On This Day

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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 8th

    1945: Angela Scoular is born--London, England.
    (She dies 11 April 2011 at age 65--Maida Vale, London, England.)
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    Angela Scoular
    Angela Scoular, the actress who died on Tuesday aged 65, played Agent
    Buttercup in the James Bond spoof Casino Royale (1967) and was Ruby
    Bartlett in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969); she was also the second
    wife of the Carry On star Leslie Phillips.

    13 Apr 2011
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    Angela Scoular Photo: ITV/ REX FEATURES
    Her qualifications as a Bond girl are obvious in OHMSS when she becomes Bond's (George Lazenby) first conquest, after writing her room number in lipstick on his inner thigh. "I used to hate chicken," she tells 007. "Used to make me break out. It was all over. You'd be surprised where."
    She met Leslie Phillips in 1970 on the set of Doctor in Trouble (in which his character chases her character aboard an ocean liner). They met again in 1976 when they were both in the same play. She was pregnant at the time with a son by another actor, while Leslie Phillips's first marriage to Penny Bartley had foundered in the 1960s following his affair with the actress Caroline Mortimer. They began living together, but at first there was no question of marriage. When Penny was crippled by a stroke, Leslie Phillips was "pulled back into the frame" by his children and he and Angela helped to care for her until her death in a house fire in 1981. They married in 1982.

    Despite Phillips's on-screen reputation as a lothario, theirs was a happy marriage. Angela Scoular went on to appear in several more films, stage productions and television series, notably as the sex-mad Lady Agatha Shawcross in the television series You Rang, M'Lord? (1988-93). But during her early years as an actress she had struggled with anorexia and later on she suffered from severe clinical depression which, according to her husband, meant that she lost her ability to face an audience. It was "difficult to be a character actress when you were a sex symbol", he observed.

    Angela Scoular was born in London on November 8 1945 and encouraged in her ambitions to be an actress by her aunt, the actress Margaret Johnston.
    She began her screen career in the mid-1960s, appearing in the long-running police drama No Hiding Place and taking a bit part in Ian McKellen's adaptation of David Copperfield, before going on to appear in her first feature films, A Countess from Hong Kong (1967, with Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren), Casino Royale and Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1968).
    On television she appeared in series such as The Avengers, Penmarric, Coronation Street and As Time Goes By, and was Cathy in a 1967 television adaptation of Wuthering Heights. On stage she starred in Alan Ayckbourn's Absurd Person Singular, at the Criterion Theatre (1974); appeared in a production of Hamlet at the Cambridge Theatre (1971); in Joseph Caruso's Little Lies at the Wyndham (1983); and in Peter Shaffer's White Liars and Black Comedy at the Lyric Theatre (1968).

    She is survived by her husband and son.
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    Angela Scoular (1945–2011)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0780029/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Actress (35 credits)

    1996 As Time Goes By (TV Series) - Glenys
    - Avoiding the Country Set (1996) ... Glenys
    - The Country Set (1996) ... Glenys
    1988-1993 You Rang, M'Lord? (TV Series) - Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Well, There You Are Then...! (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Fall of the House of Meldrum (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - The Truth Revealed (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Come to the Ball (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Requiem for a Parrot (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Yes Sir, That's My Baby (1993) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - A Day in the Country (1991) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - The Night of Reckoning (1991) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Gretna Green or Bust (1991) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Current Affairs (1991) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Please Help the Orphans (1991) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Royal Flush (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - The Wounds of War (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - The Meldrum Vases (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Trouble at Mill (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Love and Money (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - The Phantom Sign Writer (1990) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross
    - Pilot (1988) ... Lady Agatha Shawcross

    1981 The House on the Hill (TV Series) - Aileen Douglas
    - Man of Straw (1981) ... Aileen Douglas
    1971-1981 Play for Today (TV Series) - Joanna Trout / The Girl
    - Dear Brutus (1981) ... Joanna Trout
    - Evelyn (1971) ... The Girl
    1979 Penmarric (TV Series) - Maud Castallack / Maud Penmar
    - Episode #1.6 (1979) ... Maud Penmar
    - Episode #1.5 (1979) ... Maud Castallack
    - Episode #1.4 (1979) ... Maud Castallack
    - Episode #1.1 (1979) ... Maud Castallack
    1977 Adventures of a Private Eye - Jane Hogg
    1976 Adventures of a Taxi Driver - Marion
    1975 Rooms (TV Series) - Madeline Parsons
    - Midgely: Part 2 (1975) ... Madeline Parsons
    - Midgely: Part 1 (1975) ... Madeline Parsons
    1973-1974 ITV Sunday Night Theatre (TV Series) - Thomasine / Patty
    - Only the Other Day (1974) ... Thomasine
    - Hopcraft Into Europe (1973) ... Patty
    1974 Beryl's Lot (TV Series) - Jill Savage
    - Backs to the Wall (1974) ... Jill Savage
    - A Bit of Culture (1974) ... Jill Savage
    - It's a Rum World (1974) ... Jill Savage
    1973 Omnibus (TV Series documentary) - Charlotte
    - The Runaway (1973) ... Charlotte
    1973 Second City Firsts (TV Series) - Astral Philips
    - Mrs Pool's Preserves (1973) ... Astral Philips
    1973 Harriet's Back in Town (TV Series) - Frankie Prentiss
    - Episode #1.62 (1973) ... Frankie Prentiss
    - Episode #1.61 (1973) ... Frankie Prentiss
    1973 Crown Court (TV Series) - Serena Cutforth
    - The Gilded Cage: Part 2 (1973) ... Serena Cutforth
    - The Gilded Cage: Part 1 (1973) ... Serena Cutforth
    1972 For Loving (TV Movie) - Girl
    1972 The Adventurer (TV Series) - Dorinda
    - Nearly the End of the Picture (1972) ... Dorinda
    1972 Coronation Street (TV Series) - Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1193 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1192 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1191 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1190 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1189 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    - Episode #1.1188 (1972) ... Sue Silcock
    1972 Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) - Francesca Stokes
    - Knightsbridge (1972) ... Francesca Stokes
    1971 Comedy Playhouse (TV Series) - Pauline
    - Equal Partners (1971) ... Pauline
    1970 Doctor in Trouble - Ophelia O'Brien
    1970 ITV Playhouse (TV Series) - Charlotte
    - Don't Touch Him, He Might Resent It (1970) ... Charlotte
    1970 The Adventurers - Denisonde

    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service - Ruby
    1969 Doctor in the House (TV Series) - Fiona
    - Rallying Round... (1969) ... Fiona
    1968 Great Catherine - Claire
    1968 The Avengers (TV Series) - Myra
    - Super Secret Cypher Snatch (1968) ... Myra
    1968 Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush - Caroline Beauchamp
    1967 Wuthering Heights (TV Series) - Catherine Earnshaw / Cathy Earnshaw
    - The Last Revenge (1967) ... Catherine Earnshaw
    - The Abduction (1967) ... Catherine Earnshaw
    - The First Revenge (1967) ... Cathy Earnshaw
    - An End to Childhood (1967) ... Cathy Earnshaw
    1967 Love Story (TV Series) - Joy
    - Her Freudian Slip (1967) ... Joy
    1967 Casino Royale - Buttercup
    1967 Girl in a Black Bikini (TV Series) - Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.6 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.5 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.4 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.3 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.2 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    - Episode #1.1 (1967) ... Kathy Sheridan
    1967 A Countess from Hong Kong - The Society Girl
    1966 David Copperfield (TV Series) - Emily
    - Toll of the Sea (1966) ... Emily
    - Old Acquaintances (1966) ... Emily
    1965 Romeo and Juliet (TV Movie) - Juliet
    1963-1964 No Hiding Place (TV Series) - Chantal Smith / Gillian Kendrick
    - Why Baker Died (1964) ... Chantal Smith
    - Pillar to Post (1963) ... Gillian Kendrick
    Agent Buttercup in Casino Royale 1967
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    Ruby in On Her Majesty's Secret Service 1969
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    1969: Insan Iki Kere Yasar (Human Lies Twice) released in Turkey.
    The poster below lifts art from spy movie Deadlier Than The Male.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 40 of 65 - "Barbella's Big Attraction" in Rio de Janeiro.
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    James Bond Jr - Barbella's Big Attraction
    Season 1 - Episode 40
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807094/?ref_=ttep_ep40
    Barbella's high blood pressure leads her to mutiny when S.C.U.M lord insulted her. So Barbella uses the incoming asteroid that S.C.U.M. Lord wants to go on a collision course with London and send it to destroy Rio de Janeiro where the S.C.U.M conference is taking place.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack / Scumlord (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Barbella (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 40 - Barbella's Big Attraction
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    Barbella's Revenge (based on Barbella's Big Attraction), Caryn Jenner, Buzz Books 1991.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough premiere at the Fox Bruin Theater, Los Angeles.
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    2012: Skyfall IMAX premiere in the US prior to a 9 November general release.
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    2015: Geneva auction of a Rolex wristwatch with ties to Live and Let Die and Roger Moore closes this date.
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    290
    Rolex
    Ref. 5513
    A unique and historically significant stainless steel wristwatch-prop with bracelet, specially adapted for James Bond's "Live and Let Die", caseback signed "Roger Moore 007"
    1972
    39.5mm. Diameter
    Case, dial and bracelet signed
    Estimate CHF150,000 - 250,000
    Sold for CHF365,000
    Manufacturer: Rolex
    Year: 1972
    Reference No: 5513
    Case No: 2'683'776
    Model Name: Submariner
    Material: Stainless steel
    Calibre: Movement removed
    Bracelet/Strap: Stainless steel Rolex Oyster
    Clasp/Buckle: Déployant clasp stamped 7-72
    Dimensions: 39.5mm. Diameter
    Signed: Case, dial and bracelet signed
    Accessories: The present example is accompanied with James Bond memorabilia, 3 corresponding black and white framed stills, the "Live and Let Die" movie tape and the Christie's South Kensington catalogue of the "James Bond" auction in 14.02.2001.
    Provenance: The present example was formerly offered at auction at Christie's South Kensington, on 14.02.2001, "James Bond", lot 145. Later offered at Christie's Geneva, 14.11.2011, "Important Watches", lot 182.
    Provenance
    The present example was formerly offered at auction at Christie's South Kensington, on 14.02.2001, "James Bond", lot 145. Later offered at Christie's Geneva, 14.11.2011, "Important Watches", lot 182.

    Catalogue Essay
    The most recognizable watch in history with 1 billion people having watched the film “Live and Let Die”, the wristwatch worn on the wrist of Sir Roger Moore as James Bond is in fact a Rolex Submariner reference 5513 made in 1972, and was later modified for the movie.

    Art director and British production designer Syd Cain worked on over 30 movie projects, and received international fame for playing a key role as gadget designer in the James Bond movies. The acclaimed Rolex Submariner worn was memorable for its buzzsaw bezel that spun and could cut through rope to escape dangerous situations, and its hyper intensified magnetic field with the ability to deflect bullets. Used for both humor and heightened dramatic events, the magnetic power could unzip Miss Caruso’s dress, and catch a spoon off of a coffee saucer.

    The present Rolex reference 5513 “Q” is the most unforgettable watch prop used in a movie and is even signed inside the caseback “Roger Moore 007”. As a highlight in the most iconic scenes of “Live and Let Die”, this watch is sure to interest both watch collectors and true fans of cinematography alike.

    SYD CAIN: An accomplished movie production designer, "Syd" Cain is best known for his creative work on four films of the famous James Bond 007 series. His work on the series followed his successful efforts supporting Producer Albert R. Broccoli on two films in 1954 and 1956. Broccoli chose Cain for "Dr. No" in 1962, and went on to assume the role of art director for 1963's "From Russia With Love". That film introduced Q, the legendary character responsible for issuing gadgets to James Bond. It was Cain who was designing these gadgets in actuality, including villains gadgets, such as the poisoned-tipped blade of Rosa Klebb's shoes, and of course this Rolex Submariner 5513 worn in 1973's "Live and Let Die".

    Cain (1918-2011) was himself a survivor, having managed to walk away from a plane crash during World War II, and later, surviving a lightning strike. Notably, he also served as assistant art director for Standley Kubrick, and production designer for Alford Hitchcock and Jack Gold. Survived by five sons and three daughters, he was a popular personality with James Bond fans, and wrote an autobiography documenting his experiences with the 007 films: Not Forgetting James Bond: The Autobiography of James Bond Production Designer Syd Cain.
    Maker Biography

    Rolex
    Swiss • 1905
    Founded in 1905 England by Hans Wilsdorf and Alfred Davis as Wilsdorf & Davis, it soon became known as the Rolex Watch Company in 1915, moving its headquarters to Geneva in 1919. Like no other company, the success of the wristwatch can be attributed to many of Rolex's innovations that made them one of the most respected and well-known of all luxury brands. These innovations include their famous "Oyster" case — the world's first water resistant and dustproof watch case, invented in 1926 — and their "Perpetual" — the first reliable self-winding movement for wristwatches launched in 1933. They would form the foundation for Rolex's Datejust and Day-Date, respectively introduced in 1945 and 1956, but also importantly for their sports watches, such as the Explorer, Submariner and GMT-Master launched in the mid-1950s.

    One of its most famous models is the Cosmograph Daytona. Launched in 1963, these chronographs are without any doubt amongst the most iconic and coveted of all collectible wristwatches. Other key collectible models include their most complicated vintage watches, including references 8171 and 6062 with triple calendar and moon phase, "Jean Claude Killy" triple date chronograph models and the Submariner, including early "big-crown" models and military-issued variants.
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    2019: Planned BOND 25 release date (confirmed by an official announcement 24 July 2017).

    2022: Columbia University Press and Wallflower Press release Dr. No - The First James Bond Film by James Chapman.
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    Dr. No

    The First James Bond Film
    See the complete article here:
    James Chapman
    Wallflower Press
    When Dr. No premiered at the London Pavilion on October 5, 1962, no one predicted that it would launch the longest-running series in cinema history. It introduced the James Bond formula that has been a box-office fixture ever since: sensational plots, colorful locations, beautiful women, diabolical villains, thrilling action set pieces, and a tongue-in-cheek tone. An explosive cocktail of action, spectacle, and sex, Dr. No transformed popular cinema.

    James Chapman provides a lively and comprehensive study of Dr. No, marshaling a wealth of archival research to place the film in its historical moment. He demonstrates that, contrary to many fan myths, the film was the product of a carefully considered transnational production process. Chapman explores the British super-spy’s origins in Ian Fleming’s snobbery-with-violence thrillers, examining the process of adaptation from page to screen. He considers Dr. No in the contexts of the UK and Hollywood film industries as well as the film’s place in relation to the changing social and cultural landscape of the 1960s, particularly Cold War anxieties and the decline of the British Empire. The book also analyzes the film’s problematic politics of gender and race and considers its cultural legacy.

    This thorough and insightful account of Dr. No will appeal to film historians and Bond fans alike.
    Pub Date: November 2022
    ISBN: 9780231204934
    256 Pages
    Format: Paperback
    List Price: $28.00 £22.00

    Pub Date: November 2022
    ISBN: 9780231204927
    256 Pages
    Format: Hardcover
    List Price: $110.00 £85.00

    Pub Date: November 2022
    ISBN: 9780231555746
    256 Pages
    Format: E-book
    List Price: $27.99 £22.00

    About the Author
    James Chapman is professor of film studies at the University of Leicester and editor of the Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television. His books include Licence to Thrill: A Cultural History of the James Bond Films (second edition, 2007), Hitchcock and the Spy Film (2018), and The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945–1985 (2022).
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 9th

    1968: On Her Majesty's Secret Service films OO7 arriving at Piz Gloria.

    1977: The Spy Who Loved Me released in Colombia.

    1983: Octopussy - Operazione piovra (Octopussy - Operation Octopus) released in Italy.
    James Bond higher and higher!
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    1989: East Germany opens its Berlin Wall.

    1992: Charles Fraser-Smith dies at age 88--Bratton Fleming, Devon, England.
    (Born 26 January 1904--Deal, Kent, England.)
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    Charles Fraser-Smith
    Charles Fraser-Smith (26 January 1904 – 9 November 1992) was an author and one-time missionary who is widely credited as being the inspiration for Ian Fleming's James Bond quartermaster Q. During World War II, Fraser-Smith worked for the Ministry of Supply, fabricating equipment nicknamed "Q-devices" (after Q-ships) for SOE agents operating in occupied Europe. Prior to the war, Fraser-Smith had worked as a missionary in North Africa. After the war he purchased a dairy farm in Burrington, Devon, where he died in 1992.

    Early life
    Charles Fraser-Smith was the son of a solicitor who owned a wholesale grocery business; he was orphaned at age seven. He was then brought up by a Christian missionary family in Croxley Green in Hertfordshire. He went to school at Brighton College, where he was described as "scholastically useless except for woodwork and science and making things."

    On leaving school he veered from one occupation after another, working as a prep school teacher in Portsmouth, a motorcycle messenger rider, and an aircraft factory worker. Eventually, inspired by his foster family, he went to Morocco as a Christian missionary. Returning to England in 1939, he gave a Sunday sermon at the Open Brethren Evangelical Church in Leeds. In the sermon, Fraser-Smith described his practice of bricolage, and the necessity of procuring supplies from just about any source. In the congregation were two officials of Britain's Ministry of Supply, who were impressed by his adventures. As a result, the Director of the Ministry of Supply offered him what he later described as "a funny job in London".

    Wartime experiences
    Officially, Fraser-Smith was a temporary civil servant for the Ministry of Supply's Clothing and Textile Department (Dept. CT6). In reality, he developed and supplied gadgets and other equipment for section XV of Britain's World War II intelligence organisation, the Special Operations Executive. Travelling by train from his home in Hertfordshire to a small office in the clothing department of the Ministry of Supply, near St. James's Park in London, Fraser-Smith was actually working at the direction of MI6 in the nearby Minimax House. Performing a job so secret that neither his secretary nor his boss knew what he was doing, Fraser-Smith invented numerous ingenious gadgets intended to help prisoners of war to escape and to aid SOE agents gathering information on Nazi activities in occupied Europe.

    His first order was to counterfeit Spanish Army uniforms for a proposed SOE plan to infiltrate agents into neutral Spain to prevent it from entering the war on the side of Germany. He dealt directly with the textile suppliers, ultimately using more than 300 firms in and around London: many of them had no idea what they were making or why, to make equipment for secret operations.

    Initially Fraser-Smith supplied clothing and standard props (from second-hand sources) for SOE agents working behind enemy lines, but SOE directives and his taste for gadgetry led him to develop a wide range of spy and escape devices, including miniature cameras inside cigarette lighters, shaving brushes containing film, hairbrushes containing a map and saw, pens containing hidden compasses, steel shoelaces that doubled as garrottes or gigli saws, an asbestos-lined pipe for carrying secret documents, and much more.

    Directed to make copies of a new type of Luftwaffe life jacket, he made discoveries that were subsequently incorporated as standard in RAF "Mae Wests", including the use of a compressed air cylinder for inflating the jacket and a pouch filled with a powerful fluorescent dye for spotting of a downed airman at sea.

    In an example of lateral thinking, Fraser-Smith used a special left-hand thread for the disguised screw-off top of a hidden-document container; he suggested this would prevent discovery by the "unswerving logic of the German mind", as no German would ever think of trying to unscrew something the wrong way.

    At one point his expenses were challenged by a senior Treasury official over the extravagant costs of an order for packets of 12 razor blades. Fraser-Smith asked for a treasury costing clerk to accompany him on a visit to the company to determine whether or not they were profiteering. After checking that the clerk had signed the Official Secrets Act, the clerk reviewed the costs, which were in fact for a top-secret kit designed to aid SOE agents with escape and evasion. The clerk discovered that the company was in fact undercharging as they had not claimed the regulation profit. As a result, the supplier was directed to submit a new invoice with every item fully justified that, including the proper profit, was therefore greater than the original. Fraser-Smith never had a bill queried after that.
    Fraser-Smith later estimated that 50% of the orders he received were exact specifications, 40% were approximate specifications and 10% were his own idea. He called his inventions "Q gadgets", after the Q ships, warships disguised as freighters, which were deployed in the First World War. This may have been the basis of Ian Fleming's use of "Q" to refer to the suppliers of James Bond's gadgetry.
    Fraser-Smith was not the only gadget-master working for British intelligence during World War II. The SOE had various secret research and development laboratories including Station IX at the Natural History Museum and Station XII at the Frythe Hotel. Christopher Clayton Hutton of MI9, a clandestine unit within A-Force which specialised in escape and evasion, was also an inventor and deception-theorist. Major Jasper Maskelyne, a stage magician, also developed secret sabotage and subterfuge devices for MI-9.

    Operation Mincemeat
    Fraser was also involved in the intelligence operation codenamed Operation Mincemeat, which was designed to drop a body, carrying false papers to mislead the Nazis, off the Spanish coast. He was tasked with designing a trunk, 6' 2" long and 3' wide, to carry a "deadweight" of 200 lb that would be preserved in dry ice. When the dry ice evaporated, it filled the canister with carbon dioxide and drove out any oxygen, thus preserving the body without refrigeration. The plot was the basis of the book (and later film) The Man Who Never Was.

    Later life
    After the war, Fraser-Smith bought a rundown dairy farm in Bratton Fleming, in southwest England. It became a profitable business. In the late 1970s, his family persuaded him to seek permission to write a book about his wartime exploits. With clearance under the Official Secrets Act he wrote several, donating the royalties to charity.

    He had kept examples of most of his gadgets, and an exhibit of his wartime works was presented at the Exmoor Steam Railway, a tourist attraction in Bratton Fleming. Once a year, Fraser-Smith would spend a week explaining their workings to visitors.
    Charles Fraser-Smith died at his home of undisclosed causes in 1992, survived by his wife, Selina, and two children, Brian and Christine, by a previous marriage to Blanche Ellis. Live and Let's Spy: An exhibition of spy, escape and survival gadgetry, an exhibition of his work, created at Dover Castle by English Heritage, ran for two years in the late 1990s.
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    1999: Radioactive/MCA label releases the soundtrack for The World Is Not Enough in the US.
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    2012: Skyfall released in Albania, Canada, Pakistan, and the US.
    2016: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond Hammerhead #2.
    Luca Casalanguida, artist. Andy Diggle, writer.
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    JAMES BOND: HAMMERHEAD #2 (OF 6)
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513025272202011
    Cover: Francesco Francavilla
    Writer: Andy Diggle
    Art: Luca Casalanguida
    Publication Date: November 2016
    Page Count: 32 Pages
    ON SALE DATE: 11/9
    Assigned to hunt down and eliminate a terrorist threatening Britain's nuclear deterrent, 007 shadows the nation's leading defense contractor at the Dubai Arms Fair. As a lethal trap is sprung around him, Bond finds an unexpected ally in glamorous arms company executive Victoria Hunt.
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    2021: No Time To Die comes available to rent for streaming.

  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 10th

    1944: Timothy Miles Bindon Rice is born--Shardeloes, England.
    1945: Ian Fleming finishes his work with Naval Intelligence.

    1948: James Bond is born--so says his prop passport for The Living Daylights.
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    1953: James Bond is born--so says his Die Another Day passport.
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    1959: Jack Whittingham's outline for a first film is called "James Bond of the Secret Service".
    1968: Daphne Deckers is born--Nijmegen, Gelderland, Netherlands.

    1974: The US network premiere of Dr. No on ABC-TV.
    Dr No - James Bond - ABC Movie Special Star Tunnel intro

    1988: Licence to Kill films Sanchez interrogating OO7.

    2021: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond Himeros #2.
    Antonio Fuso, artist. Rodney Barnes, writer.
    DynamiteEntertainmentLogo.jpg
    JAMES BOND: HIMEROS #2
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513031230302011
    Cover A: Francesco Francavilla
    UPC: 725130312303 02011
    Cover B: Jackson Guice
    UPC: 725130312303 02021
    Writer: Rodney Barnes
    Artist: Antonio Fuso
    Genre: Spy/Fiction, Action/Adventure
    Publication Date: November 2021
    Format: Comic Book
    Page Count: 32
    ON SALE DATE: 11/10/2021
    Issue #2 continues the comic book adventures of the world's most famous spy - James Bond! While the setting exudes the allure of sun, sand and fun, this deadly island is no playtime retreat! Its sun, sand and misery for all those who visit, and up to Bond to put an end to the deadly circle once and for all!

    Featuring two amazing Covers: Francesco Francavilla and the legendary Jackson Guice!

