studios, which has primarily focused on producing TV show
programming. Amazon will help preserve MGM’s heritage and
catalogue of films, and provide customers with greater access to
these existing works. Through this acquisition, Amazon would
empower MGM to continue to do what they do best: great
storytelling. |
“MGM has a vast
catalogue with more than 4,000 films including the James Bond
series, and 17,000 TV shows that have collectively won more than
180 Academy Awards and 100 Emmys,” said Mike Hopkins, Senior
Vice President of Prime Video and Amazon Studios. “The real
financial value behind this deal is the treasure trove of IP in
the deep catalogue that we plan to reimagine and develop
together with MGM’s talented team. It’s very exciting and
provides so many opportunities for high-quality storytelling.”
MGM acquired their 50% share of the rights to James Bond when
they bought United Artists in 1981. In 1975 UA had bought James
Bond co-producer Harry's Saltzman's share in DANJAQ – the
holding company responsible for the copyright and trademarks to
the characters, elements, and other material related to James
Bond on screen. The new merger will not
affect the release of No Time To Die on September 30,
2021. Producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson stressed
that the deal did not mean the film would be pushed solely to
Amazon's streaming service. “We are committed to continuing to
make James Bond films for the worldwide theatrical audience,”
they said. |
|
MAY 2021 - SPY OXFORDSHIRE - LIFTING THE VEIL OF SECRECY Exhibition
extended |
|
Spy
Oxfordshire: Lifting The Veil of Secrecy
Exhibition Extended: Now Ends 24 April
2022
The exhibition will shine a light on previously unknown but
fascinating local connections to the intelligence world.
Oxfordshire intelligence officers were at the heart of the
British war effort during the Second World War: from the
commandos that knew no fear and wreaked havoc behind enemy
lines, to the codebreakers, analysts, and “connectors of the
dots” who provided Prime Minister Winston Churchill with
unprecedented insights into the Nazi war machine.
James Bond
author Ian Fleming features heavily in the exhibition alongside
his famous literary creation. Spy Oxfordshire will
feature some iconic film props and replicas on loan to the
museum, such as the Walther PPK used by Sean Connery in
Dr. No (1962) and
original concept drawings for the PPK/S handgun with dermal
sensors - used by Daniel Craig in
Skyfall
(2012). The display will also feature items from the private
collection of Mike VanBlaricum of the Ian Fleming Foundation,
which have rarely been seen outside the USA, including original
storyboards from the film
Diamonds Are Forever
(1971) and Sean Connery’s shoes from the film
Never Say Never Again
(1983).
FULL DETAILS |
|
MAY 2021 - Richard Chopping: The Original Bond Artist |
|
The
Salisbury Museum - 17 May - 3 October 2021
This summer, on the eve of the release of the 25th Bond movie
No Time to Die,
The Salisbury Museum celebrates the life and work of writer,
illustrator and teacher Richard Chopping (1917–2008), best-known
for illustrating the original book covers for James Bond.
Richard Chopping was a master of the trompe-l'œil technique,
producing highly realistic three-dimensional images, and it was
this distinctive style that led him to be commissioned by Ian
Fleming to illustrate nine of the
James Bond book covers
from 1957 to 1966.
The exhibition features some of the original working drawings
for the books, including the striking skull design for
GOLDFINGER – one of Chopping’s personal favourites, and a
commission that had been declined by his former friend and
subsequent arch-rival, Lucien Freud.
The exhibition looks at Chopping’s entire output, positioning
his work for Fleming firmly within the context of his 40-year
career. With many works which have never previously been
displayed, this exhibition will be a genuine treasure-trove for
the Chopping cognoscenti and for those discovering his work for
the first time. They reveal a talented artist whose work should
perhaps be as well-known as the fictional spy he helped make
famous. |
|
MAY 2021 - 007 MAGAZINE Reviews The James Bond Lexicon |
|
16 May 2021
-
007 MAGAZINE reviews The James Bond Lexicon
by Alan J. Porter and Gillian J. Porter
The James Bond Lexicon
stands - simultaneously - as an example of many things that are good, but
also many things that are bad about 007-related literature in the 21st
Century.
The democratisation and Amazon-isation of the book trade, as well as the
rise of self-publishing and print on demand, has led to an overwhelming
glut of Bondian titles within what has become an increasingly overcrowded
and difficult to navigate marketplace.