    2022: High On Films suggests An Ultimate Guide For Hosting Your Own James Bond Casino Party.
    ngcb1
    An Ultimate Guide For Hosting Your Own
    James Bond Casino Party
    Jerry Horne / November 10, 2022

    There are many theme ideas you could choose for a party, whether it’s for a birthday, New Year’s Eve, a company gathering, or a reunion. While you could simply host a standard party with no overall theme, the benefits of choosing one can be great. This will help your guests quickly develop a good understanding of what to expect from the night, what to wear, and how to act. A popular party theme choice is the casino or James Bond-style party, with people wearing classy evening dresses and tuxedos and drinking fancy cocktails throughout the night. But planning a successful and memorable James Bond-themed party is no easy task. To help you with this, we’ve created this handy guide to provide you with some ideas so you can ensure your party won’t soon be forgotten.

    Provide Some Classy Drinks
    If there is one thing that Bond is known for, other than his silver tongue, it is his choice of beverages. To make your James Bond evening feel legitimate, you’ll want to provide your guests with a wide range of cocktails. There are so many classic cocktails that were made famous by 007, including his first-ever drink he orders, the Americano, as well as the renowned vodka martini. Some other drinks that Bond has ordered over the years include the humble whiskey and soda, the distinguished old-fashioned, the vesper, and the mojito. You’ll also want to provide your guests with some nice champagne or prosecco. For a larger event, consider hiring skilled bartenders to provide your guests with high-quality drinks and a bit of a show during their preparation.

    Choose What Sort Of Food To Offer
    Providing canapes is the obvious choice when it comes to food for a Bond-themed night. Waiters can move throughout your party, providing socializing guests with satisfying snacks, and you could also put on a buffet spread so that guests can continue to chat and mingle while eating. There are many different paths you could go down when it comes to deciding on specific foods to provide, ranging from fresh fruits and vegetable dishes to cheeses and cured meats. Pastries and bread-based snacks are also good options here as they’re generally quite easy to eat and won’t require a whole lot of concentration. Foods that don’t require cutlery are also a good idea, too. Of course, you could also consider providing your guests with a full three-course meal, but remember that, while not a bad idea at all, this will set a very different vibe.

    Arrange For Some Fun Activities
    A party such as this is going to need to have a selection of fun yet sophisticated activities for guests to partake in. There are many different things you could arrange for your guests to enjoy, which will also depend on the weather. For example, a summertime Bond party could allow you to set up some fun outdoor activities such as croquet, and don’t forget to set up some form of dancefloor somewhere around the venue. But the most obvious choice when it comes to hosting a Bond party is casino games, such as blackjack, roulette, and even poker. You could hire some croupiers for the night along with some professional, quality gaming tables to provide your guests with an authentic experience, unlike a real casino or the many fun live roulette websites available online. A fun selection of games like this can really add a thrill to the evening. You should also consider providing all your guests with some chips and award a prize to the person with the most chips by the end of the night.

    Get The Music Right
    There, of course, needs to be some leniency for certain aspects of your party, and one of these will be the music. Unless you’ve chosen a strict era, such as the sixties or seventies, you should choose a playlist that is going to suit you and your guests. Of course, you could also consider instrumental music if the night is going to be one of socializing rather than outright partying. Consider a selection of instrumental or classical renditions of popular songs, or if you want to go all out, you could even hire a string quartet or jazz band for the evening. Live music will naturally bring the whole evening to another level and will definitely be appreciated by your guests.

    Set A Strict Dress Code
    One thing that can put a lot of guests off when it comes to themed parties is that they have to organize a costume or specific outfit for the night. If you want to keep things classy, you should avoid encouraging costumes and state that the dress code should be formal while also listing a few different examples on your invitations. Things like cocktail dresses and tuxedos tend to fit the bill here, but of course, you should remember that not everyone necessarily owns a tux, for example. Leniency here is important, and you should strive to ensure that all of your guests feel comfortable with what to wear and that they’ll also have enough time to be able to find something suitable for the party.

    Create A Great Atmosphere With Décor
    A themed party is nothing without relevant decorations, and for a James Bond or casino-themed party, this should be relatively straightforward. When it comes to the color scheme, you’ll want to consider deep and rich colors like blacks, golds, reds, and silvers. You’ll also want to think about the venue itself that you’ll choose when hosting your party. Hiring a location that would also suit the overall casino theme is a great idea. You might even be able to find a venue that can help you with the décor or a venue that hosts casino parties regularly. That way, you won’t necessarily need to worry about providing game tables or décor at all. If you do have to source your own decorations, spend time doing your research to find the most suitable yet subtle décor. Remember that you can go over the top with decorating for a party, and sometimes less is more.
    Author: Grace Murphy

  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 11th

    1918: The first Armistice Day on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month marks the armistice signed between the Allies of World War I and Germany at Compiègne, France, to cease hostilities on the Western Front of World War I.

    1920: James Bond's birthday according to John Pearson's James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007.
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    James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007, John Pearson, 1973.
    Chapter 2 - Boyhood of a Spy
    ‘Something that Fleming never mentioned is where you were born.’

    Bond swung round immediately. ‘Why ask me that?’

    ‘You said begin at the beginning.’ Bond smiled, somewhat ruefully, and paused before replying. ‘I suppose you have to know. The truth is that I'm a native of the Ruhr. I was born in a town called Wattenscheid – that's near Essen – on Armistice Day, 11 November 1920. I have not, I hasten to add, a drop of German blood in my veins – as far as one can ever be certain of such things. As Fleming says somewhere, my father was a Highland Scot, my mother Swiss.’
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    1920: James Bond's birth date as used by Charlie Higson in his Young Bond novels.
    1921: James Bond's birth date according to Bond scholar John Griswold.
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    Ian Fleming's James Bond: Annotations and Chronologies for Ian Fleming's Bond Stories, John Griswold, 2006.
    Creating a High Level Chronology for Ian Fleming's James Bond
    Where Fleming misleads the reader is in You Only Live Twice's chater 21 Obit:. In this chapter, Fleming sacrificed the chronology of Bond's life for artistic license by placing Bond's birth year under the Japanese zodiac sign of the Rat. By doing this, he has misled many readers who were creating their own Bond chronology into believing Bond's year of birth was 1924. Fleming even changed his original manuscript for this chapter so that he had Bond entering 'a branch of what was subsequently to become the Ministry of Defence' in 1941 a the 'early age of seventeen'. In the original manuscript, Bond entered this branch at the age of seventeen in 1949. Fleming later changed '1939' to '1941' so that Bond's birth year would be 1924 (1941 minus 1924 equals 17 years) apparently to be consistent with a prior chapter that he stated Bond's Japanese zodiac sign was the Rat. In From Russia With Love, the Soviets reviewed Bond's dossier and found that 'he has worked for the British Secret Service since 1938'. It will be shown that the year '1939' is a better fit for the start of Bond's professional life in the overall chronology. '1941' will be reference later in the topic titled 'THE BRITISH SECRET SERVICE OF IAN FLEMING'S JAMES BOND' to speculate from where Bond's British Secret Service may have originated. It could be surmised that Fleming desired to jump start Bond on to a man of action career path as expeditiously as possible. Fleming was born in 1908 and spent the time period from age eighteen to thirty-one trying to find his niche in society where he felt most productive. In 1939 (just before Breitain officially declared war on Germany in World War II), Fleming became the personal assistant to Admiral Sir John godfrey who was the Admiralty's Director of Naval Intelligence at the time. It is as though Fleming wanted Bond to bypass this period of wandering professional growth years that he himself had experienced.
    November 11th, Armistice Day (celebrating end of World War I) has been generally accepted as the day of James Bond's birth. John Pearson, who wrote The Life of Ian Fleming and James Bond, the Authorized Biography of 007, had the honor of deciding Bond's birthday. Some James Bond fans even have social events centered around November 11th to celebrate Bond's birthday. What is debatable is the year of Bond's birth. Pearson wrote that the year was 1920, which is not as good a choice as it could have been. It does not take into account the '1938" date mentioned earlier from From Russia With Love. In the obituary in You Only Live Twice, Fleming wrote that Bond was seventeen years old, and it was by claiming an age of nineteen and with the help of an old Vickers colleague of his father that Bond was able to get his professional start. If the original '1939' date was used, the timing would begin to parallel Fleming's start (in July 1939) at the Admiralty. Using spring of 1939 as the beginning of Bond's career and knowing he was seventeen at the time, his birth date would have been November, 1921. Bond's parents died in a climbing accident when he was eleven. By using the November 11, 1921 date, Bond's parent could have died in 1933 when Bond was eleven years old. If Bond's parents had died in 1933 when he was eleven years old, an issue can be resolved. In Casino Royale, CHAPTER V - THE GIRL FROM HEADQUARTERS, the following is stated: "Bond's car was his only personal hobby. One of the last of the 4 1/2-litre Bentleys with the supercharger by Amherst Villiers, he had bought it almost new in 1933 and had kept it in careful storage through the war." This is important because by using the revised birth year, Bond would have been eleven (November 11, 1932 - November 11, 1933; the car obtained within the January 1, 1933 to November 10, 1933 period) when he bought the Bentley. The logical conclusion would be that his parents had owned the Bentley, and he had inherited it and kept in storage. As conjecture, perhaps it could be thought that whenever someone inquired about how he had gotten the car, he had developed the habit of responding that he had bought it; responding in this manner to avoid the discussion of the death of his parents. As for Bond's attending Eton College in the 1930s, September (the start of the Michaelmas half) and January (the start of the Lent half) were the two halves when boys 12 years old and boys 13 years old or just over 13 years old could enter Eton College. On rare occasions, boys of 11 years of age could enter Eton in September or January if they would soon be having their 12th birthday. Four years before they were due to attend, their entrance fee would be paid to confirm their potential placement in Eton College. Boys then had to be registered with a House Master sometime prior to taking the Common Entrance Examination which was usually taken around June just prior to entering Eton in September or January. By using November 11, 1921, as Bond's birth date, Bond would be 12 years old on November 11, 1933, and around June 1934 while at the age of 12, he would have passed the Common Entrance Examination, and in January 1935 he entered Eton.
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    1948: Vincent Andrew Schiavelli is born--Brooklyn, New York

    1963: El satánico Dr. No released in Uruguay.
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    1966: Donald Pleasence takes over the Blofeld role from Czech actor Jan Werich. A decision by director Gilbert and producer Broccoli--however, publicly the change is blamed on illness.
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    1966: Alison Doody is born--Dublin, Ireland.

    1972: James Bond's birth date as on a passport displayed at a French military museum.
    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 41 of 65 - "There But for Ms. Fortune" in Colorado, United States.
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    James Bond Jr - There But for Ms. Fortune
    Season 1 - Episode 41
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807127/?ref_=ttep_ep41
    Ms. Fortune attempts to kidnap IQ and him for ransom for Q's ice formula so that she use it to freeze Colorado river to shut down most of the United States' power supply. But her plan goes awfully wrong when she mistakes Trevor for IQ and kidnap him instead.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Mary Crawford ... (writer)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Alan Templeton ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)
    Cast (in credits order)
    Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Snuffer (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut / Miss Fortune (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 41 - There But for Ms. Fortune

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    1999: "The World Is Not Enough" music video airs before the MTV Europe Music Awards, part of heavy promotion for the film including a BMW Z8 giveaway.




    1999: TV Guide publishes Raymond Benson's Bond short story "Live at Five".
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    2003: Robert Brown dies at age 82--Swanage, Dorset, England.
    (Born 23 July 1921--Swanage, Dorset, England.)
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    Robert Brown (British actor)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Brown_(British_actor)
    British_actor_Robert_Brown.jpg
    Born Robert James Brown, 23 July 1921, Swanage, Dorset, England
    Died 11 November 2003 (aged 82), Swanage, Dorset, England
    Years active 1949–1991
    Spouse(s) Rita Becker (m. 1955–2003; his death)
    Children 2
    Robert James Brown (23 July 1921 – 11 November 2003) was an English actor, best known for his portrayal of M in the James Bond films from 1983 to 1989, succeeding Bernard Lee, who died in 1981.

    Brown made his first appearance as M in Octopussy in 1983.
    Brown was born and died in Swanage, Dorset. Before appearing in the Bond films, he had a long career as a bit-part actor in films and television. He had a starring role in the 1950s television series Ivanhoe where he played Gurth, the faithful companion of Ivanhoe, played by Roger Moore. He had previously made an uncredited appearance as a castle guard in the unrelated 1952 film Ivanhoe. He had an uncredited appearance as the galley-master in Ben-Hur (1959) and as factory worker Bert Harker in the BBC's 1960s soap opera The Newcomers. In One Million Years B.C. (1966), he played grunting caveman Akhoba, brutal head of the barbaric "Rock tribe".
    Brown first started in the James Bond franchise in the film The Spy Who Loved Me as Admiral Hargreaves, appearing alongside Lee. After Lee's sudden death in January 1981, Broccoli and the other producers, decided to leave M out of For Your Eyes Only out of respect for Lee and assigned his lines to M's Chief of Staff Bill Tanner. In 1983, Brown was hired to portray M on the recommendation of Bond actor Roger Moore, his Ivanhoe co-star and the father of Brown's goddaughter Deborah. It is unclear if Brown was the same M as Lee's character, or a different M, perhaps a promoted Hargreaves. Brown was succeeded in 1995 by Judi Dench in GoldenEye.
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    Robert Brown (I) (1921–2003)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0114533/?ref_=nv_sr_4?ref_=nv_sr_4

    Filmography
    Actor (138 credits)
    1991 Merlin of the Crystal Cave (TV Series) - Gorlois
    - Reckoning (1991) ... Gorlois
    - The Return (1991) ... Gorlois

    1989 Licence to Kill - M
    1989 Slow Burn (Video) - Grandfather in Church
    1988 Hannay (TV Series) - Roberton
    - Act of Riot (1988) ... Roberton
    1987 The Living Daylights - M
    1985 A View to a Kill - M

    1984 The Life and Death of King John (TV Movie) - Earl of Pembroke
    1984 Fantasy Island (TV Series)
    - Lady of the House/Mrs. Brandell's Favorites (1984)
    1983 Octopussy - M
    1983 The Winds of War (TV Mini-Series) - English Merchantman Captain
    - The Changing of the Guard (1983) ... English Merchantman Captain
    1983 The Forgotten Story (TV Series) - Captain Stevens
    - Episode #1.5 (1983) ... Captain Stevens
    1982 American Playhouse (TV Series) - Luke
    - Pilgrim, Farewell (1982) ... Luke
    1980 Lion of the Desert - Al Fadeel
    1980 Angels (TV Series) - Mr. Carlisle
    - Episode #6.21 (1980) ... Mr. Carlisle
    1980 Time of My Life (TV Series) - Mr. Richards
    - Episode #1.1 (1980) ... Mr. Richards

    1979 Henry IV Part I (TV Movie) - Sir Walter Blunt
    1979 Danger UXB (TV Series) - Civil Defence Officer
    - Butterfly Winter (1979) ... Civil Defence Officer
    1979 The Passage - Major
    1978 All Creatures Great and Small (TV Series) - Mr. Hewison
    - Merry Gentlemen (1978) ... Mr. Hewison
    1978 Warlords of the Deep - Briggs
    1978 Play for Today (TV Series) - Rector
    - Red Shift (1978) ... Rector
    1977 The Cost of Loving (TV Series) - Adam Greenaway
    - Madge (1977) ... Adam Greenaway
    1977 Mr. Big (TV Series) - Sheik Ibrahim
    - The Sheiks (1977) ... Sheik Ibrahim
    1977 The Spy Who Loved Me - Adm. Hargreaves
    1977 Jesus of Nazareth (TV Mini-Series) - A Pharasee
    - Part 2 (1977) ... A Pharasee
    1976 The Message - Otba
    1974 Fall of Eagles (TV Mini-Series) - Uncle Serge
    - Dearest Nicky (1974) ... Uncle Serge
    - The Last Tsar (1974) ... Uncle Serge
    1972 Demons of the Mind - Fischinger
    1972 Wreck Raisers - Cox'n
    1972 The Protectors (TV Series) - Governor
    - Brother Hood (1972) ... Governor
    1971 1,000 Convicts and a Woman - Ralph
    1971 Private Road - Mr. Halpern
    1971 The Doctors (TV Series) - Robert Thurlow, 28 episodes
    1970 Big Brother (TV Mini-Series) - Edward Cheeseman
    - The Wife Factor (1970) ... Edward Cheeseman

    1969 Tintin and the Temple of the Sun - Tarragon (English version, voice, uncredited)
    1967-1969 The Newcomers (TV Series) - Bert Harker, 218 episodes
    1969 Un hombre solo
    1966 One Million Years B.C. - Akhoba
    1966 King of the River (TV Series) - Ben King, 10 episodes
    1966 ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) - Insp. Wilkins
    - The Move After Checkmate (1966) ... Insp. Wilkins
    1966 Softly Softly (TV Series) - Bramley
    - Tickle on Wheels (1966) ... Bramley
    1965 Against the Tide (Short)
    1965 The Avengers (TV Series) - Saul
    - The Town of No Return (1965) ... Saul
    1965 Jury Room (TV Series) - Mr. Duckworth - Juror
    - The Chess Player (1965) ... Mr. Duckworth - Juror
    1965 Operation Crossbow - Air Commodore
    1965 Thursday Theatre (TV Series) - Sam Sixty
    - Photo Finish (1965) ... Sam Sixty
    1964 All in Good Time (Short) - George Fitch
    1964 The Yellowbird (TV Movie)
    1964 Gideon C.I.D. (TV Series) - Bill Campbell
    - The Big Fix (1964) ... Bill Campbell
    1963-1964 The Saint (TV Series) - Atkins / Howard Jackman
    - The Miracle Tea Party (1964) ... Atkins
    - The Saint Plays with Fire (1963) ... Howard Jackman
    1964 Escape by Night - Mawsley
    1964 Smuggler's Bay (TV Series) - Sam Tewkesbury
    - On the Beach (1964) ... Sam Tewkesbury
    - A Reward of Fifty Pounds (1964) ... Sam Tewkesbury
    - The Auction (1964) ... Sam Tewkesbury
    - In the Vault (1964) ... Sam Tewkesbury
    - A Death and a Discovery (1964) ... Sam Tewkesbury
    1964 The Masque of the Red Death - Guard
    1964 Ghost Squad (TV Series) - Kaufmann
    - Death of a Cop (1964) ... Kaufmann
    1964 Emergency-Ward 10 (TV Series) - Mr. Waterman
    - Episode #1.686 (1964) ... Mr. Waterman
    - Episode #1.685 (1964) ... Mr. Waterman
    - Episode #1.681 (1964) ... Mr. Waterman
    1963 The Double - Richard Harrison
    1963 The Magical World of Disney (TV Series) - Sam / Douin / Sam Farley
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 3 (1963) ... Sam
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 2 (1963) ... Sam
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 1 (1963) ... Sam Farley
    - The Horse Without a Head: The Key to the Cache (1963) ... Douin
    - The Horse Without a Head: The 100,000,000 Franc Train Robbery (1963) ... Douin
    1963 Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow - Sam Farley
    1963 Boyd Q.C. (TV Series) - Adrian Marshall
    - Thread of Evidence (1963) ... Adrian Marshall
    1961-1963 No Hiding Place (TV Series) - Berry / Lew Evatt
    - An Eye on the Kings (1963) ... Berry
    - Man in the Dark (1961) ... Lew Evatt
    1963 Sierra Nine (TV Series) - Galliver
    - The Q-Radiation: Part One (1963) ... Galliver
    1963 The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre (TV Series) - Richard Harrison
    - The Double (1963) ... Richard Harrison
    1962 Mystery Submarine - Coxswain Drage
    1962 Live Now - Pay Later (unconfirmed)
    1962 Billy Budd - Arnold Talbot - Maintopman
    1962 The 300 Spartans - Pentheus
    1960-1961 Dixon of Dock Green (TV Series) - Mr. Lee / Dick Hastings
    - The Bent Twig (1961) ... Mr. Lee
    - The Guilty Party (1960) ... Dick Hastings
    1961 Probation Officer (TV Series) - Harry Barnett
    - Episode #2.37 (1961) ... Harry Barnett
    1961 The Arthur Askey Show (TV Series)
    - Pilbeam, the Journalist (1961) ... (as Bob Brown)
    1960 A Story of David: The Hunted - Jashobeam
    1960/III Macbeth (TV Movie) - Bloody Sergeant
    1960 Sands of the Desert - 1st Tourist
    1960 Armchair Mystery Theatre (TV Series) - George Hibberd
    - Flight from Treason (1960) ... George Hibberd
    1960 Kraft Mystery Theater (TV Series) - George Hibberd
    - Flight from Treason (1960) ... George Hibberd
    1960 Inside Story (TV Series) - Jack Brooks, 13 episodes
    1960 It Takes a Thief - Bob Crowther
    1959-1960 Interpol Calling (TV Series) - Sergeant at Car Impound / Attendant
    - A Foreign Body (1960) ... Sergeant at Car Impound
    - Dead on Arrival (1959) ... Attendant
    1960 Sink the Bismarck! - Gunnery Officer on 'King George V' (uncredited)
    1956-1960 Armchair Theatre (TV Series) - Bert Turner / Singer / Kenneth Dowey / ...
    - Where I Live (1960) ... Bert Turner
    - Dangerous World (1958) ... Singer
    - The Old Lady Shows Her Medals (1956) ... Kenneth Dowey
    - The Handshake/Bid for Fame (1956) ... Joe Mawson in

    1959 The Flying Doctor (TV Series) - Sam Marlow
    - The Riddle (1959) ... Sam Marlow
    1959 The Invisible Man (TV Series) - Prof. Howard
    - The Rocket (1959) ... Prof. Howard
    1959 Ben-Hur - Chief of Rowers (uncredited)
    1959 Saturday Playhouse (TV Series) - Richard Pengelly
    - Haul for the Shore (1959) ... Richard Pengelly
    1959 Shake Hands with the Devil - First Sergeant 'Black & Tans'
    1959 The Offshore Island (TV Movie) - Martin
    1958-1959 Ivanhoe (TV Series) - Gurth, 39 episodes
    1958 The Veil (TV Mini-Series) - Constable
    - Jack the Ripper (1958) ... Constable
    1958 Room 43 - Mike
    1957 Campbell's Kingdom - Ben Creasy
    1957 The Abominable Snowman - Ed. Shelley
    1957 ITV Television Playhouse (TV Series)
    - Desert Patrol (1957)
    1957 Overseas Press Club - Exclusive! (TV Series) - Erik Richter
    - My Favourite Kidnapper (1957) ... Erik Richter
    1957 Kill Me Tomorrow - Steve Ryan
    1957 The Steel Bayonet - Sgt. Maj. Gill
    1956 Assignment Foreign Legion (TV Series) - Sergeant Boucher
    - The Sword of Truth (1956) ... Sergeant Boucher
    1956 Hell in Korea - The Regular Soldiers: Pte. O'Brien / Pte O'Brien
    1956 The Count of Monte Cristo (TV Series) - Baron Buray / Valpezzo
    - The Barefoot Empress (1956) ... Baron Buray
    - The Island (1956) ... Valpezzo
    1950-1956 BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV Series) - Richard Pengelly / Mick Egan / Oliver North / ... 20 episodes
    1956 Kraft Theatre (TV Series) - Crewman / Officer
    - A Night to Remember (1956) ... Crewman / Officer
    1956 The Man Who Never Was - French (uncredited)
    1956 Colonel March of Scotland Yard (TV Series) - Hastings
    - Error at Daybreak (1956) ... Hastings
    1956 Tears for Simon - Farmer with Shotgun (uncredited)
    1956 Helen of Troy - Polydorus
    1956 The Alien Sky (TV Movie) - John Steele
    1955-1956 Rheingold Theatre (TV Series) - Zanos / Surgeon Lt. Donald Reynell, RCNVR
    - Dimitrios (1956) ... Zanos
    - Heritage (1955) ... Surgeon Lt. Donald Reynell, RCNVR
    1955 Theatre Royal (TV Series) - Swain
    - The Orderly (1955) ... Swain
    1955 Passage Home - Shane
    1955 The Warriors - First French Knight
    1954 Barbara's Wedding (TV Short) - Dering
    1954 Campbell Summer Soundstage (TV Series)
    - Reville for Two Angels (1954)
    1953 The Long Rope - Mick Jordan
    1953 The Will (TV Short) - Philip Ross
    1953 Wednesday Theatre (TV Series) - Dick Pascoe
    - For Want of a Nail.... (1953) ... Dick Pascoe
    1953 Noose for a Lady - Jonas Rigg
    1953 Shadow of the Vine (TV Movie) - Arthur Heath
    1953 The Pickwick Papers (TV Series) - Mr. Bob Sawyer
    - The Sixth Paper (1953) ... Mr. Bob Sawyer
    - The Fifth Paper (1953) ... Mr. Bob Sawyer
    1952 Gambler and the Lady - John - Waiter at Max's Dive (uncredited)
    1952 The Infinite Shoeblack (TV Movie) - Andrew Berwick
    1952 The Mask (TV Short) - James Glasson
    1952 Time, Gentlemen, Please! - Bill Jordan
    1952 Ivanhoe - Castle Guard Yelling 'Horseman Approaching from the South!' (uncredited)
    1952 Derby Day - Foster - Berkeley's Butler (uncredited)
    1952 Leading Question (TV Short) - Peace-be-with-us Smith
    1952 The Marvellous History of St. Bernard (TV Movie) - Bonaventure
    1952 Death of an Angel - Jim Pollard (uncredited)
    1951 Out of True (Short) - Dr. Dale
    1951 Milestones (TV Movie) - Arthur Preece
    1951 A Tomb with a View (TV Movie) - Alec Lanch
    1951 The Fifty Mark (TV Movie) - Roy Clarke
    1951 The Empty Street (TV Short) - Robins
    1951 Cloudburst - Carter
    1951 Rush Job (TV Movie) - Cliff Whatley
    1951 The Dark Man - Policeman at Hospital (uncredited)
    1950 Marion (TV Movie) - George Saunders

    1949 The Coventry Nativity Play (TV Movie) - First soldier
    1949 The Big Story (TV Series) - Danny
    - Make Believe Bandit ... Danny
    1949 The Third Man - British Military Policeman in Sewer Chase (uncredited)
    1948 Good Friday (TV Movie) - Herod (1950 version)
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    2006: The Spectator prints the short story "Moneypenny's First Date With Bond" by Kate Westbrook (Samantha Weinberg).
    2015: Spectre released in Switzerland and France.
    2015: 스백터 (Seu-paek-duh) released in the Republic of Korea.
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    2021: No Time To Die released in Australia.
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    2021: Opening Night for No Time To Die at the Windsor Cinema, Midland, Australia.
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    Open Night for James Bond 'No Time To Die'
    Schedule
    Thu Nov 11 2021 at 05:30 pm
    UTC+08:00
    Location
    Windsor Cinema | Midland, WA
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    2022: SAMLA's Call For Papers seeks The Changing Worlds of James Bond at Jacksonville, Florida.
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    Calls for Papers (CFPs)
    See the complete article here:
    SAMLA welcomes broad participation in planning, chairing, and presenting as part of sessions for its next conference, SAMLA 94, taking place on November 11-13, 2022, in Jacksonville, FL

    Each Session Chair writes their own Call for Papers (CFP) and submits it to SAMLA for approval and posting. Presentation abstracts are then directed to the individual Chair, who selects and notifies their panelists accordingly. The Chair then submits information about the panel they have selected to SAMLA for inclusion in the conference program.