This has enabled many writers who otherwise might never get the
opportunity to be published to do so, and areas of the Bondian universe
that have been hitherto overlooked to gain some much-needed attention. On
the flipside, it might have been a good thing if some such writers had
stayed unpublished, while locating or identifying quality and worthwhile
offerings within such a crowded marketplace can be a significant
challenge.
Continue reading... |
|
MAY 2021 - Neil Connery (1938-2021) |
|
11 May 2021
Neil Connery, the younger brother of James Bond star
Sir Sean Connery
(1930-2020), has died at the age of 83.
Born in
Edinburgh on January 1, 1938, for most of his life Neil Connery
worked as a plasterer, but in 1967 he starred in the James Bond
spoof O.K. Connery (known in the USA as Operation Kid
Brother). The Italian Eurospy comedy film was directed by
Alberto De Martino and co-starred several actors from the
EON-produced James Bond film series including Daniela Bianchi [Tatiana
Romanova in From Russia With Love (1963)], Adolfo
Celi [Emilio
Largo in Thunderball (1965)], Anthony Dawson [Professor
Dent in Dr. No (1962),
Bernard Lee
(M), and Lois Maxwell (Miss Moneypenny). In addition to the
aforementioned 007 alumni, the film boasted a memorable score by
legendary Italian film composer Ennio Morricone (1928-2020).
O.K. Connery was released in Italy in April 1967, and later
distributed in the USA and Europe by United Artists under the title
Operation Kid Brother. The film then played for three weeks at the London
Pavilion cinema on Piccadilly Circus from April 25 to May 15, 1968. Neil
Connery appeared as the character Dr. Neil Connery but was
re-voiced in all versions of the film.
Neil Connery
returned to acting in 1969 when he appeared in the British
Science Fiction thriller The Body Stealers. After several
small roles on British television, his final film performance
was in 1984, playing ‘Mr. Bond’ in Mad Mission 3: Our Man
from Bond Street - a Hong Kong made James Bond spoof also
known as Aces Go Places 3.
O.K Connery (1967) full film on Youtube |
|
APRIL 2021 - Frank McRae (1942-2021) |
|
29 April
2021
Frank McRae, the American film & television actor, and
former professional NFL football player, has died at the age of
80. McRae will be best-remembered by James Bond fans for playing
Sharkey in Licence To
Kill (1989) opposite
Timothy
Dalton as 007.
After his
football career, McRae became a character actor appearing in
more than 40 movies including, Hard Times (1975),
Norma Rae (1979), Steven Spielberg's 1941 (1979) and
Red Dawn (1984). McRae also appeared F.I.S.T.
(1978) with Sylvester Stallone, with whom he later reunited for
Paradise Alley (1978) and Rocky II (1979). He also
appeared in Last Action Hero with Arnold Schwarzenegger
in 1993.
One of McRae's
early acting roles was in the 1973 gangster film Dillinger
playing Reed Youngblood, a grinning inmate who helps Warren
Oates’ titular John Dillinger escape from prison. Frank McRae
also made several appearances in popular US television shows
including guest roles in hit series Hill Street Blues; Police
Story, The Rockford Files, Magnum P.I. and Quincy M.E.
A friend of
Felix Leiter (played by
David
Hedison), McRae's character
Sharkey had a
significant role in Licence To Kill (1989), before being
murdered by Sanchez’ henchmen led by
Milton Krest
(Anthony Zerbe). |
|
APRIL 2021 - Helen McCrory (1968-2021) |
|
16 April
2021
English stage, television and screen actress Helen McCrory
OBE,
who played MP Clair Dowar in Skyfall (2012), has died at
the age of 52.
Helen McCrory
studied at the Drama Centre London, and made her stage debut in
The Importance of Being Earnest in 1990. Other stage
roles included Lady Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre,
which won her the ‘Richard Burton Award For Most Promising Newcomer’ in
the 1995 Shakespeare Globe Awards; and Olivia in Twelfth
Night at the Donmar Warehouse in 2002, directed by Sam
Mendes.