    Please read the instructions below for further details and links to the appropriate forms.

    CHAIRS
    or
    PRESENTERS
    Instructions for Prospective Chairs

    Prospective Chairs should begin by deciding on the session's type and format:

    Session Types include Regular Sessions, Affiliated Group Sessions, and Special Sessions. For your convenience, we have defined these session types here. Unless you are representing an existing Affiliated Group or Regular Session, your CFP will be classified as a Special Session. If you represent an organization looking to become an Affiliated Group, or if you are unsure if your session is a recurring Regular Session, please email Dan Abitz at [email protected].

    Session Formats include Traditional Sessions, Roundtables, Workshops, Readings, and more. We have described the most common formats here. SAMLA welcomes other session formats when applicable.

    Next, prospective session chairs should prepare their CFP language and submit a CFP form for SAMLA's approval. A CFP form should be submitted for each session, even if the session already has a full list of presenters. SAMLA will post all approved CFPs below to encourage scholars to submit abstracts to Session Chairs for approval and, ultimately, inclusion in the conference program.

    When selecting panelists, Chairs are asked to take note of the eligibility guidelines posted in the "Instructions for Prospective Presenters" section below. Chairs may choose to widen their selection process by posting their CFPs to other databases.

    The final deadline to submit a CFP is July 1, 2022.
    Instructions for Prospective Presenters

    Scholars interested in presenting at SAMLA 94 should review the approved Calls for Papers (CFPs) below and follow any submission instructions set by the individual Session Chairs.

    SAMLA asks that you abide by certain eligibility guidelines when planning your participation in our conference:

    All conference participants will need to become SAMLA members AND will need to register for the conference. There are two separate forms to fill out and two separate payments to be rendered to meet these requirements.
    See our Membership Rates & Forms page here. The Membership forms will be updated soon.
    See our Conference Registration page here. The SAMLA 94 Conference Registration form will be available in Spring 2022.
    A member may present only one traditional paper per SAMLA conference. A member may participate in other forms as long as the nature of each panel or presentation differs significantly. This may include, but is not limited to: serving as both Chair and Panelist in one’s own panel; serving as Chair in one session and Panelist in another session; serving as Panelist both in a traditional panel and on a roundtable, reading, or workshop discussion; serving as Panelist while also presenting on our Poster Session. If a member is presenting in multiple formats, it is expected and required that the content of the presentations will also be different. Additionally, members are welcome to serve as Chairs, Co-Chairs, and/or Secretaries for multiple panels.
    SAMLA is proud to provide ample space for undergraduate research at its annual conference. We invite undergraduate students to participate in Undergraduate Research Forum (URF) panels or our annual Friday-night Poster Session. According to SAMLA guidelines, however, undergraduate students are not permitted to participate in non-URF sessions.

    CFPs by Category
    THE CHANGING WORLDS OF JAMES BOND
    2022 marks the sixtieth anniversary of the film Dr. No and the publication of Ian Fleming’s ninth James Bond novel, The Spy Who Loved Me. Both these works represent watershed moments for the character of James Bond, the film launching the beginnings of Bond mania, and the novel presented from the female perspective, Bond himself absent until the final third of the novel. Other seminal Fleming works (From Russia, with Love and The Diamond Smugglers) and James Bond films (You Only Live Twice, The Spy Who Loved Me, The Living Daylights, Tomorrow Never Dies, Skyfall) also have anniversaries in 2022, from 10 to 65 years of age. We invite paper proposals on any aspect of these anniversary films and books as they navigate change. We are especially interested in papers that address change in the adaptation of Fleming’s work for film and other media. Please send abstracts of 300 words and brief biographies to Oliver Buckton ([email protected]) and Matt Sherman ([email protected]) by May 16, 2022.

  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 12th

    1929: Peter Curtis Lamont is born--London, England.
    (He dies 18 December 2020 at age 91.)
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    Peter Lamont, Legendary
    Production Designer on Bond
    Films and 'Titanic,' Dies at 91
    11:10 AM PST 12/18/2020 by Mike Barnes
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    GOLDFINGER, from left: Sean Connery, Harold Sakata, 1964
    Courtesy Everett Collection
    Sean Connery (left) and Harold Sakata do battle on the Fort Knox set of 'Goldfinger.'
    An Oscar winner and four-
    time nominee, he also
    worked on 'The Seven-Per-
    Cent Solution,' 'Fiddler on
    the Roof' and 'Aliens.'
    Peter Lamont, the top-notch British art director, set decorator and production designer who worked on 18 James Bond films and received an Academy Award for Titanic, has died. He was 91.
    Lamont's death was reported by the official 007 account on Twitter. No details of his passing were immediately available.
    "Peter Lamont was a much beloved member of the Bond family and a giant in the industry," producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli said in a statement. He was "inextricably linked with the design and aesthetic of James Bond since Goldfinger."
    Indeed, the four-time Oscar nominee helped create the monumental scenarios for every 007 movie from Goldfinger (1964) through Casino Royale (2006) except for one — Tomorrow Never Dies (1997). He had a good reason for missing that, however; he was serving as production designer on James Cameron's best picture winner Titanic.

    Lamont, who collaborated often with two-time Oscar winner Ken Adam, landed his other Academy Award noms for Norman Jewison's Fiddler on the Roof (1971), Lewis Gilbert's The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Cameron's Aliens (1986).

    Lamont also contributed to such notable films as This Sporting Life (1963), The Ipcress File (1965), Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976), The Boys From Brazil (1978) and his final partnership with Cameron, True Lies (1994).
    Peter Curtis Lamont was born in London on Nov. 12, 1929. He worked as print boy runner at Pinewood Studios, and after serving for two years in the Royal Air Force, he returned to the studio as a draughtsman on features including Captain Boycott (1950), The Browning Version (1951) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1952).
    For art director Peter Murton on Goldfinger, the third Bond movie, he and Adam designed Pinewood's iconic Fort Knox set, which was one of the most expensive ever built at that time.

    "I drew it all up and made a model," Lamont recalled in a 2006 interview. "And I remember [director] Guy Hamilton and [producers] Cubby [Broccoli] and Harry [Saltzman] came up and they looked at it and said, 'Well, let's get an estimate of how much it's going to cost.' And I almost fell through the roof because the estimate was for £56,000 … I thought, 'Oh God, I'm going to get fired for this.' But nobody turned a hair."

    In today's dollars, that set would have cost some $6.3 million.

    Lamont graduated to set decorator on Thunderball (1965), to art director on Joseph L. Mankiewicz's Sleuth (1972), to visual effects art director on Moonraker (1979) and to production designer on For Your Eyes Only (1981).

    After working with Sean Connery, George Lazenby, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosnan, he ended his career on [/b]Casino Royale[/b] (2006), the first Bond film to star Daniel Craig.
    His autobiography, The Man With the Golden Eye: Designing the James Bond Films, was published in 2016.

    Survivors include his son, Neil Lamont, an art director on Harry Potter films and Star Wars: Episode VII — The Force Awakens, and his daughter, Madeline.
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    Peter Lamont (I) (1929–2020)
    Art Department | Production Designer | Art Director
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0483682/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_1
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    1943: Julie Ege is born--Sandnes, Norway.
    (She dies 29 April 2008 at age 64--Oslo, Norway.)
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    Julie Ege: 'Sex Symbol of the 1970s'
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/julie-ege-sex-symbol-of-the-1970s-820386.html
    Saturday 3 May 2008 00:00
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    In the late Sixties and early Seventies, British cinema-goers, and British men in general, had a weakness for Scandinavian women. For a time, the Norwegian actress and model Julie Ege was as ubiquitous as Sweden's Britt Ekland.
    In 1969, Ege's stunning looks caught the eye of the film producer Albert Broccoli, who cast her in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, the only James Bond film to feature George Lazenby as the lead. In 1971, Ege was Voluptua to Frankie Howerd's Lurcio in the first Up Pompeii film, based on the titter-heavy sitcom of the same name. Having starred in Creatures the World Forgot, another Hammer "cave girl" film in the vein of the Raquel Welch vehicle One Million Years BC, Ege was touted as the "Sex Symbol of the 1970s" by Sir James Carreras, head of Hammer Film Productions, and his son Michael.
    Despite further appearances in sci-fi and horror hokum like The Final Programme (1973), Craze, Dr of Evil (aka The Mutations) and The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (all in 1974), she was typecast as a glamour girl, in comedies such as The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971) and Not Now Darling (1973), both with Leslie Phillips, as well as Percy's Progress (1974) and The Amorous Milkman (1975).

    Born in Sandnes, on the south-west coast of Norway, in 1943, she was a bit of a tomboy but blossomed into a teenager obsessed with Hollywood stars. Spotted by local photographers, Ege appeared in advertisements for "anything from dresses to sardines", she later recalled. Following a short-lived marriage to a major in the Norwegian army, she moved to Oslo, won a beauty contest and took part in the Miss Universe pageant in Florida in 1962. She then remarried and undertook various modelling assignments, including an appearance in Penthouse magazine.
    In 1967, she made her acting début playing a German masseuse in Stompa til Sjøs ("The Sky and the Ocean"), a low-budget Norwegian film, and also had an uncredited part in Robbery, a British gangster picture about the Great Train Robbery. She settled in London, registered with various model agencies, and sent her picture to Broccoli. The Bond producer signed Ege to play the Scandinavian Girl, one of the 10 women of different nationalities being brainwashed by Blofeld, the villain portrayed by Telly Savalas in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (the English Girl was played by Joanna Lumley). Ege spent nearly three months on location at Piz Gloria, the revolving restaurant on top of the Schilthorn in Switzerland, but was disappointed to see that, in the finished film, she only appeared on screen for a few moments.
    In 1970, Ned Sherrin gave her a role opposite Marty Feldman in the comedy Every Home Should Have One. "It was my first real part with dialogue. They wanted me to look and sound like a Scandinavian nanny so I gave them just that. It was really difficult," Ege joked. She had spent time as an au pair in London in the early Sixties. "Once the film opened, all the newspapers carried a photo of me with the caption 'Every Home Should Have One'. I was famous overnight and was not prepared for all the decision-making so crucial at that moment," she admitted.

    Ege's subsequent career moves bore out this claim. She turned down the chance to appear with Peter Sellers in the saucy comedy There's a Girl in My Soup and signed up with Hammer to do Creatures the World Forgot. The shooting on location in Africa turned out to be something of an ordeal for Ege who had recently given birth to her first daughter. "They made me wear this awful wig and my bikini was a far cry from the one Raquel Welch wore," she recalled. "I had dirt smeared all over me. My newborn child was back in England and after a few days I got homesick."

    Ege then undertook a gruelling publicity schedule which included appearances on the Johnny Carson and David Frost chat-shows and a special edition of The Money Programme documenting the amount of money Hammer was investing in her. However, Creatures the World Forgot was slated by the critics and her career lost momentum after she passed on Hammer's Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde in 1972. "I was by then very reluctant about doing nudity," she said. "Many people think I did so much nudity in my films. I did a short scene in Every Home Should Have One, and two bathtub scenes in Not Now Darling and Mutations."

    Ege was happier doing comedies, including playing "the sexy wife of a mad scientist" (Donald Sinden) in Rentadick (1972), even if the project went so awry that Graham Chapman and John Cleese, the film's original writers with John Fortune and John Wells, asked for their names to be removed from the credits. In 1972, she also had cameos in The Alf Garnett Saga and in Go For a Take with Reg Varney of On the Buses fame. "They needed a pretty girl with a good attitude to play these parts," she said. "It was all a laugh and I have never seen these films since."

    In the Seventies, Ege lived for several years with the Beatles associate Tony Bramwell and recorded a version of "Love", a John Lennon composition originally featured on the John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album in 1970. She subsequently went back to Norway and took up photography before training as a nurse in the Eighties. She was delighted when one of her patients presented her with a video copy of The Amorous Milkman.

    Over the last decade, Ege was amazed by the renewed interest in her films. "There I was on the front cover of so many newspapers as the forgotten diva of British horror and comedy films," she said in 2004, two years after publishing her autobiography, Naken ("Naked"), in Norway. In 1999, she visited Britain and took part in a reunion of Hammer alumni. In 2005, she featured in the BBC documentary Crumpet! A Very British Sex Symbol, presented by the former Daily Sport editor Tony Livesey. "To be honest, I was never really that proud of my performance in films," she said, "but I gave it my best and enjoyed the work very much."

    Pierre Perrone

    Julie Ege, model, actress and nurse: born Sandnes, Norway 13 November 1943; twice married (two daughters); died Oslo 29 April 2008.
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    Julie Ege (1943–2008)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0250774/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Actress (24 credits)

    1998 Blodsbånd (TV Mini-Series)
    - Episode #1.2 (1998)
    - Episode #1.3 (1998)
    - Episode #1.1 (1998)

    1988 Fengslende dager for Christina Berg - Krags hustru

    1976 Farlig yrke (TV Mini-Series) - Wenche Berg
    - Det tredje offeret (1976) ... Wenche Berg
    - Helmer (1976) ... Wenche Berg
    - Etterlyste ble sist sett... (1976) ... Wenche Berg
    1975 De dwaze lotgevallen van Sherlock Jones - Sondag's secretaresse
    1975 The Amorous Milkman - Diana
    1974 Bortreist på ubestemt tid - Christina
    1974 The Mutations - Hedi
    1974 Den siste Fleksnes - Julie Ege
    1974 It's Not the Size That Counts - Miss Hanson
    1974 The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires - Vanessa Buren
    1974 Craze - Helena
    1973 The Final Programme - Miss Dazzle
    1973 Kanarifuglen - Kari, flyvertinne
    1973 Not Now Darling - Janie McMichael
    1972 Double Take - April
    1972 The Alf Garnett Saga - Julie Ege
    1972 Rentadick - Utta Armitage
    1971 The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins - Ingrid (segment "Gluttony")
    1971 Creatures the World Forgot - Nala - The Girl
    1971 Up Pompeii - Voluptua
    1970 Every Home Should Have One - Inga

    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service - The Scandinavian Girl
    1967 Stompa til Sjøs!
    1967 Robbery - Hostess (uncredited)
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    1943: Valerie Leon is born--Islington, London, England.

    1966: James Bond comic strip The Living Daylights completes its run in The Daily Express.
    (Started 12 September 1966. 210-263) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/tld.php3
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    Swedish Semic Comics 1985 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1985.php3
    Spionen Från Öst
    (The Living Daylights)
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    Danish 1968 https://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no14-1968/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 14:
    “The Living Daylights” (1968)
    Spionen fra øst
    [The Spy from the East]
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    2020
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    1981: William Holden dies at age 63--Santa Monica, California.
    (Born 17 April 1918--O'Fallon, Illinois.)
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    William Holden
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    Holden in a publicity photo, 1954
    William Franklin Beedle Jr.
    Born April 17, 1918 | O'Fallon, Illinois, U.S.
    Died November 12, 1981 (aged 63) | Santa Monica, California, U.S.
    Cause of death Exsanguination
    Resting place Ashes scattered in the Pacific Ocean
    Nationality American
    Alma mater South Pasadena High School
    Occupation Actor, wildlife conservationist
    Years active 1938–1981
    Home town South Pasadena, California, U.S.
    Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
    Political party Republican
    Spouse(s) Brenda Marshall
    (m. 1941; div. 1971)
    Partner(s) Stefanie Powers (1972–1981) (his death)
    Children 3
    Awards
    Academy Award for Best Actor (1953)
    Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor (1974)
    Military career
    Allegiance United States of America
    Service/branch US Army Air Corps, United States Army Air Forces
    Years of service 1942–45
    Rank US-O2 insignia.svg First lieutenant[2]
    Unit First Motion Picture Unit (USAAF)
    Battles/wars World War II
    William Holden (born William Franklin Beedle Jr.; April 17, 1918 – November 12, 1981) was an American actor who was one of the biggest box-office draws of the 1950s and 1960s. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for the film Stalag 17 (1953), and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie for the television film The Blue Knight (1973). Holden starred in some of Hollywood's most popular and critically acclaimed films, including Sunset Boulevard, Sabrina, The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Wild Bunch, Picnic and Network. He was named one of the "Top 10 Stars of the Year" six times (1954–1958, 1961), and appeared as 25th on the American Film Institute's list of 25 greatest male stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema.
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    With Lee J. Cobb (right) in Holden's first starring role in a film, Golden Boy (1939)
    Early life and education
    Holden was born William Franklin Beedle Jr. on April 17, 1918, in O'Fallon, Illinois, son of William Franklin Beedle (1891–1967), an industrial chemist, and his wife Mary Blanche Beedle (née Ball, 1898–1990), a schoolteacher. He had two younger brothers, Robert Westfield Beedle (1921–1944) and Richard P. Beedle (1924–1964). One of his father's grandmothers, Rebecca Westfield, was born in England in 1817, while some of his mother's ancestors settled in Virginia's Lancaster County after emigrating from England in the 17th century.[3] His younger brother, Robert W. "Bobbie" Beedle, became a U.S. Navy fighter pilot and was killed in action in World War II, over New Ireland, a Japanese-occupied island in the South Pacific, on January 5, 1944.

    His family moved to South Pasadena when he was three. After graduating from South Pasadena High School, Holden attended Pasadena Junior College, where he became involved in local radio plays.

    Career
    Paramount

    Holden appeared uncredited in Prison Farm (1939) and Million Dollar Legs (1939) at Paramount.

    A version of how he obtained his stage name "Holden" is based on a statement by George Ross of Billboard: "William Holden, the lad just signed for the coveted lead in Golden Boy, used to be Bill Beadle. [sic] And here is how he obtained his new movie tag. On the Columbia lot is an assistant director and scout named Harold Winston. Not long ago he was divorced from the actress, Gloria Holden, but carried the torch after the marital rift. Winston was one of those who discovered the Golden Boy newcomer and who renamed him—in honor of his former spouse!"

    Golden Boy
    Holden's first starring role was in Golden Boy (1939), costarring Barbara Stanwyck, in which he played a violinist-turned-boxer. The film was made for Columbia who negotiated a sharing agreement with Paramount for Holden's services.

    Holden was still an unknown actor when he made Golden Boy, while Stanwyck was already a film star. She liked Holden and went out of her way to help him succeed, devoting her personal time to coaching and encouraging him, which made them into lifelong friends. When she received her Honorary Oscar at the 1982 Academy Award ceremony, Holden had died in an accident just a few months prior. At the end of her acceptance speech, she paid him a personal tribute: "I loved him very much, and I miss him. He always wished that I would get an Oscar. And so tonight, my golden boy, you got your wish".

    Next he starred with George Raft and Humphrey Bogart in the Warner Bros. gangster epic Invisible Stripes (1939).

    Back at Paramount he starred with Bonita Granville in Those Were the Days! (1940) followed by the role of George Gibbs in the film adaptation of Our Town (1940), done for Sol Lesser at United Artists.

    Columbia put Holden in a Western with Jean Arthur, Arizona (1940), then at Paramount he was in a hugely popular war film, I Wanted Wings (1941) with Ray Milland and Veronica Lake.

    He did another Western at Columbia, Texas (1941) with Glenn Ford, and a musical comedy at Paramount, The Fleet's In (1942) with Eddie Bracken, Dorothy Lamour and Betty Hutton.

    He stayed at Paramount for The Remarkable Andrew (1942) with Brian Donlevy then made Meet the Stewarts (1943) at Columbia. Paramount reunited him and Bracken in Young and Willing (1943).

    World War Two
    Holden served as a second and then a first lieutenant in the United States Army Air Force during World War II, where he acted in training films for the First Motion Picture Unit, including Reconnaissance Pilot (1943).

    Post War
    Holden's first film back from the services was Blaze of Noon (1947), an aviator picture at Paramount directed by John Farrow.

    He followed it with a romantic comedy, Dear Ruth (1947) and he was one of many cameos in Variety Girl (1947).

    RKO borrowed him for Rachel and the Stranger (1948) with Robert Mitchum and Loretta Young, then he went over to 20th Century Fox for Apartment for Peggy (1948).

    At Columbia he did a film noir, The Dark Past (1948) and a Western with Ford, The Man from Colorado (1949). At Paramount he did another Western, Streets of Laredo (1949).

    Columbia teamed him with Lucille Ball for Miss Grant Takes Richmond (1949) then he did a sequel to Dear Ruth, Dear Wife (1949). He did a comedy at Columbia Father Is a Bachelor (1950).
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    With Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard (1950)
    His career took off in 1950 when Billy Wilder tapped him to play a role in Sunset Boulevard, in which he played a down-at-heel screenwriter taken in by a faded silent-screen star, played by Gloria Swanson. Holden earned his first Best Actor Oscar nomination with the part.

    Getting the part was a lucky break for Holden, as the role was initially cast with Montgomery Clift, who backed out of his contract. Swanson later said, "Bill Holden was a man I could have fallen in love with. He was perfection on- and off-screen." And Wilder commented "Bill was a complex guy, a totally honorable friend. He was a genuine star. Every woman was in love with him."

    Paramount reunited him with Nancy Olson, one of his Sunset Boulevard costars, in Union Station (1950).

    Holden had another good break when cast as Judy Holliday's love interest in the big screen adaptation of Born Yesterday (1950). He made two more films with Olson: Force of Arms (1951) at Warners and Submarine Command (1951) at Paramount.

    Holden did a sports film at Columbia, Boots Malone (1952) then returned to Paramount for The Turning Point (1952).

    Stalag 17 and Peak Era of Stardom
    Holden was reunited with Wilder in Stalag 17 (1953), for which Holden won the Academy Award for Best Actor. This ushered in the peak years of Holden's stardom.

    He made a sex comedy with David Niven for Otto Preminger, The Moon Is Blue (1953), which was a huge hit, in part due to controversy over its content. At Paramount he was in a comedy with Ginger Rogers that was not particularly popular, Forever Female (1953). A Western at MGM, Escape from Fort Bravo (1953) did much better, and the all star Executive Suite (1954) was a notable success.
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    With Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina (1954)
    Holden made a third film with Wilder, Sabrina (1954), billed beneath Audrey Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart. Holden and Hepburn became romantically involved during the filming, unbeknown to Wilder: "People on the set told me later that Bill and Audrey were having an affair, and everybody knew. Well, not everybody! I didn't know." The interactions between Bogart, Hepburn, and Holden made shooting less than pleasant, as Bogart had wanted his wife, Lauren Bacall, to play Sabrina. Bogart was not especially friendly toward Hepburn, who had little Hollywood experience, while Holden's reaction was the opposite, wrote biographer Michelangelo Capua.