In the 2006 film
The Queen, McCrory played the Prime Minister's wife Cherie
Blair, a role she reprised in Peter Morgan's follow-up TV-Movie
The Special Relationship (2010), once again opposite Michael
Sheen as Tony Blair. McCrory also appeared as Narcissa Malfoy in
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009), and again
in the final two films of the series, Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows – Part 1 (2010) & Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows – Part 2 (2011). Following her appearance in
Skyfall, McCrory was cast in the popular BBC Television series
Peaky Blinders as Polly Gray, appearing in 31 episodes
between 2013 and 2019. McCrory also gave a standout performance
as Madame Kali in 12 episodes of the first two seasons (2014-15) of the
Sky Atlantic TV series Penny Dreadful, created and written
by John Logan; and
starring former 007
Timothy Dalton,
Eva
Green and
Rory Kinnear.
Sam Mendes who directed
Skyfall
(2012) and Spectre (2015) acted as
co-executive producer with John Logan. |
|
APRIL 2021 - A season of 11 James Bond films at the Prince Charles
Cinema from May 2021 |
|
“Bond. James
Bond.”
The name's
Cinema... The Prince Charles Cinema. And they're putting
together a little JAMES BOND 007 SELECTROSPECTIVE to welcome you
all back to the cinema with!
The season will feature 11 Bond classics, screening on Saturday
afternoons and early evenings from May 22 - August 21, 2021,
with at least one film from each actor to portray James Bond in
the official EON Productions series.
FULL PROGRAMME |
It's been a
tough year for the Bond franchise, what with losing the original
big screen Agent 007 Sir Sean Connery, and the continual delay of
Daniel Craig's likely final outing as the iconic British secret
agent. So let this season keep you occupied and your desire to
see Bond on the big screen fulfilled until
No Time To Die finally
hits UK cinemas this September! |
|
APRIL 2021 - Ewbank's James Bond 007 Auction |
|
Ewbank's
James Bond 007 Auction, 9th April 2021, 12:00pm
Among the James
Bond items offered in this auction are many theatrical posters
and Exhibitor's Campaign Books, and a unique menu for the launch
dinner held at The Dorchester, Park Lane on Monday 31st October
1966, to celebrate the start of production on You Only Live
Twice (lot #7076). [Sold for £910]
FULL CATALOGUE & RESULTS
Update April
10, 2021 - An original Dr. No quad poster sold for
£20,800; and an Exhibitors’ Campaign Book from Dr. No
sold for £975; a From Russia With Love quad poster sold
for £10,400, with a corresponding Exhibitors’ Campaign Book
selling for a staggering £1,950. A Goldfinger Exhibitors’
Campaign Book sold for £1,560, with an incomplete Thunderball
quad poster still fetching £1,300.
|
|
MARCH 2021 - Prop Store to auction iconic James Bond posters and
unique artwork |
|
Prop Store
is hosting one of Europe's largest and most exciting Cinema
Poster Live Auctions on April 22nd 2021.
Over 490 rare,
sought-after posters and artworks on offer are expected to fetch
in excess of £175,000. The catalogue
also includes an exclusive collection of some never-before-seen
poster concepts and designs for one of the world’s most exciting
and innovative creative agencies - FEREF - and includes many
alternative concepts for well-known poster campaigns such as
Star Wars, James Bond and so much more.
View James Bond lots #208 - #249 •
Full auction catalogue
Update April
23, 2021 - An original From Russia With Love quad
poster sold for £7,000; a corresponding double crown sold for
£2,000; a 1965 double-bill of Dr. No/From Russia With
Love sold for £2,250; quad posters from You Only Live
Twice (1967) [Style A], and On Her Majesty's Secret
Service (1969) sold for £900 and £1,200 respectively.
The FEREF Archive James Bond lots
were subsequently withdrawn from
the auction.
|
|
MARCH 2021 - Several important James Bond weapons to be auctioned by
Julien's |
|
The HOLLYWOOD SCI-FI,
ACTION, FANTASY AND MORE AUCTION features over 800 movie props and will
take place on Wednesday, April 28 & Thursday, April 29, 2021 at Julien’s
Auctions in Beverly Hills and live online at
juliensauctions.com.
Following
Julien's historic sale for $256,000 in
December 2020 of the Walther PP used by legendary actor Sean Connery in
the first James Bond film Dr. No
(1962), the auction house will be offering
Connery's hero Walther P5 from his last Bond film
Never Say Never Again
(1983). In one of the most renowned collection of Bond weapons brought
to auction in years, Julien's will also offer an M16 prop rifle used in
Moonraker (1979); the very
first Walther P99 used by Pierce
Brosnan in Tomorrow Never Dies
(1997), and the hero .38 Smith & Wesson used by Pierce Brosnan in
Die Another Day (2002).