    Holden recalls their romance:
    Before I even met her, I had a crush on her, and after I met her, just a day later, I felt as if we were old friends, and I was rather fiercely protective of her, though not in a possessive way.

    Their relationship did not last much beyond the completion of the film. Holden, who was at this point dependent on alcohol, said, "I really was in love with Audrey, but she wouldn't marry me."[19] Rumors at the time had it that Hepburn wanted a family, but when Holden told her that he'd had a vasectomy and having children was impossible, she moved on. A few months later, Hepburn met Mel Ferrer, whom she would later marry.
    He took third billing for The Country Girl (1954) with Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly, directed by George Seaton from a play by Clifford Odets.

    It was a big hit, as was The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), a Korean War drama with Kelly.

    In 1954, Holden was featured on the cover of Life. On February 7, 1955, Holden appeared as a guest star on I Love Lucy as himself.

    The golden run at the box office continued with Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955), from a best-selling novel, with Jennifer Jones, and Picnic (1955), as a drifter, in an adaptation of the William Inge play with Kim Novak. Picnic was his last film under the contract with Columbia.

    A second film with Seaton did not do as well, The Proud and Profane (1956), where Holden played the role with a moustache.

    Neither did Toward the Unknown (1957), the one film Holden produced himself.

    The Bridge on the River Kwai
    Holden had his most widely recognized role as an ill-fated prisoner in David Lean's The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) with Alec Guinness,[26] a huge commercial success.

    He made another war film for a British director, The Key (1958) with Trevor Howard and Sophia Loren for director Carol Reed.[27] He played an American Civil War military surgeon in John Ford's The Horse Soldiers (1959) opposite John Wayne, which was a box office disappointment.[28] Columbia would not meet Holden's asking price of $750,000 and 10% of the gross for The Guns of Navarone (1961); the amount of money Holden asked exceeding the combined salaries of the stars Gregory Peck, David Niven, and Anthony Quinn.

    Holden had another big hit with The World of Suzie Wong (1960) with Nancy Kwan that was shot in Hong Kong.

    Less popular was Satan Never Sleeps (1961), the last film of Clifton Webb and Leo McCarey; The Counterfeit Traitor (1962), this third film with Seaton; or The Lion (1962), with Trevor Howard and Capucine. The latter was shot in Africa and sparked a fascination with the continent that was to last until the end of Holden's life.
    Holden's films continued to struggle at the box office however: Paris When It Sizzles (1964) with Hepburn that was shot in 1962 but given a much delayed release; The 7th Dawn (1964) with Capucine and Susannah York, a romantic adventure set during the Malayan Emergency produced by Charles K. Feldman; Alvarez Kelly (1966), a Western; and The Devil's Brigade (1968). He was also one of many names in Feldman's Casino Royale (1967).
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    Holden in The Revengers (1972)
    In 1969, Holden made a comeback when he starred in director Sam Peckinpah's graphically violent Western The Wild Bunch, winning much acclaim.

    Also in 1969, Holden starred in director Terence Young's family film L'Arbre de Noël, co-starring Italian actress Virna Lisi and French actor Bourvil, based on the novel of the same name by Michel Bataille. This film was originally released in the United States as The Christmas Tree and on home video as When Wolves Cry.

    Holden made a Western with Ryan O'Neal and Blake Edwards, Wild Rovers (1971). It was not particularly successful. Neither was The Revengers (1972), another Western.

    For television roles in 1974, Holden won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie for his portrayal of a cynical, tough veteran LAPD street cop in the television film The Blue Knight, based upon the best-selling Joseph Wambaugh novel of the same name.

    In 1973, Holden starred with Kay Lenz in a movie directed by Clint Eastwood called Breezy, which was considered a box-office flop.

    Also in 1974, Holden starred with Paul Newman and Steve McQueen in the critically acclaimed disaster film The Towering Inferno, which became a box-office smash and one of the highest-grossing films of Holden's career.

    Two years later, he was praised for his Oscar-nominated leading performance in Sidney Lumet's classic Network (1976), an examination of the media written by Paddy Chayefsky, playing an older version of the character type for which he had become iconic in the 1950s, only now more jaded and aware of his own mortality.

    Around this time he also appeared in 21 Hours at Munich (1976).

    Final Films
    Holden made a fourth and final film for Wilder with Fedora (1978). He followed it with Damien: Omen II (1978) and had a cameo in Escape to Athena (1978).

    Holden had a supporting role in Ashanti (1979) and was third-billed in another disaster movie with Paul Newman for Irwin Allen, When Time Ran Out... (1980), which was a flop.

    In 1980, Holden appeared in The Earthling with popular child actor Ricky Schroder, playing a loner dying of cancer who goes to the Australian outback to end his days, meets a young boy whose parents have been killed in an accident, and teaches him how to survive.

    After making S.O.B. (1981) for Blake Edwards, Holden refused to star in Jason Miller's film That Championship Season.
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    Matron of honor Brenda Marshall (left) and best man William Holden,
    sole guests at Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan's wedding in 1952
    Personal life
    Holden was best man at the wedding of his friend Ronald Reagan to Nancy Davis in 1952; however, he never involved himself in politics.

    While in Italy in 1966, Holden killed another driver in a drunk-driving incident. He received an eight-month suspended sentence for vehicular manslaughter.

    Holden maintained a home in Switzerland and also spent much of his time working for wildlife conservation as a managing partner in an animal preserve in Africa. His Mount Kenya Safari Club in Nanyuki (founded 1959) became a mecca for the international jet set. On a trip to Africa, he fell in love with the wildlife and became increasingly concerned with the animal species that were beginning to decrease in population. With the help of his partners, he created the Mount Kenya Game Ranch and inspired the creation of the William Holden Wildlife Foundation. The Mount Kenya Game Ranch works to assist in Kenya with the wildlife education of its youth. Within the Mount Kenya Game Ranch is the Mount Kenya Conservancy, which runs an animal orphanage as well as the Bongo Rehabilitation Program in collaboration with the Kenya Wildlife Service. The orphanage provides shelter and care for orphans, injured and neglected animals found in the wild, with the aim of releasing these animals back into the wild whenever possible. The conservancy is home to the critically endangered East African mountain bongo, and aims to prevent its extinction by breeding.
    Marriage and relationships

    Holden was married to actress Ardis Ankerson (stage name Brenda Marshall) from 1941 until their divorce 30 years later, in 1971. They had two sons, Peter Westfield "West" Holden (1943–2014) and Scott Porter Holden (1946–2005). He adopted his wife's daughter, Virginia, from her first marriage with actor Richard Gaines. During the filming of the film Sabrina (1954), costar Audrey Hepburn and he had a brief but passionate affair. Holden met French actress Capucine in the early 1960s. The two starred in the films The Lion (1962) and The 7th Dawn (1964). They reportedly began a two-year affair, which is alleged to have ended due to Holden's alcoholism. Capucine and Holden remained friends until his death in 1981.

    In 1972, Holden began a nine-year relationship with actress Stefanie Powers, and sparked her interest in animal welfare. After his death, Powers set up the William Holden Wildlife Foundation at Holden's Mount Kenya Game Ranch.

    Death
    According to the Los Angeles County Coroner's autopsy report, Holden was alone and intoxicated in his apartment in Santa Monica, California, on November 12, 1981, when he slipped on a rug, severely lacerating his forehead on a teak bedside table, and bled to death. Evidence suggests he was conscious for at least half an hour after the fall. He likely may not have realized the severity of the injury and did not summon aid, or was unable to call for help. His body was found four days later. The causes of death were given as "exsanguination" and "blunt laceration of scalp." Rumors existed that he was suffering from lung cancer, which Holden himself had denied at a 1980 press conference. His death certificate made no mention of any cancer. He had dictated in his will that the Neptune Society cremate him and scatter his ashes in the Pacific Ocean. In accordance with his wishes, no funeral or memorial service was held.

    Ronald Reagan released a statement, saying, "I have a great feeling of grief. We were close friends for many years. What do you say about a longtime friend – a sense of personal loss, a fine man. Our friendship never waned." For his contribution to the film industry, Holden has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 1651 Vine Street. He also has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. His death was noted by singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega, whose 1987 song "Tom's Diner" (about a sequence of events one morning in 1981) included a mention of reading a newspaper article about "an actor who had died while he was drinking". Vega subsequently confirmed that this was a reference to Holden.
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    William Holden (I) (1918–1981)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000034/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Actor (75 credits)

    1981 S.O.B. - Tim Culley
    1980 The Earthling - Patrick Foley
    1980 When Time Ran Out.. - Shelby Gilmore

    1979 Ashanti - Jim Sandell
    1979 Escape to Athena - Prisoner smoking a cigar in prison camp (uncredited)
    1978 Omen II: Damien - Richard Thorn
    1978 Fedora - Barry Detweiler
    1976 Network - Max Schumacher
    1976 21 Hours at Munich (TV Movie) - Chief of Police Manfred Schreiber
    1974 The Towering Inferno - Jim Duncan
    1974 Open Season - Hal Wolkowski
    1973 Breezy - Frank Harmon
    1973 The Blue Knight (TV Movie) - Bumper Morgan
    1972 The Revengers - John Benedict
    1971 Wild Rovers - Ross Bodine

    1969 The Christmas Tree - Laurent Ségur
    1969 The Wild Bunch - Pike
    1968 The Devil's Brigade - Lt. Col. Robert T. Frederick
    1967 Casino Royale - Ransome
    1966 Alvarez Kelly - Alvarez Kelly
    1964 The 7th Dawn - Major Ferris
    1964 Paris When It Sizzles - Richard Benson / Rick
    1962 The Lion - Robert Hayward
    1962 The Counterfeit Traitor - Eric Erickson
    1962 Satan Never Sleeps - Father O'Banion
    1961 Frances Farmer Presents (TV Series) - Colin McDonald
    - Blaze of Noon (1961) ... Colin McDonald
    1960 The World of Suzie Wong - Robert Lomax

    1959 The Horse Soldiers - Maj. Henry Kendall
    1958 The Key - Captain David Ross
    1957 The Bridge on the River Kwai - Shears
    1956 Toward the Unknown - Maj. Lincoln Bond
    1956 The Proud and Profane - Lt. Col. Colin Black
    1956 Picnic - Hal Carter
    1955 Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing - Mark Elliott
    1954 The Bridges at Toko-Ri - Lt. Harry Brubaker
    1954 The Country Girl - Bernie Dodd
    1954 Sabrina - David Larrabee
    1954 Executive Suite - McDonald Walling
    1953 Escape from Fort Bravo - Capt. Roper
    1953 Forever Female - Stanley Krown
    1953 Die Jungfrau auf dem Dach - Tourist (uncredited)
    1953 The Moon Is Blue - Donald Gresham
    1953 Stalag 17 - Sgt. J.J. Sefton
    1952 The Turning Point - Jerry McKibbon
    1952 Boots Malone - Boots Malone
    1951 Submarine Command - Lt. Cmdr. Ken White
    1951 Force of Arms - Sgt. John 'Pete' Peterson
    1950 Born Yesterday - Paul Verrall
    1950 Union Station - Lt. William Calhoun
    1950 Sunset Blvd. - Joe Gillis
    1950 Father Is a Bachelor - Johnny Rutledge

    1949 Dear Wife - Bill Seacroft
    1949 Miss Grant Takes Richmond - Dick Richmond
    1949 Streets of Laredo - Jim Dawkins
    1948 The Man from Colorado - Del Stewart
    1948 The Dark Past - Al Walker
    1948 Apartment for Peggy - Jason Taylor
    1948 Rachel and the Stranger - Big Davey
    1947 Variety Girl - William Holden
    1947 Dear Ruth - Lt. William Seacroft
    1947 Blaze of Noon - Colin McDonald
    1943 Reconnaissance Pilot (Documentary short) - Lt. Packard A. Cummings (uncredited)
    1943 Young and Willing - Norman Reese
    1942 Meet the Stewarts - Michael Stewart
    1942 The Remarkable Andrew - Andrew Long
    1942 The Fleet's In - Casey Kirby
    1941 Texas - Dan Thomas
    1941 I Wanted Wings - Al Ludlow
    1940 Arizona - Peter Muncie
    1940 Our Town - George Gibbs
    1940 Those Were the Days! - P.J. 'Petey' Simmons

    1939 Invisible Stripes - Tim Taylor
    1939 Golden Boy - Joe Bonaparte
    1939 Million Dollar Legs - Graduate Who Says 'Thank You' (uncredited)
    1938 Prison Farm - Prisoner (uncredited)

    Soundtrack (6 credits)

    1971 Wild Rovers (performer: "Ballad of the Wild Rovers" - uncredited)
    1956 Picnic (performer: "Moonglow" - uncredited)
    1950 Sunset Blvd. (performer: "La Cumparsita" (1916) - uncredited)
    1947 Variety Girl ("HARMONY")
    1940 Arizona (performer: "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair" (1854), "Kiss Me Quick and Go" (1856) - uncredited)
    1939 Golden Boy (performer: "Lullaby (Cradle Song)", "Funiculi, Funicula")
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    1984: A View to Kill films OO7 and Stacey in elevator peril.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 42 of 65 "Invaders from S.C.U.M." at Warfield, England.
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    James Bond Jr - Invaders from S.C.U.M.
    Season 1 - Episode 42
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807290/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    Student Hayley Comet and her scientist father are both convinced they've made first contact when a UFO lands at Warfield, but James suspects the truth is closer to home.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Jennie Tremaine ... (written by)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack / Scumlord (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 42 - Invaders from S.C.U.M.

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    1995: GoldenEye cast including Pierce Brosnan attend the Second Annual James Bond Convention, New York. 1999: The World Is Not Enough premieres in Singapore.

    2002: Warner Bros. Records releases David Arnold's Die Another Day soundtrack.
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    Now expanded.
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    2015: Spectre released in Australia, Greece, and Uruguay.

    2020: No Time To Die planned UK premiere date in UK, fourth attempt.
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    2020: The most expensive bikini in the world goes to auction in Los Angeles, California.
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    The most expensive bikini in the
    world will be auctioned off!
    See the complete article here:
    Ursula Andress white belted bikini from James Bond "007 chases Dr. No" comes under the hammer in Los Angeles Several hundred props from Hollywood blockbusters will be auctioned online in Los Angeles on November 12. The sensation is that the legendary bikini by Ursula Andress from James Bond "007 chases Dr. No" will also change hands. The bikini achieved cult status when Ursula Andress climbed out of the sea in 1962 as a honey rider and is one of the most famous film scenes of all time. The episode promoted the worldwide triumphal march of the bikini, which like no other piece of clothing had divided the minds and caused turmoil. The bikini had already come under the hammer at an auction of the British auction house Christie's in 2001 for the equivalent of 45,000 Euros. This time the bikini is to be auctioned for a multiple.

    The BikiniARTmuseum will also participate in the auction of the auctioneers "Profiles in History" in Los Angeles for several swimwear exhibits.

    Closing date: Thursday, 12.11.2020, 20 hrs
    Guess what auction price the James Bond bikini will fetch?
    The winner is the person who guesses the exact auction price or comes closest to it. In the event of several correct answers, the winner will be decided by drawing lots.

    My guess is that the James Bond bikini for
    _____________ Dollar is auctioned off.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    edited November 2023 Posts: 13,785
    November 13th

    1923: Linda Christian is born--Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico.
    (She dies 25 July 2011 at age 87--Palm Desert, California.)
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    Linda Christian obituary
    B-movie actor who could lay claim to having been the first Bond
    girl
    Linda-Christian-007.jpg?width=620&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=a99bcf3dfa77c0d4bfb3901a29431900
    Linda Christian’s first ambition was to become a doctor,
    but her outstanding beauty led her into the movies.
    Photograph: Bob Landry/Time & Life Pictures
    The phrase "famous for being famous" could have been invented for Linda Christian, who has died aged 87. Her celebrity came from her marriages to the handsome film stars Tyrone Power and Edmund Purdom, and her liaisons with various wealthy playboys and bullfighters, rather than her somewhat limited acting ability.

    Christian's extravagant, cosmopolitan lifestyle derived from her stunning beauty – she was dubbed "The Anatomic Bomb" by Life magazine – and her ability to speak fluent French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Italian and English. She was born Blanca Rosa Welter in Tampico, Mexico, the daughter of a Dutch executive at Shell, and his Mexican-born wife of Spanish, German and French descent. As the family moved around a great deal, living in South America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, she gained a taste for globetrotting.

    Christian's early ambition was to become a doctor, but after winning a beauty contest and meeting Errol Flynn in Acapulco, she was persuaded to try her luck in films in the US. She was soon cast as a Goldwyn Girl in the actor Danny Kaye's first feature film, Up in Arms (1944), and as a cigarette girl in Club Havana (1945), directed by Edgar G Ulmer. Then, with her name changed to Linda Christian, she signed a contract with MGM, which gave her a small decorative role in the musical Holiday in Mexico (1946), shot in Hollywood, and an exotic one in Green Dolphin Street (1947), as Lana Turner's Maori maid.

    At the time, Turner was having an affair with Power. Rumour has it that Christian overheard Turner say when Power was going to be in Rome. Christian decided to fly to Rome, stay at the same hotel and wangle a meeting with the dashing star. A romance led to Christian and Power getting married in January 1949 at a church in Rome while an estimated 8,000 screaming fans lined the street outside.

    Prior to the marriage, the only substantial role MGM had given Christian was as an island girl rescued by Tarzan from the clutches of an evil high priest in Tarzan and the Mermaids (1948), the 12th and final time Johnny Weissmuller played the Ape Man. Christian, wearing a skimpy two-piece costume, is referred to as a mermaid because she swims a lot.

    After marrying Power, Christian started to get a few leading roles in B-pictures such as Slaves of Babylon (1953), co-starring Richard Conte. More gratifying was her sitting for a portrait by the great Mexican artist Diego Rivera. The painting, reproduced on the cover of her autobiography, Linda (1962), and for which she was once offered $2m, is now in a private collection.
    In 1954, Christian played Valerie Mathis, James Bond's former lover now working for the French secret service, in a CBS television version of Ian Fleming's Casino Royale, therefore allowing her to lay claim to being the first Bond girl. At this time, the movie fan magazines were full of photos of Power and Christian as a blissfully married couple with two daughters, while the gossip columns intimated that both husband and wife had strayed. In 1954, Christian played Purdom's snooty fiancee in the MGM musical Athena. Christian had been at the same school as Purdom's wife, the former ballerina Anita Phillips, and the Powers and the Purdoms became good friends, even going on holidays together. But soon sexual jealousy broke up the once cosy foursome. In 1956, Christian divorced Power, charging mental cruelty.
    After the divorce, there was no shortage of millionaires to help keep Christian in the manner to which she was accustomed. Once she was called to testify at a Los Angeles court because she refused to return jewels given to her by the socialite Robert H Schlesinger, whose cheque for $100,000, as partial payment for the jewels, had bounced. Christian was also involved with the racing driver Alfonso de Portago, with whom she was photographed a short while before he died in a crash at the 1957 Mille Miglia car race, in which several spectators were also killed. That year, she and the Brazilian mining millionaire Francisco "Baby" Pignatari went on an around-the-world tour together. In 1962 she married Purdom. They divorced the following year.

    Christian continued to appear in routine films such as The Devil's Hand (1962), as a seductive high priestess of voodoo, opposite her real-life sister Ariadna Welter. In Francesco Rosi's semi-documentary The Moment of Truth (1965), she played herself as an American in Barcelona who attracts a matador (the bullfighter Miguel Mateo Miguelín). During the filming, she fell for the bullfighter Luis Dominguín, the former lover of Ava Gardner.

    In 1968, Christian retired to Rome. She returned to cinema almost 20 years later, at the age of 64, in a couple of dreadful Italian thrillers.

    She is survived by her daughters, Taryn and Romina Power.

    • Linda Christian (Blanca Rosa Welter), actor, born 13 November 1923; died 22 July 2011
    7879655.png?263
    Linda Christian (I) (1923–2011)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0160046/

    Filmography
    Actress (36 credits)

    1988 Cambiamento d'aria (TV Movie) - Linda Christian
    1987 Amore inquieto di Maria - Helen
    1987 Delitti - The Narrator

    1968 L'oro del mondo - Mother of Lorena
    1967 The World's Gold - Laura - mother of Lorena
    1966 How to Seduce a Playboy - Lucy's Mother
    1966 Murder in Amsterdam - Ellen Martens
    1965 The Boy and the Ball and the Hole in the Wall - Madre de Martha
    1965 The Moment of Truth - Linda, American woman
    1964 Contest Girl - Rose of England Judge (uncredited)
    1964 Full Hearts and Empty Pockets - Minelli
    1963 The V.I.P.s - Miriam Marshall
    1963 The Dick Powell Theatre (TV Series) - Susan Lane
    - Last of the Private Eyes (1963) ... Susan Lane
    1963 The Lloyd Bridges Show (TV Series) - Taina Haagen
    - The Waltz of the Two Commuters (1963) ... Taina Haagen
    1963 The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (TV Series) - Eva Ashley
    - An Out for Oscar (1963) ... Eva Ashley
    1962 Passport for a Corpse - Eva
    1961 The Devil's Hand - Bianca Milan
    1960 Das große Wunschkonzert - Vilma Cortini
    1960 Appuntamento a Ischia - Mercedes Barock

    1959 Meet Peter Voss - Grace McNaughty
    1959 Rebel Flight to Cuba - Gräfin Colmar
    1959 The House of the Seven Hawks - Elsa
    1956 ITV Television Playhouse (TV Series) - - A Piece of Cake (1956)
    1956 Thunderstorm - Maria Ramon
    1954 Athena - Beth Hallson
    1954 Climax! (TV Series) - Valerie Mathis
    - Casino Royale (1954) ... Valerie Mathis

    1953 Slaves of Babylon - Princess Panthea
    1952 The Happy Time - Mignonette Chappuis
    1952 Battle Zone - Jeanne
    1951 Show Boat - Chorus Girl (uncredited)

    1948 Tarzan and the Mermaids - Mara
    1947 Green Dolphin Street - Hine-Moa
    1946 Holiday in Mexico - Angel (uncredited)
    1945 Club Havana - Cigarette Girl (uncredited)
    1944 Up in Arms - Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)
    1943 The Rock of Souls (as Linda Welter)
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    Valerie Mathis and CIA Agent Jimmy Bond
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    Diego Rivera painting.
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    1952: Art Malik is born--Bahawalpur, Pakistan.

    1969: Gerard Butler is born--Paisley, Scotland.

    1986: Goldfinger re-released in Norway.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 43 of 65 - "Going for the Gold" in Barcelona, Spain.
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    James Bond Jr - Going for the Gold
    Season 1 - Episode 43
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807287/?ref_=ttep_ep43
    Barbella makes several failed attempts to get rid of James Bond Jr. when he and his friends represent Warfield in the High School games in Barcelona; Goldie Finger plans to rob the Columbus museum of its golden treasury.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Doug Molitor
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Goldie Finger / Barbella / Ynez Aragonez (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 43 - Going for the Gold

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    1995: GoldenEye world premiere at Radio City Music Hall, New York City, New York.
    2001: Electronic Arts publishes video game Agent Under Fire for PlayStation 2, Xbox, Nintendo GameCube.


    2005: Draft US cover art for Blood Fever revealed, dropping the UK tagline "Death is contagious".
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    2006: A&M releases the Chris Cornell single "You Know My Name" from his album Carry On.




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    2008: A Quantum csendje (The Silence of Quantum) released in Hungary.
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    2015: Spectre released in Cambodia and Ecuador.
    2015: 幽灵 released in China in an edited form.
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    2019: The Sunday Times Driving shares "James Bond stunt team provide toughest test of all for new Land Rover" with the promotional video.
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    James Bond stunt
    team provide
    toughest test of all
    for new Land Rover
    Defender
    Nobody punishes it better
    https://www.driving.co.uk/video/james-bond-stunt-team-provide-toughest-test-new-land-rover-defender/
    Published 13 November 2019 by Will Dron
    WHATEVER your thoughts on the all-new Land Rover Defender, the 4×4 has been put through some serious testing during its development, covering more than 745,000 miles in some of the most extreme environments around the world, where temperature ranged from -40C to 50C and the altitude reached 10,000ft. But nothing could have prepared it for what the James Bond stunt team had in store.

    A new teaser video released by Land Rover shows Lee Morrison, stunt co-ordinator for No Time To Die, the 25th official James Bond film, and stunt driver Jess Hawkins doing their absolute best to punish the Defender.
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    Behind the scenes of Stunt Coordinator Lee Morrison with the New Land Rover Defender featured in No Time To Die
    Land Rover says its design team worked closely with Chris Corbould, the special effects and action vehicles supervisor, on the specification of the Defenders to feature in the movie.