FULL STORY AND IMAGES
Update April 29, 2021 - The
Never Say Never Again Walther P5 sold for $106,250, all
other James Bond weapons were unsold. |
|
MARCH 2021 - Yaphet Kotto (1939-2021) |
|
15 March
2021
Yaphet Kotto, the American actor who played the dual role of
Dr. Kananga/Mr. Big in Roger Moore's debut film as James Bond
Live And Let Die (1973), has died at the age of 81.
Born in New
York City in 1939 Kotto made his professional acting debut in
Othello, and was a member of The Actors Studio in New York.
Kotto got his start in acting on Broadway, appearing in The
Great White Hope among other productions. His cinema debut
came in 1963 with an uncredited role in the comedy-western 4
For Texas starring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and
Ursula Andress.
Kotto's breakthrough role would come in 1972 when he starred
alongside Anthony Quinn in the crime-thriller Across 110th
Street.
In 1973 Yaphet Kotto was
cast as the villain in
Live And Let Die
playing the corrupt Caribbean dictator Dr. Kananga, and his
alter ego gangster drug baron Mr. Big. Although he brought great
dignity to the role, which was filmed at the height of the
cinematic ‘Blaxploitation’ movement, he struggled with
Tom
Mankiewicz’ stereotypical script and was unhappy with the
comedic demise of his character at the end of the film. Kotto
subsequently would not take part in any publicity for Live
And Let Die, and did not attend the
premiere at the ODEON
Leicester Square in July 1973.
Perhaps Yaphet
Kotto's most famous role would be in Ridley Scott's
unforgettable sci-fi thriller Alien (1979), where he
memorably played chief engineer Parker, holding his own in the
gender and racially defining classic. |
|
MARCH 2021 - Monica “Nikki” van der Zyl (1935-2021) |
|
ABOVE:
James Bond producer Albert R. Broccoli, Nikki van der
Zyl, Gert Frobe, director Guy Hamilton and Harold Sakata
on location at Stoke Poges golf course Goldfinger
(1964). |
|
|
6 March 2021
Monica “Nikki” van der Zyl, known for her voice dubbing work
on ten James Bond films has died at the age of 85. Born in
Berlin in 1935, Nikki moved to England and began her career in
British films by re-voicing Shirley Anne Field in the 1960
comedy Man in the Moon. However, it will be her
contribution to the James Bond series for which she will be
best-remembered. Her re-voicing of many of the principal (and
smaller parts) actresses was demanding in the extreme and her
professionalism was admired by all who worked with her. Only
rarely in film production are the voices of actors deemed to be
unsuitable in terms of clarity, diction or accent, but
throughout the early days of the Bond series actresses were cast
for their visual suitability rather than their mastery of the
English language.
Ursula Andress
was re-voiced in Dr. No
(1962) due to her strong Swiss-German accent, with
Nikki
van der Zyl providing her entire vocal and singing
performance. In addition to Andress, Nikki also re-voiced Eunice
Gayson as Sylvia Trench [and again in
From Russia With Love
(1963)]. In
Goldfinger (1964),
Nikki re-voiced Nadja Regin and Shirley Eaton, as well as also
acting as on-set English-language vocal coach to
Gert Frobe,
although he would be completely re-voiced by
Michael
Collins.
Claudine Auger in
Thunderball (1965) and Mie Hama in
You Only Live Twice
(1967) were also completely re-voiced by Nikki van der Zyl,
followed by Virginia North in
On Her Majesty's
Secret Service (1969), and Denise Perrier in
Diamonds Are Forever
(1971). In later films it was decided to partially re-voice
several actresses for clarity, and part of Jane Seymour's vocal
performance in Live
And Let Die (1973) was enhanced by Nikki van der Zyl,
who then provided the entire vocal performance of Francoise
Therry (Chew Mee) in
The Man With The Golden
Gun (1974). Nikki later re-voiced part of the
performance of French actress Corinne Cléry in
Moonraker (1979),
which was to be her final connection with the James Bond series.