    The cars used were the first Defenders to be built at Jaguar Land Rover’s new production facility in Nitra, Slovakia, and based on the Defender X model in Santorini Black, with darkened skid pans, 20in dark finish wheels and professional off-road tyres.
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    Behind the scenes image of the New Land Rover Defender featured in No Time To Die
    No Time To Die, directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga and starring Daniel Craig, who returns for his fifth film as Ian Fleming’s James Bond 007, will be released globally in cinemas in April 2020. [later delayed]

    It will also feature the Range Rover Sport SVR, Series III Land Rover and Range Rover Classic, as well as a host of models from other brands including the Jaguar XF, Aston Martin Valhalla supercar and, of course, the legendary Aston Martin DB5.

    2021: John Pearson dies at age 91--Sussex, Canada.
    (Born 5 October 1930--Epsom, Surrey, England.)
    wikipedia_PNG40.png
    John Pearson (author)
    See the complete article here:
    John Pearson
    Born 5 October 1930
    Epsom, Surrey, England
    Died 13 November 2021 (aged 91)
    Occupation Writer
    Genre Biography
    Website www.johnpearson.uk
    John George Pearson (5 October 1930 – 13 November 2021) was an English novelist and an author of biographies, notably of Ian Fleming (the creator of James Bond), of the Sitwells, and of the Kray twins.
    Life and career
    Pearson was born in Epsom, Surrey. He was educated at King's College School, Wimbledon, and Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he gained a double first in history.[1] He then worked for The Economist, BBC Television and The Sunday Times. He was Ian Fleming's assistant at the Sunday Times and went on to write the first biography of Fleming, The Life of Ian Fleming, published in 1966.
    Pearson was commissioned by Donald Campbell to chronicle his successful attempt on the Land Speed Record in 1964 in Bluebird CN7, resulting in the book Bluebird and the Dead Lake.

    Pearson had also written "true crime" biographies, such as The Profession of Violence, an account of the rise and fall of the Kray twins, who had hired him to write their biography in 1967.[2] Over the next several years the brothers, who by now were in jail, wrote frequently to Pearson. He wrote two further books about the Krays: The Cult of Violence: The Untold Story of the Krays and Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins.[3] In 2010 Pearson put up for auction more than 160 previously unseen letters and photographs from the Kray twins. The items sold for £20,780.[4]

    Another of Pearson's books, The Gamblers, is an account of the group of gamblers who made up what was known as the Clermont Set, including John Aspinall, James Goldsmith and Lord Lucan. Warner Bros. purchased the film rights to the book in 2006.[5] The Gamblers was made into a two-part TV drama, Lucan, starring Rory Kinnear and Christopher Eccleston, broadcast on ITV1 in December 2013.

    Pearson's book Facades was the first full-scale biography of the Sitwell siblings Edith, Osbert and Sacheverell. It was published in 1978.

    Pearson had also written five novels. Storm Jameson praised his first novel, Gone to Timbuctoo, as "an unusually good first novel, an exciting story, and a splendid setting in French West Africa. The writing is sharp and witty."[6] Malcolm Muggeridge said, "This is an exceptionally brilliant first novel - exciting, wryly funny and perceptive."[6]
    For his next three novels, Pearson did tie-in fictional biographies. Pearson also became the third official author of the James Bond series, writing in 1973 James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007, a first-person biography of the fictional agent James Bond. However, Pearson declined an offer to write further Bond novels.[7] Pearson then did fictional tie-in works about Upstairs, Downstairs (The Bellamys of Eaton Place) and Biggles.
    Pearson had three children from his first marriage.[1] In 1980, he married his second wife, Lynette, daughter of Ian Hope Dundas of Dundas, 30th Chief of Clan Dundas, and former wife of Timothy Cecil Frankland, grandson of Sir Frederick Frankland, 10th Baronet by his wife Mary (née Curzon), Baroness Zouche, of the family of the Viscounts Curzon.[8] Pearson died on 13 November 2021, at the age of 91.[9][10]

    Bibliography
    Novels

    Gone To Timbuctoo (1962) - winner of the Authors' Club First Novel Award
    James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007 (1973)
    The Bellamys of Eaton Place (1976) - published in the U.S. as The Bellamy Saga
    Biggles: The Authorised Biography (1978)
    The Kindness of Dr Avicenna (1982)

    Non-fiction
    Biographies

    Bluebird and the Dead Lake (1965) (published in the U.S. as The Last Hero: The Gallant Story of Donald Campbell and the Land Speed Record in 1966)
    The Life of Ian Fleming (1966)
    The Kray Twins series:
    The Profession of Violence: The Rise and Fall of the Kray Twins (1972) - nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award
    The Cult of Violence: The Untold Story of the Krays (2001)
    Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins (2010)
    Facades: Edith, Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell (1978) (published in the U.S. as The Sitwells in 1979)
    Barbara Cartland: Crusader in Pink (1979), first published as by "Henry Cloud" but subsequently republished under his own name
    Stags and Serpents: The Story of the House of Cavendish and the Dukes of Devonshire (1983) (published in the U.S. as The Serpent and the Stag in 1984)
    The Ultimate Family: The Making of the Royal House of Windsor (1986) (published in the U.S. as The Selling of the Royal Family: The Mystique of the British Monarchy)
    Citadel of the Heart: Winston and the Churchill Dynasty (1991) (published in the U.S. as The Private Lives of Winston Churchill)
    Painfully Rich: the Outrageous Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Heirs of J. Paul Getty (1995)
    Blood Royal: The Story of the Spencers and the Royals (1999)
    One of the Family: The Englishman and the Mafia (2003)
    The Gamblers: John Aspinall, James Goldsmith and the Murder of Lord Lucan (2005)
    Ian Fleming: The Notes (2020)

    History
    Airline Detective: The Fight Against International Air Crime (1962) co-written with BOAC Security expert Donald E. W. Fish although Pearson is uncredited[11]
    Arena: The Story of the Colosseum (1973)
    Edward the Rake (1975) (published in the U.S. as Edward the Rake: An Unwholesome Biography of Edward VII)

    Politics
    The Persuasion Industry (1965), with Graham Turner

    Adaptations
    Goldeneye (1989), telefilm directed by Don Boyd, based on non-fiction book The Life of Ian Fleming
    Lucan (2013), mini-series directed by Adrian Shergold, based on non-fiction book The Gamblers: John Aspinall, James Goldsmith and the Murder of Lord Lucan
    Legend (2015), film directed by Brian Helgeland, based on non-fiction book The Profession of Violence: The Rise and Fall of the Kray Twins
    All the Money in the World (2017), film directed by Ridley Scott, based on non-fiction book Painfully Rich: the Outrageous Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Heirs of J. Paul

    References
    Hunt, George P. (7 October 1966). "Editor's Note: The Biography of Ian Fleming". Life. Vol. 61, no. 15. p. 7.
    "Kray twins memorabilia sold at auction". 20 October 2010 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
    Campbell, Duncan (3 September 2015). "The selling of the Krays: how two mediocre criminals created their own legend | Duncan Campbell" – via www.theguardian.com.
    "Kray twin items sell for £20,780". 19 October 2010 – via www.bbc.co.uk.
    Michael Fleming (5 October 2006). "'Departed' scribe digs WB: Studio inks overall deal with Monahan". Variety. Retrieved 5 January 2007.
    The Publisher, Volume 176.
    Reineke, Hank. "...a lot of criminals and very dodgy people". 007 Magazine #49 (2006)
    Burke's Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage, 107th edition, ed. Charles Mosley, Burke's Peerage Ltd, 2003, vol. 1, p. 1221, vol. 3, p. 4291
    "In Memoriam: James Bond author John Pearson (1930-2021)". 007travelers.com. 13 November 2021.
    Obituaries, Telegraph (15 November 2021). "John Pearson, author of a seminal study of the Kray twins and biographer of both Ian Fleming and 007 – obituary". The Telegraph.
    Ian Fleming The Bibliography, p.514
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 14th

    1966: Bond comic strip Octopussy begins its run in The Daily Express.
    (Ends 27 May 1967. 264-428) Yaroslav Horak,artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/op.php3
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    http://spyguysandgals.com/sgLookupComicStrip.aspx?id=996
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    Barcelona James Bond numero 04: Octopussy
    https://en.todocoleccion.net/comics/james-bond-numero-04-octopussy~x116600976
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    JAMES BOND DI IAN FLEMING. OCTOPUSSY. N. 112. ED. C. CONTI, 1977. ITALIANO
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    Swedish Semic Comic https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1986.php3
    Undervattensdöden (Octopussy - Part 1) -
    Undervattensdöden (Octopussy - Part 2)
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    Danish 1969 https://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no16-1969/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 16: “Octopussy” (1969)
    ”Undervandsdøden” [The Underwater Death]
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    Danish 1977 https://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no42-1977/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 42: “Octopussy” (1977)
    "Undervandsdøden" [The death underwater]
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    1968: On Her Majesty's Secret Service's films OO7 and more cowbell.

    1972: Live and Let Die begins filming on location in Jamaica.
    1979: Olga Kurylenko is born--Berdyansk, Zaporozhye Oblast, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union.
    (Today known as Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine.)

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 44 of 65 - "A DeRange Mind" in New York.
    latest?cb=20150417205350
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    James Bond Jr - A DeRange Mind
    Season 1 - Episode 44
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807090/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    When an UFO is shot down by a military close to New York, the craft is taken for analysis to a military research laboratory.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Jeffrey Scott ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Oddjob (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Barbella (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 44 - A DeRange Mind


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    1995: EMI releases Éric Serra's GoldenEye soundtrack.
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    2006: Casino Royale Royal Premiere at the Odeon Leicester Square, London.
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    2006: Casino Royale released in Kuwait.
    2006: Sony Classical releases David Arnold's Casino Royale soundtrack.
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    2008: Quantum of Solace released in Morocco (Casablanca), Kenya, Pakistan, and the US.
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    2008: 007 Quantum (French title) and Quantum of Solace released in Canada.
    2008: 007 Quantum released in Mexico.
    2008: Định Mức Khuây Khỏa (Comfort Rate) released in Vietnam.
    Poster_phim_%C4%90%E1%BB%8Bnh_m%E1%BB%A9c_khu%C3%A2y_kh%E1%BB%8Fa_2008.jpg

    2018: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond Origin #3.
    Bob Q, artist. Jeff Parker, writer.
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    James Bond Origin #3
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513027244703011
    Cover A: John Cassaday
    Cover B: Declan Shalvey
    Cover C: Kev Walker
    Cover D: Ibrahim Moustafa
    Cover E: Bob Q
    Writer: Jeff Parker
    Art: Bob Q
    "CHAPTER THREE: ROCKET SEA"
    The epic account of James Bond's exploits during World War II continues, by superstar JEFF PARKER (Suicide Squad, Fantastic Four) and BOB Q (The Lone Ranger)!
    Aboard a Royal Navy submarine, Lieutenant James Bond and crew encounter deadly German warships and bombers! Can the British crew keep their nerve and evade...or will they sink into a watery grave?
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 15th

    1939: Yaphet Kotto is born--New York City, New York.
    (He dies 15 March 2021 at age 81--The Philippines.)
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    Yaphet Kotto, Bond Villain and ‘Alien’
    Star, Dies at 81
    Well known for playing hardened personalities, he was also seen in movies like “Midnight Run” and the TV show “Homicide: Life on the Street.”
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    Yaphet Kotto with Sigourney Weaver in the 1979 film “Alien,” in which he played
    a member of a spaceship crew doing battle with an extraterrestrial creature.
    Credit...20th Century Fox, via Associated Press
    By Neil Genzlinger | March 16, 2021
    Yaphet Kotto, a versatile actor whose many roles included the wisecracking engineer in the hit science-fiction film “Alien,” the villainous adversary in the James Bond movie “Live and Let Die” and a police lieutenant on the long-running television series “Homicide: Life on the Street,” died on Monday near Manila. He was 81.
    His agent, Ryan Goldhar, confirmed the death but said he did not know the cause. Mr. Kotto had lived in the Philippines for some years.

    Mr. Kotto worked mostly in the theater for the first decade or so of his career. His bodily size made him a dominating figure in any sort of role, though it tended to bring him parts as a heavy.

    “I’m always called powerful, bulky or imposing,” he told The Baltimore Sun in 1993, when “Homicide: Life on the Street” made its debut. “Or they say I fill up a room. I’m a 200-pound, 6-foot 3-inch Black guy. And I think I have this image of a monster. It’s very difficult.”
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    Mr. Kotto as a police lieutenant on the long-running TV series “Homicide: Life on the Street.”
    Credit...James Sorensen/NBC Universal, via Getty Images
    In 1969, still largely unknown, he had the formidable task of replacing James Earl Jones on Broadway in “The Great White Hope,” Howard Sackler’s drama based on the life of the boxer Jack Johnson. Mr. Jones had won a Tony Award for his portrayal of the lead character, who in the play is named Jack Jefferson. Mr. Kotto stepped into the role as the production entered its second year, and Clive Barnes, taking a fresh look at the show in The New York Times, was impressed.

    “I had never even heard of the Hollywood-based Mr. Kotto,” he wrote. “But luckily someone had, for this is inspired casting, and Mr. Kotto will never be unheard-of again.”

    It was two decades before he returned to the stage, and again it was as something of a shadow to Mr. Jones, who had received another Tony playing Troy Maxson in August Wilson’s “Fences” in 1987. Mr. Kotto tackled the role in 1990 at Arena Stage in Washington, again drawing raves.

    “Setting the tone throughout is the thunderous Mr. Kotto,” Hap Erstein wrote of that production in The Washington Times, “a caged animal pacing the backyard, a bullying brute more expressive with his hands than his words. Away from the theater for many years pursuing film and TV work, he makes a scorching return to the stage.”
    merlin_10466114_6997368d-5983-4ffc-a84f-5e0cddc78722-jumbo.jpg?quality=90&auto=webp
    Mr. Kotto with Roger Moore in the 1973 James Bond film “Live and Let Die.”
    It was Mr. Moore’s first film as Bond, and one of Mr. Kotto’s best-known movie roles.
    Credit...MGM/UA Entertainment
    In between those stage appearances, two movie roles in the 1970s particularly elevated Mr. Kotto’s his profile. The first, in 1973, was in “Live and Let Die,” Roger Moore’s debut as James Bond. Mr. Kotto played his chief nemesis, a dual role in which he was both a corrupt Caribbean dictator and that character’s alter ago, a drug trafficker named Mr. Big.
    Then, in 1979, came “Alien,” Ridley Scott’s outer-space horror classic, in which Mr. Kotto’s character, Parker, was part of a spaceship crew doing battle with a nasty extraterrestrial creature.

    “The combination punch for my career of ‘Live and Let Die’ and ‘Alien’ was like wham, bam!” he told The Canadian Press in 2003, adding that those wildly different roles showcased his versatility. “I think the only other person who has a combination like that is Harrison Ford.”

    Yaphet Frederick Kotto was born on Nov. 15, 1939, in Harlem and grew up in the Bronx. His father, he told The Baltimore Jewish Times in 1995, was from Cameroon and jumped ship as a merchant seaman, ending up in New York; his mother, he said, was of Panamanian and West Indian descent. His father had adopted Judaism, and his mother was Roman Catholic. The couple separated when Mr. Kotto was a child, and he was raised by his maternal grandparents.

    Mr. Kotto said his career path was set by a fateful trip to the movies.

    “One day, when I was about 16, I walked into this theater showing ‘On the Waterfront’ and I saw Marlon Brando for the first time,” he told The Orange County Register of California in 1994. “I couldn’t speak. It was like somebody had punched me in the stomach. It was like someone had crashed cymbals in both ears. I was blasted out of the theater. I knew from that moment that I wanted to be an actor.”

    The actress Judy Holliday saw him in a stage production and became a mentor, he said, “moving me around like furniture, telling me what to eat.” He said his knowledge of Yiddish earned him his only other Broadway credit, in the 1965 production of “The Zulu and the Zayda,” a comedy about a Jewish grandfather who settles in South Africa.

    Mr. Kotto received an Emmy nomination for his performance as Idi Amin, the Ugandan strongman, in the 1977 television movie “Raid on Entebbe.” He appeared opposite Robert Redford in the prison movie “Brubaker” in 1980.

    In the 1988 action-comedy “Midnight Run,” starring Robert De Niro and Charles Grodin, he played the F.B.I. agent Alonzo Mosely, whose stolen ID becomes fodder for a running joke. And in “The Running Man,” a dystopian 1987 thriller set in what was then the near future (2019), Mr. Kotto played a resistance fighter alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger in a fascist version of America.

    Mr. Kotto married three times, Mr. Goldhar said. He and Thessa Sinahon, who is from the Philippines, married in 1998. A full list of survivors was not immediately available.

    Mr. Kotto was always conscious of the image projected by his roles, something that led him to reject certain ones.

    “I was offered a part in ‘Glory’” — a 1989 movie about a Black company commanded by a white office in the Civil War — “which I refused, because for me it purported to be about a Black experience and was really about the white guy,” he told The Globe and Mail of Canada in 1994. “Do you see me taking orders like that? I couldn’t see myself in ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ either, playing the chauffeur, taking it from some old lady. Some other actor may be able to put that on and make it look real, but I couldn’t do it.”

    “Homicide,” a police series that was innovative for its time, was a career high point, running for seven seasons. But things started off badly, Mr. Kotto said.

    “The script was so good and the camera work was so different than what I was used to that I forgot my lines,” he told The Register. “I was really embarrassed. That had never happened to me before.

    “But the other actors came over to me and told me the same thing had happened to them.”

    Mike Ives contributed reporting.

    Neil Genzlinger is a writer for the Obituaries Desk. Previously he was a television, film and theater critic. @genznyt
    7879655.png?263
    Yaphet Kotto (1939–2021)
    Actor | Writer | Director
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001433/
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    1972: Live and Let Die films Rosie Carver's death by scarecrow.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 45 of 65 - "Catching the Wave."
    latest?cb=20150417205350
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    James Bond Jr - Catching the Wave
    Season 1 - Episode 45
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807096/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    Jaws and Nick Nack prepare to gatecrash a secret meeting of the Government Technology Committee.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack / Scumlord (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Baron Von Skarin (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 45 - Catching the Wave

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    1999: Radioactive releases "The World Is Not Enough" as a limited-edition digipak CD single and a cassette single in the UK. Both include "Ice Bandits". CD adds remix by Unkle.
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    2004: Video game GoldenEye Rogue Agent released in Canada.
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    GoldenEye: Rogue Agent (2004)
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0422335/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0
    Join the other side of the law, as you play a rogue MI6 Agent, who becomes involved in a bitter gang war between Dr. No and Auric Goldfinger.
    Directed by Ken Harsha ... (in-game cinematics)
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Danny Bilson
    Paul De Meo
    Ian Fleming ... (characters)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Enn Reitel ... Auric Goldfinger (voice)
    Jeannie Elias ... Pussy Galore (voice)
    Christopher Lee ... Francisco Scaramanga (voice)
    Jenya Lano ... Xenia Onatopp (voice)
    Carlos Alazraqui ... Dr. Julius No (voice)
    Jason Carter ... James Bond / 007 (voice)
    Gideon Emery ... Number One (Ernst Stavro Blofeld) (voice)
    André Sogliuzzo ... (voice)
    Robert Wu ... (voice)
    Ron Yuan ... (voice)
    Danny Mann ... (voice)
    Brian George ... (voice)
    Linda Wang ... Hong Kong 1 'Sexy Bath House Girl' (voice)
    Peter Kwong ... Hong Kong 1 (voice)
    Tim Dang ... Triad Informant (voice) (as Timothy Dang)
    Greg Ellis ... (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Judi Dench ... M (voice)
    Zach Goldsmith ... (voice)
    Kirsten Kairos ... Hologram Hostess (voice) (as Kristen Kairos)
    Nolan North ... (voice)
    Robin Sachs ... (voice)
    Toonyun ... Hong Kong 'Sexy Bath House Girl' (voice) (as Shirley To)
    HQ James Bond: Goldeneye:Rogue Agent Introduction


    GoldenEye: Rogue Agent Teaser Trailer
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    2006: Casino Royale released in Bahrain, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Jordan, Oman, and the Philippines.

    2011: Michael Alexander Olson (of Williams Lake, British Columbia, Canada) completes Goldeneye 007's Antenna Cradle in record time on Nintendo 64.
    2012: The New York Times prints Edward Rothstein's "No, Mr. Bond, We Expect You to Die". 2012: Skyfall released in Cambodia.
    2013: Danjaq, LLC and MGM announce they acquired full rights to Blofeld and SPECTRE from the McClory estate.

    2017: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond Kill Chain #5.
    Luca Casalanguida, artist. Andy Diggle, writer.
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    JAMES BOND: KILL CHAIN #5 (OF 6)
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513026017805011
    Cover A: Greg Smallwood
    Writer: Andy Diggle
    Art: Luca Casalanguida
    Publication Date: November 2017
    Page Count: 32 Pages
    ON SALE DATE: 11/15
    As NATO tears itself apart from within, 007 is declared Europe's most wanted man. Hunted by SMERSH and the CIA, he must infiltrate a nuclear airbase to learn the secrets of Operation Hooded Falcon before Europe erupts into all-out war!
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    2024: Go!Tekken Wiki projects future animated product James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die. (?!?)
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    James Bond 007: An Italian
    Mission to Live it and Die
    James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die
    Directed by Guy Richard
    Screenplay by Guy Richard, Tessa Selier, Jackie Sanderman
    Based on James Bond by Ian Fleming

    Starring
    Michael Caine
    Lea Seydoux
    Lisa-Dorah Sonnet
    Ben Whislaw
    Naomie Harris
    Mike Nawrocki
    Jack Dylan Grazer
    Emma Berman
    Josh Gad
    Tony Hale
    Alec Baldwin

    Music by Dan Romer (score), Pharrell Williams (songs)
    Cinematography by Sanne De Beer (lighting), Rinske Hermus (camera)
    Edited by Mandy van Zuylen

    Production Company
    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
    Eon Productions
    Goanimate Animation

    Distributed by
    Warner Bros Pictures (North America and Asia)
    20th Century Studios (International)

    Release Date
    November 15, 2024 (United Kingdom)
    November 22, 2024 (United States)

    Running Time 105 minutes
    Country United Kingdom, The Netherlands, United States
    Budget $115 million (€110 million)
    James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die is 2024 upcoming computer-animated spy comedy film and the 27th film to the James Bond film series, it will be directed by Guy Richard, produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Eon Productions and Goanimate Animation and distributed by Warner Bros Pictures, the production will be started in December 2021 and will take nearly 4 years until September 2024, Michael Caine will do the role of James Bond, along with the new voice actors including Mike Nawrocki, Emma Berman, Josh Gad, Jack Dylan Grazer, Tony Hale and Alec Baldwin, and with Ben Whislaw reprising the role of James Bond's Quartermaster named Q, Léa Seydoux and Lisa-Dorah Sonnet as the roles of Madeleine Swann and his daughter Mathilde, and with Naomie Harris returning to voice the role of Eve Moneypenny, with the estimated production budget of $115 million, James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die is first very-expensive animated film of James Bond movie series that is ever made and the third Goanimate Animation film to feature the computer-animated on-screen logo with the squirrel mascot Scrat, since the fifth Andrew Orozco movie and Cartoons: King's Games: The Movie.
    James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die will have its world premiere at De Bodde Film Festival in Eindhoven, The Netherlands on November 13, 2024, and was scheduled to be released direct-to-streaming on Goanimate Plus on November 22, 2024, it was originally intended for the worldwide theatrical release, but the fears from the worldwide people over the infections rises caused by B.A. 4 and B.A. 5, resulted in the change.

    Premise
    ..and to Genova, where Nonos Spectre will kill people with the pepper spray gun, to stop the plan to kill the people, James Bond, Giulia Marcovaldo, Larry Bond and Steve will work together to save Italy and prevent it from getting people killed and died by the pepper spray.

    Cast
    For the international voice casts, see James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die international voice casts.

    Michael Caine as James Bond, a british MI6 agent, Mathilde's father and Giulia's uncle.
    Lea Seydoux as Madaline Swann, James Bond's girlfriend.
    Lisa-Dorah Sonnet as Mathilde Swann, Madaline and Bond's daughter.
    Mike Nawrocki as Larry Bond, a british-accent cucumber agent from the MI6.
    Jack Dylan Grazer as Alberto Scorfano, Giulia's adopted brother from Portorosso.
    Josh Gad as Steve, a smart-knoweldge bird and Mathilde's bird friend.
    Emma Berman as Giulia Marcovaldo, a 13-year old girl from italy who is the fan of James Bond.
    Marco Barricelli as Massimo Marcovaldo, an Italian fisherman, cook, and Giulia's father.
    Alec Bladwin as Noros Spectre, a half human and half stork villain who is the co-founder of Spectre.
    Phil Vischer as Dr. Zorro, Noros's nervous tomato assistant.
    Guy Richard as Almir Piegon, a piegon with indian accent.
    Brian Hull as Sudsan Piegon, a piegon who is Almir's brother.
    Wesley Selier as Casino Worker #2, Crash the Hand, and the cheese-headed bean boy.

    [Production
    Animation and Compositing

    The animation was created by Goanimate Mac Guff in Waalwijk, The Netherlands, the models of the italian towns of Portorosso, Rome and Genova, and the MI6 headquarters in London, England was created after building for 4 months with Autodesk Maya, while the characters James Bond and Larry Bond was created with Blender, a dutch animation software that the Goanimate Mac Guff animation-studio and other animation studios used it, and to composit the movie, the compositing team used the Nuke software.

    Release
    Theatrical and streaming
    James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die was originally scheduled for theatrical release in the United States on September 15, 2023, but due to the production not starting until November 2021, it was delayed by a year to July 8, 2024, and then on April 3, 2024, the film got delayed again, this time to November 22, 2024, due to the rapid spread of the Deltacron variant in the US and Canada.

    On October 4, 2024, it was announced that the film would have its world premiere at the De Bodde Film Festival Eindhoven on November 6, 2024.

    Marketing
    To promote the film's theatrical release, Goanimate Animation signed the sereval deals with the marketing companies like Tokon Toys (for the non-dangerously guns) and Spreadshirt (for the clothes and home accessories like t-shirts, pants, socks, caps, mugs, coasters, drink bottles, fabric bags and iphone cases for IPhone 7, 8 and X).

    Music
    Score soundtrack

    No. Title Composer
    1 Gunbarrel/A Life in Portorosso | Dan Romer | 2:35
    2 James Bond, You're Back! | Dan Romer | 1:32
    3 The Pepper Spray Gun/A Fight in Rome | Dan Romer | 1:25
    4 For Once in My Life Guy Richard 2:50

    Omitted tracks
    For Once in My Life by Stewie Wonder (played in the end credits scene)

    Reception
    Box office

    James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die was projected to gross $95-120 million in the opening weekend in the United States and Canada.

    Critical response
    On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film had its rating of 95% and had the audience score of 84%, with an average rating of 7.30/10. The website's critics consensus reads ''James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die is one of the best James Bond movies, and of course the first animated movie in the movie series that the fans was hoped, for the action, the spy missions, the comedy and friendship, and animated look of James Bond was surprised for the James Bond fans''.

    Sequel
    After beginning development of the first James Bond 007 animated film, Goanimate Animation is also developing the sequel to James Bond 007: An Italian Mission to Live it and Die titled James Bond 007: No Far from Italy, the planned sequel is slated for theatrical release on July 17, 2026, and Micheal Caine was interested about reprising the role of James Bond in the animated sequel.
    Gallery
    Textless promotional posters
    James_Bond_007_James_Bond_textless_poster.png
    James_Bond_007_Larry_Bond_textless_poster.png

    Promotional posters
    Untitled James Bond animated movie reveal poster
    Untitled_James_Bond_animated_movie_reveal_poster.png
    James_Bond_007_James_Bond_original_US_poster.png

  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 16th

    1942: Joanna Pettet is born--Westminster, London.

    1968: Yildirim Harekati (Lightning Strike) released in Turkey.
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    0z8kgltjyeigcyv1vcs
    Apparently there was also a sequel.
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    1986: The Los Angeles Times reports only minor changes to the finished script for The Living Daylights since the casting of Timothy Dalton.

    1995: L'oeil de feu (The Eye of Fire) released in Canada.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough premieres in Malaysia.
    1999: Tomorrow Never Dies video game released in the UK and US.
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    Tomorrow Never Dies
    Video Game | 1999 | T
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0253823/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_3
    As suave secret agent 007, employ your cunning wit and high-tech gadgets to survive multiple levels of espionage based on exciting situations from the blockbuster film.
    Directed by
    William Botti
    Writing Credits
    Flint Dille ... (written by)
    Ian Fleming ... (character)
    William Botti

    Cast (in credits order)
    Stephen Critchlow ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Adam Blackwood ... James Bond (voice)
    Andrew Bicknell ... Stamper / Bartender (voice)
    Miles Anderson ... Dr. Kaufmann / Isagura / Q (voice)
    Ève Karpf ... Paris Carver (voice)
    Larissa Murray ... Wai Lin (voice)
    Steve Hope Wynne ... Elliot Carver (voice)
    Caron Pascoe ... M (voice)
    Nicolas Read ... Additional Voices (voice)

    Music by
    David Alexander ... (as Sonic Mayhem)
    Howard Ulyate

    Tomorrow Never Dies PS1 Trailer


    Tomorrow Never Dies (Video Game) Medley


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    2006: Casino Royale released in the UK, Ireland, Czech Republic, Greece, Israel, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Puerto Rico, Qatar, Singapore, and Syria.
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    2006: James Bond: Casino Royale released in Slovakia.
    2006: Казино Рояль released in Russia.
    2006: 007: Казино Рояль released in Ukraine.
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    2012: Skyfall premieres in Sydney, Australia, at the State Theatre.
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    2012: The International Spy Museum in Washington DC opens its Exquisitely Evil: 50 Years of Bond Villains exhibit.
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    2012: OO7 Legends video game released in the US.
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    OO7 Legends
    Video Game | 2012 | T
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2171704/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0
    Play as James Bond in this first person shooter adventure. You will encounter the most memorable nemeses of 007 spanning from Goldfinger to Skyfall.
    Directed by
    John Dower ... (film segment director) (voice director)
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Bruce Feirstein
    Ian Fleming ... (characters)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Timothy Watson ... James Bond / Auric Goldfinger / Drax Henchman (voice)
    Judi Dench ... M (voice)
    Rory Kinnear ... Bill Tanner (voice)
    Demetri Goritsas ... Felix Leiter (voice)
    Naomie Harris ... Eve (voice)
    Natasha Little ... Pussy Galore (voice)
    Orion Lee ... Mr. Ling / Moonraker Scientist (voice)
    Glenn Wrage ... Ernst Stavro Blofeld (voice)
    Nicola Walker ... Teresa di Vicenzo (voice)
    Anthony Edridge ... Marc Ange Draco (voice) (as Antony Edridge)
    Roberto Davide ... Franz Sanchez / Additional Voices (voice) (as Rob David)
    Carey Lowell ... Pam Bouvier (voice)
    Vincent Carmichael ... Alfonso / Additional Voices (voice)
    Madalena Alberto ... Jinx Johnson / Moonraker Scientist (voice)
    Toby Stephens ... Gustav Graves (voice)
    Jason Wong ... Zao / Additional Voices (voice)
    Jane Perry ... Holly Goodhead / Moonraker Scientist (voice)
    Michael Lonsdale ... Hugo Drax (voice)
    Gyuri Sarossy ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Nicholas Boulton ... Aston Martin GPS (voice)
    Jen Bradshaw ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Joseph May ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Joseph Balderrama ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Lauren Dagley ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Luis Soto ... Additional Voices (voice)
    James Goode ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Nick Fletcher ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Nigel Whitmey ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Ollie Hollis ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Paul Courtenay Hyu ... Goldfinger Soldier / Additional Voices (voice) (as Paul Hyu)
    Peter Stark ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Richard Cant ... Additional Voices (voice)
    David Thomas ... Additional Voices (voice) (as Rob Matthews)
    Stephane Cornicard ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Stephen Hoo ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Todd Boyce ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Trevor White ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Velibor Topic ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Peter Brück ... (voice)
    Kezia Burrows ... Performance Capture Various
    Daniel Curshen ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Carsten Hayes ... Blofeld Guard (voice)

    Music by
    Kevin Kiner
    007 Legends Launch trailer


    007 Legends - GOLDFINGER Trailer


    007 Legends - ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE Trailer


    007 Legends: Die Another Day & Licence to Kill Trailer


    007 LEGENDS SKYFALL TRAILER


    007 Legends: Multiplayer Trailer

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    2020: Adrian Harrington Ltd. publish Ian Fleming and James Bond by Jon Gilbert.
    logo.png
    Ian Fleming and James Bond. Manuscripts in The Schøyen Collection
    Series 32. [Silver]
    GILBERT, Jon (born 1972).
    Royal Tunbridge Wells: Adrian Harrington Ltd., 2020. [Literary and film Reference] 'SILVER' edition, SIGNED by the author. Quarto (30 x 22cm), pp.292, printed on Munken Lynx paper. Illustrated throughout in black and white, with a colour frontispiece and 32 colour plates. Bound in full graphite buckram, blocked in two-colour metallic foils with silver titles to front cover, red and grey endbands and cherry red endpapers. New book, sold at the RRP. PRE-ORDER ONLY (Published 16th November 2020). A comprehensive account of the Ian Fleming/James Bond material held at The Schøyen Collection, London and Oslo, compiled by Jon Gilbert, with an introduction by Dr. Martin Schøyen and a foreword by Fergus Fleming. Item #58365

    Price: £65.00
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 17th

    1905: Teru Shimada is born--Mito, Japan.
    (He dies 19 June 1988 at age 82--Encino, California.)
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    Teru Shimada
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teru_Shimada

    Born Akira Shimada, November 17, 1905 - Mito, Ibaraki, Japan
    Died June 19, 1988 (aged 82) - Encino, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
    Occupation Actor, Years active 1932–1975
    Teru Shimada (November 17, 1905 – June 19, 1988) was a Japanese American actor who was cast most famously as Mr. Osato, a SPECTRE agent in the 1967 James Bond film, You Only Live Twice. His film career began in 1932 with the Night Club Lady. He appeared with Peter Lorre in the 1939 classic Mr. Moto's Last Warning. Another notable role was opposite Humphrey Bogart in the 1949 film, Tokyo Joe. He had an uncredited role in 20th Century Fox's 1966 film Batman as a Japanese Delegate and as Mr. Kurawa in Cary Grant's final film, Walk, Don't Run. He also appeared in an episode (titled "And Five of Us are Left") of the 1960s American television series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea in 1965. That year he also made a guest appearance on Perry Mason as Dr. Maseo Tachikawa in "The Case of the Baffling Bug" and as Ito Kumagi in the 1962 episode "The Case of the Capricious Corpse". In 1970, he had had a leading role in an episode of Hawaii Five-O (titled "The Reunion"). He later retired in the mid-1970s following appearances in Barnaby Jones and The Six Million Dollar Man and died in Encino, Los Angeles, California in 1988.
    During World War II, Shimada was interned at the Poston War Relocation Center. He is buried in Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery.
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    Teru Shimada (1905–1988)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0793574/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Actor (74 credits)

    1975 The Six Million Dollar Man (TV Series) - Shige Ishikawa
    - The Wolf Boy (1975) ... Shige Ishikawa
    1975 Barnaby Jones (TV Series) - Hidekei Ito
    - The Deadly Conspiracy: Part 2 (1975) ... Hidekei Ito
    1971 To Rome with Love (TV Series) - Mr. Okada
    - Bonsai (1971) ... Mr. Okada
    1970 Hawaii Five-O (TV Series) - Shigato
    - The Reunion (1970) ... Shigato
    1970 The Doris Day Show (TV Series) - Mr. Orokumu
    - Doris Leaves Today's World: Part 2 (1970) ... Mr. Orokumu
    1970 Which Way to the Front? - Japanese Naval Officer (uncredited)
    1970 Family Affair (TV Series) - Mr. Osaki
    - Mr. Osaki's Tree (1970) ... Mr. Osaki
    -
    1968 The Felony Squad (TV Series) - Mr. Namura
    - Hostage (1968) ... Mr. Namura
    1968 Mannix (TV Series) - Gardener
    - The Need of a Friend (1968) ... Gardener
    1968 Judd for the Defense (TV Series) - Judge Hara
    - Transplant (1968) ... Judge Hara
    1968 It Takes a Thief (TV Series) - Mr. Tsu
    - When Good Friends Get Together (1968) ... Mr. Tsu
    1967 The Hardy Boys: The Mystery of the Chinese Junk - Mr. Pan
    1967 Savage Justice - Tom Hirata
    1967 You Only Live Twice - Mr. Osato
    1966 Batman: The Movie
    Japanese Delegate (uncredited)
    1966 Walk Don't Run - Mr. Kurawa
    1965 The Wackiest Ship in the Army (TV Series) - Capt. Osama
    - I'm Dreaming of a Wide Isthmus (1965) ... Capt. Osama
    1965 I Spy (TV Series) - Mr. Okura
    - Tigers of Heaven (1965) ... Mr. Okura
    1962-1965 Perry Mason (TV Series) - Dr. Maseo Tachikawa / Ito Kumagi
    - The Case of the Baffling Bug (1965) ... Dr. Maseo Tachikawa
    - The Case of the Capricious Corpse (1962) ... Ito Kumagi
    1965 King Rat - The Japanese General
    1965 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV Series) - Nakamura
    - ...And Five of Us Are Left (1965) ... Nakamura
    1965 The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (TV Series) - President Sing-Mok
    - Alexander the Greater Affair: Part Two (1965) ... President Sing-Mok
    1965 Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre (TV Series) - Japanese Captain
    - A Time for Killing (1965) ... Japanese Captain
    1963 The Prize - Japanese Correspondent (uncredited)
    1963 Sunday in New York - Maitre 'd (uncredited)
    1963 Hazel (TV Series) - Mr. Nakuro Isaka
    - A Good Example for Harold (1963) ... Mr. Nakuro Isaka
    1962 Checkmate (TV Series) - Ling Chow
    - In a Foreign Quarter (1962) ... Ling Chow
    1962 The Horizontal Lieutenant - Master of Ceremonies at Show (uncredited)
    1962 Have Gun - Will Travel (TV Series) - Takara - Board Game Opponent
    - Coming of the Tiger (1962) ... Takara - Board Game Opponent
    1961 Follow the Sun (TV Series) - Captain Suma
    - The Longest Crap Game in History (1961) ... Captain Suma
    1961 Laramie (TV Series) - Kami
    - Dragon at the Door (1961) ... Kami
    1960-1961 The Islanders (TV Series) - Kam Chuh / Regas
    - The Strange Courtship of Danny Koo (1961) ... Kam Chuh
    - The Terrified Blonde (1960) ... Regas
    1961 Assignment: Underwater (TV Series) - - Affair in Tokyo (1961)
    1960 The Wackiest Ship in the Army - Maj. Samada
    1960 Hong Kong (TV Series) - Colonel Okumara
    - Colonel Cat (1960) ... Colonel Okumara
    1960 Hawaiian Eye (TV Series) - Noburu
    - Sword of the Samurai (1960) ... Noburu
    1960 The Detectives (TV Series) - Mr. Harada
    - Karate (1960) ... Mr. Harada

    1959 The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour (TV Series) - Osato
    - The Ricardos Go to Japan (1959) ... Osato
    1959 Battle of the Coral Sea - Comm. Mori
    1959 Tokyo After Dark - Sen-Sei
    1959 Steve Canyon (TV Series) - Major Fukuda
    - The Prisoner (1959) ... Major Fukuda
    1958 The Geisha Boy - Osakawa, Japanese Detective (uncredited)
    1958 Run Silent Run Deep - Japanese Submarine Commander (uncredited)
    1956-1957 The Loretta Young Show (TV Series) - Kiyoshi Arikawa / Kiyoshi
    - Innocent Conspiracy (1957) ... Kiyoshi Arikawa
    - The Pearl (1956) ... Kiyoshi
    1956-1957 Navy Log (TV Series) - Patriarch / Judge Toyama
    - The Commander and the Kid (1957) ... Patriarch
    - A Guy Called Mickey (1956) ... Judge Toyama
    1957 The Delicate Delinquent - Togo's Japanese Interpreter (uncredited)
    1957 Battle Hymn - Korean Official
    1956 Navy Wife - Mayor Yoshida
    1956 Telephone Time (TV Series)
    - Time Bomb (1956)
    1956 Cavalcade of America (TV Series)
    - Call Home the Heart (1956)
    1955 House of Bamboo - Nagaya (uncredited)
    1954 The Bridges at Toko-Ri - Japanese Father (uncredited)
    1954 The Snow Creature - Subra
    1953 The War of the Worlds - Japanese Diplomat (uncredited)
    1950 Emergency Wedding - Ho (uncredited)

    1949 Tokyo Joe - Ito
    1944 Dragon Seed - Villager (uncredited)
    1941 They Met in Bombay - Japanese Colonel (uncredited)

    1939 Mr. Moto's Last Warning - Fake Mr. Moto (uncredited)
    1936 White Legion - Dr. Nogi (as Teru Shumada)
    1936 Revolt of the Zombies - Buna
    1935 The Affair of Susan - Spieler (uncredited)
    1935 Oil for the Lamps of China - Tea House Owner (uncredited)
    1935 Public Hero Number 1 - Sam - Sonny's Japanese Houseboy (uncredited)
    1935 Let 'em Have It - Chinese Houseboy (uncredited)
    1935 Bordertown - Law School Graduate (uncredited)
    1934 Imitation of Life - Japanese Customer in Pancake Shop (uncredited)
    1934 Charlie Chan's Courage - Jiu Jitsu Man
    1934 Murder at the Vanities - Koto (uncredited)
    1934 Four Frightened People - Native (uncredited)
    1933 Midnight Club - Nishi (uncredited)
    1933 Gabriel Over the White House - Japanese Admiral at Debt Conference (uncredited)
    1932 The Night Club Lady - Ito Mura (uncredited)
    1932 The Washington Masquerade - Japanese Dignitary (uncredited)

    Self (2 credits)

    2000 Inside 'You Only Live Twice' (Video documentary short) - Mr. Osato
    1967 Whicker's World (TV Series documentary) - Himself
    - The World of James Bond (1967) ... Himself
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    1936: John Campbell Wells is born--Ashford, Kent, England.
    (He dies 11 January 1998 at age 61--London, England.)
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    John Wells (satirist)
    See the complete article here:
    John Wells
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    From John Wells and the Three Wise Men
    (produced by Open Media in 1988)
    Born - John Campbell Wells, 17 November 1936, Ashford, Kent, England
    Died 11 January 1998 (aged 61), London, England
    Occupation Actor, writer and satirist
    John Campbell Wells (17 November 1936 – 11 January 1998) was an English actor, writer and satirist.

    Early life
    The son of a clergyman, Wells was born in Ashford, Kent in 1936. He was educated at Eastbourne College and St Edmund Hall, Oxford.

    Career
    Wells started in cabaret at Oxford and began his television career as a writer on That Was The Week That Was, the 1960s weekly satire show that launched the careers of David Frost and Millicent Martin, among others, and also appeared in the television programme Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, as well as in The Secret Policeman's Other Ball. Besides making cameo appearances in films such as Casino Royale (1967) and Rentadick (1972), television dramas like Casanova (1987), an episode of Lovejoy (1991) and comedy shows like Yes Minister, he also wrote television scripts and screenplays, such as Princess Caraboo (1994).

    In 1971, with John Fortune, he published the comedy classic A Melon for Ecstasy, about a man who consummates his love affair with a tree. Wells played the headmaster of Thursgood's Preparatory School in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1979).

    Wells was one of the original contributors to the satirical magazine Private Eye and contributed to Mrs Wilson's Diary, the long-running spoof journal of the wife of Prime Minister Harold Wilson. From 1979 he repeated that success with Dear Bill, a series of letters (co-written with Richard Ingrams) supposedly sent by Denis Thatcher, husband of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, to Bill Deedes. Wells developed the feature into a stage farce, Anyone for Denis?, first performed in 1981, in which he played Denis Thatcher. Co-starring Angela Thorne as Mrs. Thatcher, the play was a major West End hit, toured the UK and was adapted for television. Wells also played Denis Thatcher in the Bond movie For Your Eyes Only (1981). In 1991, he and Thorne again played the Thatchers in Dunrulin, a one-off TV sitcom-like satirical look at the couple in retirement. He also voiced Arnold the Elephant, Edward the Monkey and Bert in the children's TV series Charlie Chalk.

    In 1988, Leonard Bernstein started working on a new version of his much-revised operetta Candide. The author of the original book, Hugh Wheeler, had died, and John Wells was asked to help revise the text.[3] The first production of this "final version", by Scottish Opera, was followed by a "final revised version" in 1989, performances of which have been released on CD and DVD. An insert in the DVD ("Bernstein and Voltaire"), written by Wells, explained what Bernstein had wanted in this final revised version.

    In 1997 Wells appeared in the BBC situation comedy Chalk as ineffectual headmaster Richard Nixon. His fellow cast members do not recall him being ill on set, but he was too unwell to participate in the second series.

    Wells' last book, House of Lords, was a best-seller and published a year before his death in 1998. The book is a historical and humorous study of the British peerage system.

    Personal life
    From 1982, Wells was the second husband of Teresa Chancellor (daughter of Sir Christopher and sister of Alexander). His daughter Dolly is an actress.

    Wells died of cancer in London in 1998 at the age of 61.

    Filmography
    Title Year Role Notes
    Casino Royale 1967 'Q's' assistant
    The Bobo 1967 Pompadour Major Domo
    30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia 1968 Honorable Gavin Hopton

    Every Home Should Have One 1970 Tolworth
    Rentadick 1972 Owltruss

    For Your Eyes Only 1981 Denis Thatcher
    Bullshot 1983 American Scientist
    Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes 1984 Sir Evelyn Blount
    Revolution 1985 Corty
    Consuming Passions 1988 Dr. Forrester

    Princess Caraboo 1994 Reverend Hunt
    Gulliver's Travels 1996 Flimnap the Treasurer TV Mini-Series, 1 episode
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    1966: Sophie Danièle Sylvie Maupu (Sophie Marceau) is born--Paris, France.

    1982: Octopussy films OO7 fighting Mischka and Grischka.

    1995: GoldenEye general release in the US.
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    1995: The New York Times reviews GoldenEye as "That 'Sexist, Misogynist Dinosaur' James Bond".
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    FILM REVIEW;That 'Sexist,
    Misogynist Dinosaur' James Bond
    By Janet Maslin | Nov. 17, 1995
    GoldenEye
    Directed by Martin Campbell
    Action, Adventure, Thriller
    PG-13
    2h 10m
    "Goldeneye" unveils Pierce Brosnan as the coffee-bar James Bond: mild, fashionable and nice in a very 90's way. Mr. Brosnan, as the best-moussed Bond ever to play baccarat in Monte Carlo, makes the character's latest personality transplant viable (not to mention smashingly photogenic), but the series still suffers the blahs.

    Today's Bond does have the Internet and a credit sequence resembling a pretentious music video. And he has a girlfriend with advanced computer skills (Izabella Scorupco, a deep-voiced model who looks as good as Mr. Brosnan, which is saying a lot). Still, he often seems adrift. And this film is missing such basics as the cold war and the James Bond theme music. The absence of the latter is sure to throw some audience members into a two-hour Pavlovian twitch.

    Judi Dench, as the first woman to play his supervisor, M, is on hand to call Bond "a sexist, misogynist dinosaur" so that you won't have to. But the real problem is not a matter of Bond's antediluvian quirks. It's that "Goldeneye" bears no stamp of Ian Fleming beyond its title, which was the name of his Jamaican home. This film's screenplay, by Jeffrey Caine and Bruce Feirstein from a story by Michael France, features only flat repartee and fairly desperate homages to the Fleming style.

    And so many other action films have borrowed from the Bond formula in the 33 (yes!) years since "Dr. No" that this one has a hard time looking special. A plane, a motorcycle, a huge dam, a bungee jumper and nerve gas all feature in the opening sequence, yet it still lacks the novelty that starts the best Bond films off with a bang. And Mr. Brosnan, who makes a fabulous clothing model and has mastered the one dramatic mode this role requires of him (wry), is not at his most believable during action scenes. When Bond rides in a tank through St. Petersburg during a scenery-crunching chase scene, Michael Dukakis comes to mind.

    Clinging desperately to the idea of Russian villainy for old times' sake, the plot involves Russian gangsters trying to exploit a secret space-based weapons program to sabotage financial markets in the West. And its chief villain is 006 (Sean Bean), who was once Bond's colleague and now calls him "Her Majesty's loyal terrier." Beyond this, it's enough to note that character actors include Robbie Coltrane as a Russian hood and Joe Don Baker as a C.I.A. man, and that settings can be drably industrial unless the film is pointedly visiting Switzerland or the Caribbean, where it practically screams about the scenery.