Nikki's name never appeared in the credits of any of the James
Bond films she worked on, but her significant contribution to
the series cannot be underestimated.
FOR YOUR EARS ONLY – The
autobiography of Nikki van der Zyl |
|
MARCH 2021 - William P. Cartlidge (1942-2021) |
|
3
March 2021
William P. Cartidge, who worked on the three James Bond film
directed by Lewis Gilbert, has died at the age of 78.
Born in 1942,
Cartlidge was the son of a senior executive at Rank Cinemas
which helped him secure a position as darkroom assistant at
Elstree Studios. Moving up the ranks of assistant director in
the early 1960s on such films as Summer Holiday (1963),
The Evil of Frankenstein (1964), Born Free (1966)
and The Reptile (1966), Cartlidge was hired by Lewis
Gilbert (1920-2018) to be his assistant director on Alfie
(1966) starring Michael Caine. The film was a huge critical and
commercial success, and Gilbert was then chosen to direct the
fifth James Bond film You Only Live Twice (1967), retaining William Cartlidge
as his first assistant.
When Lewis
Gilbert returned to the series to direct
The Spy Who Loved Me
(1977) and Moonraker
(1979), William Cartlidge came with him; but this time took on
the role of associate producer to
Albert R.
Broccoli, now working solo following his split with
Harry
Saltzman. Cartlidge later teamed up again with
Lewis
Gilbert to co-produce the award-winning Educating Rita
(1983) starring Michael Caine. |
|
FEBRUARY 2021 - David de Keyser (1927-2021) |
|
20 February
2021
Veteran British voiceover artist and actor David de Keyser has
died at the age of 93. Born on August 22, 1927 in
Islington, London, as Rafael David de Keyser, he was narrator of the cinema newsreel
Pathe Pictorial from 1956-1962, but will be best remembered by
James Bond fans as the voice of Marc Ange Draco (played by
Gabriele
Ferzetti) in
On Her Majesty's Secret
Service (1969). David de Keyser would also re-voice Gabriele Ferzetti for the English-language version of Liliana Cavani's
controversial 1974 film The Night Porter, which starred
Dirk Bogarde and Charlotte Rampling.
David de
Keyser also played Blofeld's plastic surgeon (credited as ‘Doctor’) in the pre-credit
sequence of Diamonds
Are Forever (1971). He was also a familiar face in minor
acting roles in many British television series from the late
1950s, and was still working until 2016. He also provided the
voice of Count Dracula (played by John Forbes-Robertson) in the
1974 Hammer film Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires, and
a brief vocal appearance as the prison warden at the end of
Superman: The Movie (1978). In 2001 he provided the voices
of both Dumbledore and Lord Voldemort in the videogame
adaptation of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's
Stone. |
|
JANUARY 2021 - Rémy Julienne (1930-2021) |
|
21 January
2021
French driving stunt arranger/performer and stunt co-ordinator Rémy
Julienne has died at the age of 90, after contracting COVID-19.
A veteran of
over 1,400 films including The Italian Job (1969) and six
James Bond adventures (five of which were directed by John Glen). Rémy
Julienne's first Bond assignment was driving stunts arranger on
For
Your Eyes Only (1981), when he choreographed the spectacular
chase through the olive groves on the island of Corfu. Julienne
returned to the series as driving stunts arranger on
Octopussy (1983) and
again for
A View To A Kill (1985), also
doubling for Roger Moore (uncredited) during the car chase in
Paris.
Rémy Julienne
also served as driving stunts arranger on
The Living
Daylights (1987) and
Licence To Kill (1989), where he
doubled for Timothy Dalton when Bond tilts a tanker onto its
side to avoid an oncoming missile. After many aborted attempts
with other drivers, Julienne took to the wheel and performed the
stunt himself in one take. Julienne's final James Bond
film was GoldenEye (1995) starring Pierce Brosnan, which
included the memorable tank chase filmed on location in St. Petersburg and
at Leavesden Studios. |
|
JANUARY 2021 - BOND IN MOTION - Exhibition closure |
|
18 January
2021
The BOND IN MOTION exhibition has now come to the end of its
time at the London Film Museum. In January 2014 production
began on the BOND IN MOTION exhibition in partnership with EON
Productions, opening a new chapter in the London Film Museum's
history. BOND IN MOTION was the largest official collection of
original James Bond vehicles and props including concept
drawings, storyboards, scripts, model miniatures and full-size
cars, boats, and motorbikes. Highlights included the Aston
Martin DB10 from Spectre (2015), the Aston Martin DB5 from
GoldenEye (1995);
the ‘Wet Nellie’ Lotus Esprit S1 from
The Spy Who Loved Me
(1977); the Rolls-Royce Phantom III from
Goldfinger (1964);
and the ‘Little Nellie’ Wallis WA-116 Agile Autogyro from
You Only Live Twice
(1967).