    Though 006 has the poor form to bait Bond about his past, wondering theatrically whether all those vodka martinis can silence the screams of all the men Bond has killed, most of "Goldeneye" is relatively restrained. Martin Campbell, who previously directed the sci-fi prison film "No Escape" with Ray Liotta, supplies shootouts and explosions at reliable intervals, and without any special frills. The film's gaudiest feature is a vicious Russian named Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen), who bites and claws her lovers and has a way of confusing sex with death. Her nutcracker thighs, not to mention her name, suggest that the Bond babe is as ready as 007 was for a timely overhaul.

    In the product-placement department, BMW, Perrier and the becoming Bond wardrobe are all advertised. "Goldeneye" is as much a merchandising event as it is a wishfully nostalgic movie.

    "Goldeneye" is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It includes several sexual episodes, along with double-entendres that either draw smirks or die trying.
    GOLDENEYE
    Directed by Martin Campbell; written by Jeffrey Caine and Bruce Feirstein, based on a story by Michael France and characters created by Ian Fleming; director of photography, Phil Meheux; edited by Terry Rawlings; music by Eric Serra, with "Goldeneye" theme written by Bono and the Edge; production designer, Peter Lamont; produced by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli; released by United Artists. Running time: 130 minutes. This film is rated PG-13.

    WITH: Pierce Brosnan (James Bond), Sean Bean (Alec Trevelyan), Izabella Scorupco (Natalya Simonova), Famke Janssen (Xenia Onatopp), Joe Don Baker (Jack Wade), Robbie Coltrane (Valentin Zukovsky) and Judi Dench ( M )

    Nov. 17, 1995, Section C, Page 17 of the National edition with the headline: FILM REVIEW;That 'Sexist, Misogynist Dinosaur' James Bond.
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    2002: Frank McCarthy dies at age 78--Sedona, Arizona.
    (Born 30 March 1924--New York City, New York.)
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    Frank C. McCarthy, the world of Western Art has lost a great talent and leader. Internationally known artist, Frank C. McCarthy passed away from lung cancer, Sunday, November 17, 2002 at his home of 30 years in the beautiful red rocks of Sedona, Arizona. Frank McCarthy was born in New York City in 1924. He studied at the Art Students League in New York City during the summers starting at the age of 14. He was a graduate of Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York. Frank McCarthy began his art career as a commercial illustrator. He painted illustrations for most of the paperback book publishers, magazines, movie companies, and advertisements. He created works that became posters for such movies as the James Bond series.

    Frank McCarthy's talents were highly sought after by art directors enabling him to work as a free lance illustrator for many years. His art career spanned over 50 years, beginning with a request for a western cover for a magazine by an art director. He left the world of commercial art in 1968, and began his fine art career after moving to Sedona, Arizona. Frank McCarthy's dynamic paintings frequently featured the people of the west with a special emphasis on the Plains Indian, mountain men, and cavalry that made up the lore and lure of the old west. Appropriately entitled "the Dean of Western Action Painters", Frank McCarthy"s art was unsurpassed for its motion, drama, and absolute attention to accuracy and detail. Highly collected, and frequently imitated, Frank McCarthy's works were treasured throughout the world as classic examples of contemporary Western Art. Retrospective showings of Frank McCarthy's paintings have been held at the Museum of the Southwest, Midland, Texas; the R.W. Norton Museum in Shreveport, La.; the Thomas Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Ok.; and in 1992, at the Cowboy Artist of America Museum in Kerrville, Texas. Frank McCarthy was invited to join the prestigious Cowboy Artists of America organizaton in 1975 and was an active member in the CAA group for 23 years.

    He was inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 1997. Five books of his paintings have been published-1 hardbound, 3 softbound, and 1 leather limited edition book. Over 100 limited edition art prints of his paintings have been published since 1974 by Greenwich Workshop, Shelton, Ct. Survivors include: children by his late wife Mary Farendorf - daughter Mary Jean McCarthy Tyll of Dallas, Texas and son Kevin C. McCarthy of Durango, Colorado; six grandchildren; brother Henry and sister Gertude Shevlin both of Florida; and wife Cynthia Bennett of Sedona, Arizona. Cremation has taken place and private services were held. Memorial donations may be made to the Frank and Cynthia McCarthy Scholarship fund at Little Big Horn College, P.O. Box 370, Crow Agency, Mt. 59022. For further information, please contact Big Horn Galleries, 1167 Sheridan Ave. Cody, Wy 82414 (307) 527-7587.

    Published in The Arizona Republic on Dec. 8, 2002

    Witness he.

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    http://www.artnet.com/artists/frank-mccarthy/

    Note: on some projects Frank McCarthy worked with Robert McGinnis.

    Thunderball
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    You Only Live Twice
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    On Her Majesty's Secret Service
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    Colonel Sun paperback
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    Casino Royale
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    Dr. No
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    From Russia With Love
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    Goldfinger
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    Around the World Under the Sea
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    Where Eagles Dare
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    The Great Escape
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    The Dirty Dozen
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    Danger: Diabolik
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    2006: Casino Royale released in Canada, Iceland, Poland, Turkey, and the US.
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    2006: 007: Casino Royale released in Estonia.
    2006: Kazino Royale released in Lithuania and Latvia.
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    2006: 皇家赌场 (Huángjiā dǔchǎng; Royal Casino) released in Taiwan.
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    2015: MTV proposes GoldenEye as the best party game of all time.
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    'Goldeneye' Is Still The Best Party
    Game Of All Time
    Slappers only, please.
    By Victoria McNally
    November 17, 2015 / 1:35 PM

    On November 17, 1995, Pierce Brosnan first stepped into the role of James Bond for the iconic film "Goldeneye," and with it the franchise was forever changed -- we got the first Bond movie with CGI in it, the first to feature Judi Dench as M, and the first to ever be sold on DVD.

    But for many kids growing up back then in the '90s, the true legacy of "Goldeneye" has nothing to the movie at all (you know, because some of our parents wouldn't let us watch it *cough*). Instead, when we hear the title "Goldeneye" we think of a completely different medium altogether -- video games, because "Goldeneye 007" for the Nintendo 64 was one of the best games of all time.



    Although it was released two years after the film, "Goldeneye 007" was miles above what you'd expect from the average movie tie-in game -- it ended up becoming the third best-selling Nintendo 64 game of all time, and drastically influenced the future of first person shooters for years to come. You like "Call Of Duty" or "Halo?" You've got this game to thank.

    And "Goldeneye" also had one of the most awesome, most hilarious, most fun multiplayer modes ever, where you and your friends could kill each other over and over again until one of you came out the victor. Pretty awesome for a game that wasn't even going to have multiplayer in the first place, right?

    In case you haven't picked up this amazing game in a few years, let's take a walk down memory lane and remind you why it got brought out at every sleepover, after school hangout session, and nostalgia college party you've ever been to:

    First of all, it let you play all kinds of characters from across the Bond franchise, even the Bond Girls.



    Trust me, you notice that stuff when you're a little girl who always gets stuck playing Peach in "Mario Kart 64." And even if you weren't worried about gender breakdown, there were plenty of awesome characters to play, especially if you or your friend managed to unlock everyone by beating story mode. Grace Jones as Mayday from "A View To Kill?" Yes please! Oddjob from "Goldfinger?" Sign me up!

    It also let you play with up to three of your friends for maximum carnage.



    Connecting up with your friends from across the country via headsets and WiFi is fun and all, but admit it: you miss having to share a screen and a couch with a bunch of your buds.

    It was so, so satisfying to see your competitors go down in a haze of red.




    You weren't supposed to cheat when you were playing local multiplayer, but it was just so wonderful seeing somebody's side of the screen go bloody after you'd hunted them down.

    Speaking of which, you got to handle all those amazing weapons.




    Sure, sometimes you accidentally ran right past them on the floor because you weren't sure of where you were going, and that was always pretty embarrassing. But once you got your hands on a rocket launcher, watch out! (No seriously, watch out, because if you fired that thing too close to your opponent then you ended up going red, too.)

    Or with just one weapon at a time, if you wanted it to get real weird.




    Anyone could win a round with a wide variety of weapons at their disposal, but what happened when you were all stuck using throwing knives or proximity mines? That's where things got truly interesting, and either one of you would emerge victorious as a strategic mastermind of mines, or you'd all die in a chaotic mess. Probably both, actually.

    Or, even better, no weapons.




    If you have not played a 4-person session of "Goldeneye" in "Slappers Only" mode, then you have not lived. It's the single funniest thing that has ever been programmed into a video game, and you'd always die so many times simply because you were too busy laughing to pay attention to who was smacking you in the face.

    And then there was the infamous Big Head mode.




    Honestly, you didn't even need to be in multiplayer to enjoy the magic of the Big Head cheat -- you could just take turns in first person story mode and have just as much fun together, if not more. Look at all those giant furry Russian hats! Pure bliss.
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    2020: Hero Collector publishes 50 Greatest Bond Cars, Ben Robinson, editor.
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    50 Greatest Bond Cars
    Out next week from Hero Collector, the ultimate resource on James Bond cars, 50 Greatest Bond Cars.

    Here's a selection of the lavish contents you can find in this new fully illustrated hardback book.

    50 legendary cars from 25 James Bond movies. The vehicles featured in this book were driven by – or pursued – the world's most celebrated spy. Stylish, fast, and especially equipped with state-of-the-art gadgets, each detailed graphic shows the key features that set them among the world's greatest cars. Includes the cars from No Time to Die movie starring Daniel Craig and Rami Malek.
    007 has driven some of the most exciting and iconic cars in movie history and he has been involved in some of the greatest car chases ever filmed. Famously, many of Bond’s cars have been modified by Q Branch, who fitted them with everything from machine guns, to bulletproof screens, mines, lasers and ejector seats. Some of Q’s cars can even turn into submarines or become invisible!

    Aston Martin DB5, Lotus Esprit, Ford Mustang, BMW Z8, Rolls-Royce, Cadillac, Ferrari, Jaguar, Alfa Romeo and many many more, with facts and figures plus their key scenes and stunts, these are the cars that made Bond history.
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    2022: Movieweb talks to British James Bond and the American Thanksgiving holiday.
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    How James Bond Became a Thanksgiving Holiday
    Franchise
    By Richard Fink | 17 November 2022

    The James Bond movies have typically been released around Thanksgiving weekend, so what makes a UK spy great to watch on an a American holiday?
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    Thanksgiving weekend has often been a big time for movies, as the five-day holiday weekend gives for more chances for families that have gathered together to celebrate the holiday the chance to go out to the movies. There have been certain staples over the years. Disney has often opened an animated feature film over the holiday weekend. Harry Potter, Twilight, and The Hunger Games all used the week before Thanksgiving to achieve incredible box office numbers. Yet one franchise has been a staple of the holiday season without anyone really noticing: James Bond.

    James Bond has been a box office draw since his debut film in 1962's Dr. No. The super spy has been the star of 25 official films from Eon Pictures. The franchise is celebrating its 60th anniversary, and is in a transition period between Bond actors. With all the James Bond movies on Prime Video now, and for those needing to get in the Thanksgiving spirit, this is how and why Bond is such a staple of the Thanksgiving holiday season.
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    Pierce Brosnan James Bond GoldenEye 1995 Eon
    MGM / UA
    James Bond Release History
    From Dr. No in 1962 until The Man With The Golden Gun in 1974, the James Bond films typically were released during the holiday season around December as it was one of the most profitable times to release a movie. However, in 1975 the release of Jaws shifted the release calendar to make the summer movie season the most profitable time for big budget fair which was only solidified in 1977 with the release of Star Wars. 1977 saw the first James Bond movie released in the summer, The Spy Who Loved Me. The next seven Bond movies were released during the summer movie season.

    After a seven-year hiatus, Bond returned with Goldeneye in 1995 and the film was given a November 17 release date, the Friday before Thanksgiving. Goldeneye was a box office hit and set the Pierce Brosnan era as a staple of the holiday season. While Tomorrow Never Dies got a December release date (opening the same day as Titanic), both The World Is Not Enough and Die Another Day were released the Friday before Thanksgiving.
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    Daniel Craig in a Barbour Jacket in Skyfall
    Sony Pictures
    Craig Bond Films Bring the Franchise to New Heights
    Daniel Craig marked not only a new James Bond but a new continuity. However, many rules of the franchise remained the same, and one of them was that prime November release date. Casino Royale opened on November 17, 2006. While the movie did not take the number one spot at the box office (it was beaten by Happy Feet), Casino Royale held exceptionally well the following weekend during the Thanksgiving holiday and ended up bringing $167 million domestic and $605 million worldwide.

    The following three Daniel Craig James Bond movies, Quantum of Solace, Skyfall, and Spectre opened on the second weekend of November as the weekend before Thanksgiving had since become the main weekend for YA novel adaptations. Quantum of Solace may not have received the positive reviews that Casino Royale did, but it did see a slight increase at the domestic box office. Skyfall on the other hand shattered all expectations to become the highest grossing Bond movie and the first in the franchise to cross $1 billion worldwide. Spectre may not have performed at the level of Skyfall but $880 million worldwide is still nothing to be ashamed of.

    The tradition did break with the release of No Time To Die but not for lack of trying. The studio original set it for release in November 2019 but was delayed following original director Danny Boyle's departure. The film was set for April 2020 but was delayed due to COVID-19 and the studio set it for release on November 12, 2020 in the UK and Thanksgiving weekend of November 25, 2020 in the United States. However, the movie was delayed multiple times and finally was released in theaters on October 8, 2021.
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    Daniel Craig as James Bond in Spectre
    Sony Pictures
    Why Does Bond Work With The Holiday Season
    It is odd that a franchise focused on a British secret agent would feel so right with a uniquely American holiday. Yet there is something about Bond movies that just feel right at home in November. Typically, the movies open a few weeks earlier in the UK, but in the United States, Bond has been a part of the holiday season for two decades. Part of the reason could be the cold London setting fits the weather of the holiday season while the unique locations offer a break from the traditional November weather that feels like an escape.

    Yet another major aspect would be the target audience. Bond is an old franchise, now celebrating 60 years. A good portion of the audience who went to go see the original films as kids are now old enough to not only be parents but grandparents and even great-grandparents. It is a franchise that has grown up with its audience, catering to an older movie going crowd that may not go out to the movies as much but will go for a Bond film.

    That also has the impact of making them generational films, as they will go with younger relatives and, pun intended, form a bond watching them. It becomes a shared experience, one that can become associated with the holiday. Everyone coming together to enjoy a meal and then afterwards deciding to go out to a movie together and James Bond can appeal to all ages. Thanksgiving just feels like it is missing something when a James Bond movie isn't around.
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    2022: The International Spy Museum hosts Superspy Science with author Kathryn Harkup.
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    Superspy Science with
    Kathryn Harkup
    Virtual Event
    Thursday, November 17, 2022
    Could our favorite Bond villains actually achieve world domination? Were the huge variety of weapons and technology in Bond’s arsenal ever actually developed? Could 007 really escape all those close shaves with his life intact?

    The world of 007 is known for its guns, gadgets, and grandiose schemes to take over the world, but would any of these weapons, tech, or plots make it in the real world? With her new book, Superspy Science: Science, Death and Tech in the World of James Bond, international bestselling author, Dr. Kathryn Harkup has set out to explore how science and technology intersect with the world of Bond. From Dr. No to Skyfall, Harkup takes on the really difficult questions such as: Will being covered in gold paint really kill you? Can you run across crocodiles? Can you sled in a cello case? And how do suicide pills work and can you survive taking one? Join us for a conversation with Harkup about some of our favorite Bond weapons, technologies, and tactics and just how rooted in reality they are.

    Following the conversation, you’ll be able to ask questions via our online platform.
    Auto-generated closed captioning will be available for this program.

    International Spy Museum 700 L'Enfant Plaza, SW Washington DC 20024
    202.393.7798
    [email protected]

    700 L'Enfant Plaza, SW Washington DC 20024
    202.393.7798
    [email protected]
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 18th

    1928: Mickey Mouse is born in the film short Steamboat Willy.
    (Known as Topolino --Baby Mouse-- in Italy.)
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    Walt Disney Animation Studios' Steamboat Willie (7:22)

    1962: The Sunday Times prints the Ian Fleming piece "James Bond's Hardware. [The Guns of James Bond]". 1966: You Only Live Twice films OO7 infiltrating the volcano.

    1974: Chelsea Records releases Lulu's single "The Man with the Golden Gun".
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    1988: Licence to KIll principal photography finishes. (Started 18 July.)

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 46 of 65 - "Last of the Tooboos."
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    James Bond Jr - Last of the Tooboos
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807107/?ref_=ttep_ep46
    While visiting the London Zoo, James interrupts Skullcap during his theft of a rare animal, a tooboo, whose unusual enzymes Dr. Derange wants for himself.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Skullcap (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 46 - Last of the Tooboos

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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in Malaysia and Singapore.
    1999: Hodder & Stoughton publish Raymond Benson's novelization of The World Is Not Enough.
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    THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH

    Greed, revenge, world domination
    through the power of oil,
    high-tech terrorism . . Only
    some of the ingredients of this
    latest 007 adventure which
    begins outside the Guggenheim
    Museum in Bilbao, Spain and
    continues with a spectacular
    high-speed boat chase up the
    Thames and an avalanche in
    the Caucasus Mountains before
    Bond faces a murderous enemy
    in Baku and a potential nuclear
    explosion in Turkey.

    Sir Robert King, a wealthy oil
    tycoon, is murdered in an
    unprecedented bombing at the
    Secret Intelligence Service's
    London headquarters. M takes
    the attack personally and sends
    James Bond to what was once
    the USSR to protect King's
    heiress, his beautiful and fiery
    daughter Elektra. For the
    bombing is the work of "Renard",
    the cruel and cunning terrorist
    who once kidnapped Elektra King
    and held her to ransom.

    With nuclear weapons expert Dr
    Christmas Jones at his
    side, Bond travels to the Caspian
    Sea - where a former enemy
    becomes a formidable
    ally - before the final dramatic
    confrontation in the
    claustrophobic confines of
    a nuclear submarine beneath the
    surface of the Bosphorus.

    THE WORLD IS NOT ENOUGH
    takes James Bond to new
    levels of danger, intrigue and
    non-stop action.

    RAYMOND BENSON
    is the author of HIGH TIME TO KILL,
    THE FACTS OD DEATH, ZERO MINUS
    TEN and the novelisation of the
    Bond film TOMORROW NEVER DIES.
    His first book, The James
    Bond Bedside Companion
    , was
    shortlisted for an Edgar Allan
    Poe Award for Best
    Biographical/Critical Work.
    A director of the Ian Fleming
    Foundation, he lives and works
    in the Chicago area.

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    2002: Die Another Day world premiere at Royal Albert Hall, London.
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    2003: Michael Arnold Kamen dies at age 55--London, England.
    (Born 15 April 1948--New York City, New York.)
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    Michael Kamen
    Driven classical and pop composer
    Friday 21 November 2003 01:00

    Michael Kamen, composer: born New York 15 April 1948; married Sandra Keenan (two daughters); died London 18 November 2003.

    The extraordinary musical career of Michael Kamen was a testament not only to his talent and driven ambition, but also to a ceaseless passion and energy for his chosen course in life: following the twin paths of classical and pop music, he seemingly effortlessly balanced work as a composer, collaborator, performer, orchestrator and producer.

    On one hand, he was the driving force behind such fantastically ambitious projects as the 1994 Great Music Experience at Todaiji Temple in Nara, Japan, in aid of Unesco, to which Kamen not only brought Bob Dylan together with an orchestra for the first time, but also composed and conducted an overture for 350 performers including a symphony orchestra, 200 Buddhist monks, 35 Kodo Japanese drummers, an ancient Chinese orchestra, the Irish folk group the Chieftains and an all-star rock band. Yet, he was also the co-composer of Bryan Adams' 1991 hit "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You", a No 1 single in the UK for four months and for seven weeks in the United States. It was the biggest selling single in the history of A & M Records, and won Kamen one of several Grammy awards.
    The Adams' hit song, which many loved to hate, was taken from the soundtrack of Robin Hood: prince of thieves. The film world readily came to appreciate Kamen's abilities: he could write under pressure and he was fast - it took him just three weeks to come up with the soundtrack for The Three Musketeers in 1993 ("He thought visually," said the film producer Eric Fellner) and he wrote over 30 musical soundtracks, including those for all the Die Hard and Lethal Weapon series, for Terry Gilliam's Brazil (1985) and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988), Neil Jordan's Mona Lisa (1986), The Krays (1990), the James Bond film Licence To Kill (1989) and X-Men (2000); several of these soundtracks were Oscar-nominated.
    "He was a man of many parts, using a very wide brush," said his close friend David Gilmour of Pink Floyd. "He was about the most successful film writer in recent years. He had such a gift for a memorable tune, and a great gift for melody. He also had huge enthusiasm, and a compulsion to keep at it." Gilmour had considerable experience of Kamen's work method. At the instigation of the producer Bob Ezrin, Kamen was brought in to orchestrate the string sections of Pink Floyd's 1979 album The Wall and subsequently moved to London from his native New York. In 1983 he co-produced Pink Floyd's The Final Cut album with the group. Kamen was an ebullient, bouncing bear of a man, with a gregarious personality.

    - - -

    Chris Salewicz
    [Licence to Kill (Suite), Michael Kamen, 1989.


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    The Final Cut, Pink Floyd, 1983. Produced by Roger Waters, James Guthrie, Michael Kamen.

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    2012: Daniel Craig visits British troops at Camp Bastion, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Screens Skyfall with 800 soldiers.
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    2017: Mark Milsome dies at age 54--Ghana.
    (Born 1963--London, England.)
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    On 18th November 2017, Mark Milsome was killed age 54 on a film set in Ghana whilst operating a camera for a car stunt that went tragically wrong. It was a shocking happening leaving everybody astonished by the fact that the accident ocurred while in duty and should have never happened. Now a few initiatives like getting up a foundation under is name is now underway in the occasion of the date of the first year of his death.
    The Mark Milsome Foundation is inspired by the achievements, character and unique nature of our respected friend and colleague, Mark Milsome who was killed behind his camera whilst filming a car stunt in Ghana 18th November 2017.

    We are a non profit registered UK charity which aims to support, encourage and inspire young people, initially through two scholarship programmes, and to raise awareness of the importance of Health and Safety in the Film and Television Industry.

    We have established one scholarship in advance of our launch via the Guild of British Camera Technicians Training Programme and will announce a second early in 2019 that will support deserving Film Students to secure mentorship and work experience.
    We have taken our core values and ambitions as a charity from the example set by Mark Milsome and believe opportunities should be open to men and women who prove they have the character, determination and focus needed to thrive in the industry.

    We will encourage young people from all parts of the UK, all social and economic backgrounds, all levels of academic achievement, whether from obscurity or from a recognised educational programme to work with us. We will require evidence of genuine passion and a strong work ethic before considering anyone to be deserving of support or scholarships in Mark’s name.

    As an organisation we are open to exploring other areas, including furthering health and safety, and will evolve in any way that best serves the scholars, the Film and Television Industry and the memory of Mark Milsome.

    Please go to www.markmilsomefoundation.com to remember Mark and discover more about the ambitions of the foundation.

    LAUNCH OF MARK MILSOME FOUNDATION WEBSITE AND ANNOUNCEMENT OF BLACK - T - WEEK (18TH -24TH NOVEMBER)
    Following the tragic death of Mark Milsome on set in Ghana on 18th November 2017 a charitable foundation has been set up in his name by industry professionals, friends and family.

    The Foundation will officially launch early 2019 but as we approach the anniversary of Mark’s death they are inviting cast and crew from the film making community worldwide to honour Mark during the week of 18th - 24th November by wearing a black foundation T shirt on set. The limited edition T shirts will be available to purchase through October from the Foundation website at: www.markmilsomefoundation.com with deliveries early November in time for Black - T - Week.

    The Foundation are encouraging crew to visit their site to remember Mark and to sign up for updates and the ambitions of the Foundation to help young people in the industry.