Read the 007 MAGAZINE review of BOND IN MOTION |
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JANUARY 2021 - Michael Apted (1941-2021) |
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7
January 2021
Michael Apted, who directed Pierce Brosnan's third James
Bond film The World
Is Not Enough (1999), has died at the age of 79.
Born in
Aylesbury on February 10, 1941, Apted began his career at
Granada Television in Manchester. One of his first assignments
was researcher on the ground-breaking documentary series
Seven Up! (1964), which charted the lives of fourteen
British children from a range of socio-economic backgrounds.
Apted then directed the eight subsequent series which returned
to the children every seven years. The last series 63 Up
was broadcast by ITV in 2019. Apted also directed several
episodes of the long-running Granada soap opera Coronation
Street, and two episodes of the popular Yorkshire Television
children's series Follyfoot (1971-73), which featured
Desmond Llewelyn as Colonel Maddocks, owner of Follyfoot Farm.
Michael Apted's
feature film debut was Triple Echo (1972) starring Glenda
Jackson and Oliver Reed. Apted then alternated work on TV and
film with character-based dramas including Agatha (1979)
starring Vanessa Redgrave, Dustin Hoffman and
Timothy
Dalton, Coal Miner's Daughter (1980) starring Sissy Spacek, Gorky Park
(1983) starring William Hurt and Lee Marvin, and Gorillas in
the Mist (1988) starring Sigourney Weaver as naturalist Dian
Fossey. |
Michael Apted
was therefore an unusual choice when he was approached to direct
The World Is Not Enough (1999) in August 1998. Having
agreed to direct, Apted also had some input at the scripting
stage and made many suggestions that were ultimately
incorporated into the final uncredited rewrite by Dana Stevens (Apted's
then wife). Most of the changes focussed on the strengthening of
the character of Elektra King played by
Sophie Marceau.
In June 1999 Michael Apted was reunited with Follyfoot
star
Desmond Llewelyn (1914-1999) for his three-day shoot in Q's
lab, which was the final appearance in the series for the
much-loved actor. At the time of its release The World Is Not
Enough became the highest-grossing James Bond film to date,
taking over $350-million at the box-office.
In addition to
his television and feature film work Apted also continued to
direct documentaries including The Official Film of the 2006
FIFA World Cup narrated by
Pierce
Brosnan. |
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JANUARY 2021 - Tanya Roberts (1955-2021) |
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4 January
2021
American Actress Tanya Roberts, who played Stacey Sutton in
A View To A Kill (1985), has died at the age of 65 - a day after her agent
and partner prematurely announced the news.
Born Victoria
Leigh Blum in New York City, Roberts began her career as a model
in TV advertisements, and started acting in off-Broadway plays
in the late 1970s. In 1980 Roberts was chosen from some 2,000
candidates to replace Shelley Hack in the fifth season of the
popular US television series Charlie's Angels. The show
ultimately suffered from low ratings and was cancelled in June
1981. Roberts then starred in the adventure fantasy film The
Beastmaster (1982) which she promoted with a PLAYBOY
pictorial in the October issue. Roberts followed this by playing
the secretary to private detective Mike Hammer (played by Stacy
Keach) in the television movie Murder Me, Murder You
(1983), although she declined to appear in the follow-up series
to work on Sheena: Queen of the Jungle (1984), which
proved to be a critical and box-office disaster. Tanya Roberts
then appeared as geologist Stacey Sutton in A View To A Kill
(1985) opposite Roger Moore in his final James Bond film. After
appearances in several more forgettable US films Tanya Roberts
played the recurring role of Midge Pinciotti in three seasons of
the popular US television period sitcom That '70s Show
(1998-2000). She later appeared as a special guest in seasons 6 &
7 (2004), before leaving the series to look after her terminally
ill husband Barry. |
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