    You can also receive Mark Milsome Foundation updates and info from:
    Facebook @MarkMilsomeFoundation
    Twitter @MarkMilsomeFDN
    Instagram @markmilsomefoundation
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    Mark Milsome (1963–2017)
    Camera and Electrical Department | Cinematographer | Miscellaneous Crew
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0590600/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Camera and Electrical Department (80 credits)

    2018 Black Earth Rising (TV Series) (camera operator)
    2018 The Etruscan Smile (camera operator)
    2018 National Treasure: Kiri (TV Mini-Series) (second camera operator - 1 episode)
    - Episode #1.4 (2018) ... (second camera operator)
    2017 Bang (TV Series) (camera operator - 2 episodes)
    - Episode #1.2 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.1 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    2017 The Durrells in Corfu (TV Series) (camera operator - 6 episodes)
    - Episode #2.6 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #2.5 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #2.4 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #2.3 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #2.2 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #2.1 (2017) ... (camera operator)
    2017 Bitter Harvest (b camera operator: additional photography)
    2016 Game of Thrones (TV Series) (b camera operator - 3 episodes)
    - Battle of the Bastards (2016) ... (b camera operator: White Walker)
    - The Door (2016) ... (b camera operator: White Walker)
    - Book of the Stranger (2016) ... (b camera operator: White Walker)
    2014-2015 Downton Abbey (TV Series) (a camera operator - 9 episodes)
    - Christmas Special (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.8 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.7 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.6 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.5 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.4 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #6.3 (2015) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #5.6 (2014) ... (a camera operator)
    - Episode #5.5 (2014) ... (a camera operator)
    2015/I Bill (camera operator)
    2015 Safe House (TV Series) (camera operator - 2 episodes)
    - Episode #1.4 (2015) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.3 (2015) ... (camera operator)
    2015 Molly Moon and the Incredible Book of Hypnotism (camera operator)
    2014 The Theory of Everything (camera operator: 'b' camera)
    2014 24: Live Another Day (TV Mini-Series) (camera operator - 2 episodes)
    - 12:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. (2014) ... (camera operator)
    2014 Call the Midwife (TV Series) (camera operator - 4 episodes)
    - Episode #3.4 (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #3.3 (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #3.2 (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #3.1 (2014) ... (camera operator)
    2010-2014 Sherlock (TV Series) (camera operator - 7 episodes)
    - The Sign of Three (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - The Empty Hearse (2014) ... (camera operator)
    - The Reichenbach Fall (2012) ... (camera operator)
    - The Hounds of Baskerville (2012) ... (camera operator)
    - A Scandal in Belgravia (2012) ... (camera operator)
    - The Great Game (2010) ... (camera operator - uncredited)
    - The Blind Banker (2010) ... (camera operator)
    Show less
    2013 What Remains (TV Mini-Series) (camera operator - 4 episodes)
    - Episode #1.4 (2013) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.3 (2013) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.2 (2013) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.1 (2013) ... (camera operator)
    2013 How I Live Now (additional photography) / (camera operator: "b" camera)
    2012 Hunted (TV Series) (camera operator - 1 episode)
    - Snow Maiden (2012) ... (camera operator)
    2012 Accused (TV Series) (second camera operator - 2 episodes)
    - Tina's Story (2012) ... (second camera operator)
    - Tracie's Story (2012) ... (second camera operator)
    2011 Hunky Dory (camera operator: second unit)
    2011 My Week with Marilyn (camera operator: "c" camera)
    2011 Your Highness (camera operator: "b" camera)

    2009 Into the Rose-Garden (Short) (camera operator)
    2009 Small Island (TV Mini-Series) (camera operator)
    2009 Nowhere Boy (camera operator: "b" camera)
    2009 Skellig: The Owl Man (TV Movie) (camera operator)
    2008 Quantum of Solace (camera operator "b" camera: main unit)
    2008 The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (focus puller: "a" camera)
    2008 The Passion (TV Mini-Series) (camera operator - 4 episodes)
    - Episode #1.4 (2008) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.3 (2008) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.2 (2008) ... (camera operator)
    - Episode #1.1 (2008) ... (camera operator)
    2007 Elizabeth: The Golden Age (camera operator: second unit)
    2007 1408 (additional camera operator)
    2006 Dracula (TV Movie) (additional camera operator)
    2006 Notes on a Scandal (second assistant camera)
    2006 Miss Potter (focus puller: "a" camera)
    2006 Caught Out (Short) (camera operator)
    2006 Longford (TV Movie) (focus puller)
    2006 The History Boys (first assistant camera: "a" camera)
    2006 Breaking and Entering (focus puller)
    2005 Mrs Henderson Presents (first assistant camera)
    2005/I Game Over (first assistant camera)
    2005 The Constant Gardener ("b" focus puller: London)
    2005 Russian Dolls (first assistant camera: London)
    2005 The Dark (camera operator: second unit)
    2005 On a Clear Day (second camera operator: Isle of Man)
    2004 Finding Neverland (focus puller: "b" camera)
    2004 King Arthur (camera operator: additional photography - uncredited)
    2004 Stage Beauty (camera operator: "c" camera) / (focus puller: "a" camera)
    2004 Sex Lives of the Potato Men (camera operator)
    2003 Winter Solstice (TV Movie) (camera operator)
    2003 Loving You (TV Movie) (focus puller)
    2002 Anita & Me (focus puller)
    2002 Tipping the Velvet (TV Mini-Series) (focus puller - 3 episodes)
    - Episode #1.3 (2002) ... (focus puller)
    - Episode #1.2 (2002) ... (focus puller)
    - Episode #1.1 (2002) ... (focus puller)
    2002 Ritual (first assistant camera)
    2002 Silent Cry (focus puller)
    2002 Thunderpants (focus puller)
    2001 Victoria & Albert (TV Movie) (focus puller)
    2001 Wit (TV Movie) (focus puller: "b" camera)
    2000 The House of Mirth (focus puller) / (focus puller: second unit)
    2000 Purely Belter (focus puller)
    2000 24 Hours in London (camera operator)

    1999 Oklahoma! (TV Movie) (focus puller)
    1999 Heart (focus puller)
    1998 Little Voice (focus puller)
    1998 Saving Private Ryan (first assistant camera)
    1997 Photographing Fairies (focus puller)
    1997 A Merry War (camera focus)
    1997 Zeus and Roxanne (assistant camera: second unit)
    1996 Brassed Off (focus puller)
    1996 Mary Reilly (clapper loader)
    1995 Hackers (clapper loader)
    1994 Dandelion Dead (TV Mini-Series) (second assistant camera - 3 episodes)
    - Episode #1.4 (1994) ... (second assistant camera)
    - Episode #1.3 (1994) ... (second assistant camera)
    - Episode #1.1 (1994) ... (second assistant camera)
    1994 Four Weddings and a Funeral (clapper loader)
    1993 Dark Waters (camera operator)
    1993 Cliffhanger (second assistant camera: "b" camera)
    1992 Wuthering Heights (camera loader)
    1992 Blame It on the Bellboy (clapper loader)
    1991 American Friends (clapper loader)
    1990 Memphis Belle (clapper loader: aerial unit)
    1990 Spymaker: The Secret Life of Ian Fleming (TV Movie) (clapper loader)
    1989 About Face (TV Series) (clapper/loader - 1 episode)
    - Bag Lady (1989) ... (clapper/loader)

    Cinematographer (5 credits)

    Rasta Man Vibrations (Short) (completed)
    2017 Arsenal and Dashen and the Penalty (Short)
    2017 Bang (TV Series) (6 episodes)
    - Episode #1.8 (2017)
    - Episode #1.7 (2017)
    - Episode #1.6 (2017)
    - Episode #1.5 (2017)
    - Episode #1.4 (2017)
    - Episode #1.3 (2017)
    2014 Touch 4 Love (Short)

    1991 Caruncula (Short)

    Miscellaneous Crew (1 credit)

    1988 The Comic Strip Presents... (TV Series) (jobfit trainee - 1 episode)
    - The Yob (1988) ... (jobfit trainee)

    Thanks (1 credit)

    2018 King of Thieves (in memory of)

    Self (1 credit)

    2000 Supporting Acts (TV Series documentary) - Himself
    - Special Effects Contact Lenses/Focus Puller ... Himself (as Mark Millsome)
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    2022: The Martini Bar at The Ocean Club offers mixology and culinary experience at A Four Seasons Resort, Bahamas.
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    Shaken, Not Stirred at
    The Martini Bar
    18 Nov, 2022
    The Ocean Club, A Four Seasons Resort
    A nod to its glamorous and star-studded legacy, The Martini Bar at The Ocean Club, A Four Seasons Resort, Bahamas has launched a new and decadent mixology and culinary experience.

    The Martini Bar is known best as the backdrop for the 2006 remake of the Casino Royale film where James Bond can be seen sipping his famous Vesper Martini. This limited seat Living Room Bar transports guests into the scenes of their very own movie.

    Whether sipping on a classic Vesper Martini or indulging in the new ultra-luxe Caviar Martini, it’s an unforgettable experience. While cocktails are the heart of The Martini Bar signature experience, new unique culinary creations are presented with suggested Martini pairings.
    The Martini Bar and Lounge is open every Friday and Saturday from 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm. Reservations can be made by calling the Resort at +1-242-363-2501.

    Every friday
    The information or details for this event may change at any given time and The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism and the Government of The Bahamas will not be held liable for any decision made based upon it.
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    2023: Mickey Mouse Day.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 19th

    1962: Sports Illustrated publishes Fleming's article "The Guns of James Bond."
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    1963: Ian Fleming is photographed by the Keystone Press Agency Ltd.
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    1963: In the case of McClory v Fleming, the Chancery Division of the High Court allows Fleming and Ivar Bryce to settle. McClory gains rights to the screenplay, including film rights. Fleming receives rights to his novel, to be labeled "based on a screen treatment by Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham and the Author".
    1965: Rusya'dan Sevgilerle (From Russia With Love) released in Turkey.
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    1981: For Your Eyes Only released in Australia.
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    1981: Sólo para sus ojos (Only For Your Eyes) released in Argentina.
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    1987: The Living Daylights released in Australia.
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    1988: Licence to Kill completes filming, representing Timothy Dalton's last day on camera as Bond.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 47 of 65 - "S.C.U.M. on the Water."
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    James Bond Jr - S.C.U.M. on the Water
    Season 1 - Episode 47
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807298/?ref_=ttep_ep47
    James Bond Jr. and his comrades are planning a great day out at the regatta. However, he doesn't consider on the appearance of Captain Walker D. Plank, whose latest scheme involves building the deadliest ship that ever hoisted the Jolly Roger. He kidnapped marine engineer Walter Gibson to this end.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Jeffrey Scott ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Pump (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Ed Gilbert ... Captain Walker D.Plank (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Bilge (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Jenny Gibson (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    James Bond Jr Episode 47 - S.C.U.M. on the Water

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    1999: Le monde ne suffit pas released in Canada.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough US general release, plus Iceland premiere.
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    2002: Electronic Arts publishes Nightfire in North America for PlayStation 2, Xbox, Nintendo GameCube, and Game Boy Advance in the US.
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    007: Nightfire
    Video Game | 2002 | T
    James Bond is on a mission to investigate about a stolen space weapon platform. Raphael Drake, who is an industrialist that takes on a job to disarm nuclear missiles, is suspected to secretly using them to start a nuclear holocaust.
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Danny Bilson
    Paul De Meo
    Ian Fleming ... (characters)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Maxwell Caulfield ... James Bond (voice)
    Samantha Eggar ... M (voice)
    Kimberley Davies ... Alura McCall (voice)
    Michael Ensign ... Drake (voice)
    Ian Abercrombie ... Alexander Mayhew (voice)
    Tamlyn Tomita ... Makiko Hayashi (voice)
    Lena Reno ... Dominique Paradis (voice)
    Kai Wulff ... Austrian Guards / Party Guests (voice)
    Gregg Berger ... Q (voice)
    Jeanne Mori ... Zoe Nightshade (voice)
    Richard Whiten ... Armitage Rook (voice)
    Gustavo Rex ... Truck Driver / Additional Voices (voice)
    Yoshio Be ... Security Guard (voice)
    Jean Gilpin ... Civilians (voice)
    Vanessa Marshall ... Car Computer (voice)
    J. Grant Albrecht ... Power Plant Guards (voice) (as Grant Alberecht)
    Hiroshi Otaguro ... Yakuza Soldiers (voice) (as Hiroshi Taguro)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Masa Kanome ... Yakuza (voice)

    Produced by
    Scott Blackwood ... producer
    Ken Rogers ... associate producer
    Music by
    Lars Anderson
    Ed Lima
    Jeff Tymoschuk
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    James Bond 007 - Nightfire Trailer


    Nightfire - Theme Song | Esthero - Nearly Civilized
    2008: Quantum of Solace released in Australia, Peru, and South Africa.

    2013: BBC reports "Bond villain Blofeld could return to Bond."
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    Bond villain Blofeld could return to Bond
    https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-24999407
    19 November 2013
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    Charles Gray played Blofeld in Diamonds are Forever
    Famous Bond villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld could appear in future 007 films now that a long-running legal dispute has been settled.

    Kevin McClory, who came up with the story for Thunderball with Ian Fleming, had been locked in a battle over Bond rights since 1959.

    McClory, and later his estate, asserted he had created the Blofeld character.

    Now film studio MGM and Bond film company Danjaq have acquired all the rights from McClory's estate.

    A joint statement from the three parties involved said the deal brought "to an amicable conclusion the legal and business disputes that have arisen periodically over 50 years".

    The agreement means that Bond producers are clear to use the Blofeld character again if they wish.
    Dispute
    Blofeld's face was often concealed in the films as the camera focused on him stroking his white cat.

    The character has appeared in six official Bond films - From Russia with Love (1963), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967), On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), Diamonds Are Forever (1971) and For Your Eyes Only (1981), as well as McClory's Never Say Never Again (1983).

    He has been played by Donald Pleasence, Telly Savalas, Charles Gray and Max von Sydow.

    The dispute began when McClory worked on the script for Thunderball, which first introduced the character of Blofeld.

    It was then used by Fleming to form the basis for his novel of the same name.

    But McClory and another scriptwriter, Jack Whittingham, were unaware the novel was being published and were not credited.

    This led them to sue Fleming successfully in 1963.
    Connery's return
    McClory, who died in 2006, produced the movie of Thunderball in 1965.

    But the dispute raised its head again in the 1970s, when McClory wanted to make another Bond film - he won the right to do so in court and the result was his 1983 movie Never Say Never Again.

    He brought back Sean Connery as agent 007 after a 12-year hiatus, and the film was again based on the Thunderball novel.

    However the movie has never been welcomed into the official Bond canon.

    McClory lost another legal case in 2001 over the rights to the James Bond film character.

    A federal appeals court in San Francisco dismissed his case, saying McClory had waited too long to make a claim.

    The next Bond film, starring Daniel Craig and directed by Sam Mendes, is due for release in 2015.
    2015: With Spectre, Bond has stolen kisses in India.
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    Pay attention 007: In India, you can kill - but
    don't kiss
    By Shilpa Jamkhandikar

    Actors Lea Seydoux, Daniel Craig and Monica Bellucci (L-R) pose for photographers on the red carpet at the French premiere of the new James Bond 007 film "Spectre" in Paris, France, October 29, 2015. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

    MUMBAI (Reuters) - If the Indian censors have their way, James Bond can make liberal use of his licence to kill. But he’ll have to cut back on the kissing - by exactly half.

    The latest installment of the 007 franchise, “Spectre”, will be released on Friday with heavy cuts after censors deemed the romantic encounters between Daniel Craig, and co-stars Monica Belluci and Lea Seydoux, inappropriate for the viewing public.

    “The committee which was to certify the film thought some of the kissing scenes were too long,” said a source familiar with the application to the censors, who asked Sony Pictures cut the kissing scenes by 50 percent.

    “The studio either had the choice to accept the cuts or apply for an A certificate, which significantly cuts down reach and exhibition.”

    The Censor Board is controlled by India’s nationalist government and has turned a disapproving eye on films with steamy sex scenes.

    It is currently headed by Pahlaj Nihalani, a Bollywood producer who made a campaign video for Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year, and released another promotional video for him last week.

    Its ruling has been panned by critics on social media, who accuse it of serving the government’s conservative moral agenda, stifling freedom of expression. Nihalani could not be reached for comment.

    Under Indian law, films with an A - or adult - certificate can’t be shown on TV. India still accounts for a fraction of Hollywood’s revenues, but franchises like James Bond and the Avengers can beat Bollywood’s own productions at the box office.

    “50 Shades of Grey”, the film based on E.L. James’s erotic novel, was never released in India even after the studio cut every sex scene. The board rejected it on the basis that the language used in the film was inappropriate.

    Editing by Douglas Busvine and Sanjeev Miglani
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    2020: IO Interactive announces Project 007 in development.
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    Project 007: Everything we
    know about the first new
    Bond game in 8 years
    "I must be dreaming."
    Danny Paez | 11.19.2020 4:15 PM

    Hitman developer IO Interactive revealed November 19, 2020 that it's developing a new game starring the unmistakable British spy, James Bond, with the working title Project 007.

    The upcoming title will be completely outside of the Hitman universe and IO Interactive is collaborating with film production entities EON Productions and MGM. It will be the first James Bond video game to be released since Activision's poorly-received 2012 launch of 007 Legends, which ultimately lost the publisher the 007 license months after its launch. That's how bad the game was. But IO Interactive will seemingly breathe new life into the franchise in the world of gaming.

    James Bond games have a bit of a tainted history outside of the universally loved GoldenEye Nintendo 64 game, but IO Interactive's 20 years of experience developing the stealth franchise Hitman seems to lend itself well towards creating a game about everyone's favorite superspy. CEO of IO Interactive Hakan Abrak even went as far as saying that it will be the studio's most monumental undertaking to date.

    "Our passionate team is excited to unleash their creativity into the iconic James Bond universe and craft the most ambitious game in the history of our studio," he states in a press release.

    The Project 007 announcement comes only few months after IO Interactive teased the January 20, 2021 release of Hitman 3. Once that's hit consoles and PCs the studio should be able to dedicate a majority of its resources to bringing James Bond to life on next-generation consoles.
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    It's unclear if Daniel Craig will play James Bond in 'Project 007.'
    PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/AFP/Getty Images
    When is the Project 007
    release date?
    IO Interactive did not announce when Project 007 will be released, but it did confirm that the title is in "active development."

    The developer is wrapping production on Hitman 3 so even a 2021 release date would seem too ambitious. Expect a 2022 launch at the earliest, unless IO Interactive and its partners have been secretly working on the title in tandem with Hitman 3. But we'll need to wait for an update from the studio to be sure.
    Is there a Project 007 trailer?
    Yes, IO Interactive published a brief teaser trailer for Project 007 on November 19 that plays out like every James Bond intro sequence before it.
    Will Project 007 be released on current- or next-gen consoles?
    IO Interactive stated that "will be made for modern systems and platforms," which presumably refers to the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC. But this nonspecific statement could mean it'll come to other consoles.

    Hitman 3 is being released on the PS5 and Xbox Series X/S, as well as the PS4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, and PC. Seeing as Project 007 doesn't even have a release date yet, it might come out when the PS4 and Xbox One are seen as completely outdated, so it might skip those platforms depending on when it launches.
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    IO Interactive's experience with the 'Hitman' franchise could prove to be the secret
    ingredient to make 'Project 007' shine. IO Interactive
    What is the Project 007 story?
    Project 007 will tell the story about what made James Bond into the espionage expert action movie fans have been obsessing over for decades.

    The upcoming title's press release described the game as "the very first James Bond origin story" that "will feature a wholly original Bond story exclusively as a video game."
    When will we find out more about Project 007?

    IO Interactive didn't specific when it will have more to say about Project 007. Inverse suspects it'll be after the release of Hitman 3, but interested gamers can head to the game's website to sign up for email notifications for the latest information.
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    'GoldenEye 007' is by and large the most acclaimed James Bond game to be released.
    Rare / Nintendo
    What other James Bond games have
    been released?
    Bond has over three decades of video game appearances, including the 8-bit James Bond 007, the critically acclaimed GoldenEye 007 on Nintendo's N64, and most-recent 007 Legends on PS3 and Xbox 360.

    The spy's licensing has been passed around to heavy-weight publishers throughout the years. Nintendo held it during the 1990s, Electronics Arts took over in the early 2000s, and Activision had it between 2006 and 2013.

    The more modern releases have fallen out of favor with gamers but IO Interactive has the chance to have the international spy make a comeback.
    Project 007 is in active development.


  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 20th

    1926: John Edmund Gardner is born--Seaton Delaval, Northumberland, England.
    (He dies 3 August 2007 at age 80--Basingstoke, Hampshire, England.)
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    John Gardner
    Prolific thriller writer behind the revival of James Bond and Professor Moriarty
    https://www.theguardian.com/news/2007/nov/02/guardianobituaries.booksobituaries
    Mike Ripley - 3 Nov 2007 19.53 EDT
    John Gardner, who has died aged 80, was the consummate thriller writer, producing[ more than 50 novels. But he owed his reputation to James Bond. His early success came with send-ups of the Bond genre, and he was to find greater fame, if not satisfaction, in reinventing Agent 007 almost 20 years after the death of the secret agent's creator, Ian Fleming.
    Born in Seaton Delaval, then in Northumberland, Gardner was the only child of an Anglican priest - the family moved south when his father became chaplain at St Mary's, Wantage, Berkshire, where Gardner attended King Alfred's school. During the second world war, he joined the Home Guard aged only 14. He then served in the Fleet Air Arm in 1944 and the Royal Marine commandos in the Middle and Far East. After the war, he read theology at St John's College, Cambridge, and entered the Anglican priesthood, but after five years and a crisis of faith, he turned to journalism as drama critic of the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald, and to drink.

    By the age of 33, he realised that his intake of gin qualified him as an alcoholic. As part of his therapy, he wrote Spin the Bottle (1963), a memoir about his relationship with alcohol. He claimed never to have touched booze since 1959, and the memoir - his only non-fiction book - launched him on a writing career.
    Gardner's first novel, The Liquidator, a spoof of the Bond books, was published in 1964, the year of Fleming's death. The anti-hero, Boysie Oakes, had one drawback as a licensed-to-kill man of action: he was a coward who hated violence and sub-contracted parts of his missions to an assassin.

    The book was filmed by Jack Cardiff, with Rod Taylor in the Oakes role and Eric Sykes as the hit man. Gardner was unimpressed with the result, but he was far less complimentary about Michael Winner's 1973 film The Stone Killer, starring Charles Bronson, adapted from his novel, A Complete State of Death (not one of the Oakes series), which he wrote in 1969 under the pen name Derek Torry.

    Seven more Oakes books followed, including Amber Nine (1966), in which the villain turned out to be Hitler's long-lost daughter. By 1974, though, Gardner was ready for a change and launched a new series based on the diaries of Professor James Moriarty, the nemesis of Sherlock Holmes. He intended a trilogy, but after the appearance of The Return of Moriarty (1974) and The Revenge of Moriarty (1975), he could not agree a publishing deal for a third book, and, in any case, Bond was about to intervene once more.

    While living in tax exile in Ireland, Gardner was approached by crime novelist and president of the Detection Club Harry Keating, on behalf of the Fleming estate. The proposition was to reinvent the Bond books for the late 1970s. Gardner, by now the author of 17 novels and two collections of short stories, was at first reluctant to commit. But in the end he convinced himself he could "round out" the character.

    Licence Renewed (1976) was the first in a franchise which lasted 20 years. There was a media frenzy at the return to the page of a more politically correct Bond - and an outcry that 007 was now driving a Saab 900 Turbo.

    Although they brought him wealth and a worldwide audience, Gardner never seemed comfortable with the Bond franchise, though he remained proud of one title, The Man From Barbarossa. Within three years, he had launched a series of five much grittier, hardboiled espionage thrillers, starting with The Nostradamus Traitor (1979) starring "Big" Herbie Kruger, a character shaped by the second world war - as Gardner had been.

    Gardner wrote more Bond books than Fleming - a total of 16, two based on the films Licensed [sic] to Kill (1989) and GoldenEye (1995) - but in the same period, he also produced the Kruger books, another trilogy of spy stories and six stand-alone thrillers.

    Gardner moved to America in 1989, but ill-health forced him to relinquish the Bond franchise to Raymond Benson in 1996. Medical bills for treating cancer of the oesophagus forced his return to England in reduced circumstances, only to suffer further when his wife of more than 40 years, Margaret, died suddenly the following year.
    Now living quietly in an almshouse in Basingstoke, he turned to his own memories of wartime Britain for his final series of thrillers, featuring Detective Sergeant Suzie Mountford. The first, Bottled Spider, was published in 2002. The leading character was based on Gardner's youthful romance with a nurse named Patricia Mountford, who, some 50 years after their last meeting, contacted him after reading about her namesake. The couple enjoyed a romantic reunion.

    In the field of espionage fiction, Gardner lacked the intellectual complexities of John le Carré or the stylistic innovations of Len Deighton or Anthony Price, but he was a prolific and reliable deliverer to a thrill-seeking audience. Harsher critics have suggested he fed off the creations of others. He always knew that Bond would overshadow everything, and longed to be remembered as more than the man who brought back 007. In that, despite 52 novels, he probably failed.

    The fifth Suzie Mountford book, No Human Enemy, has just been published. The third Moriarty book, The Redemption of Moriarty, completed shortly before Gardner's death, will be published posthumously. He is survived by the son and daughter of his marriage, Simon and Alexis; Miranda, the daughter of his relationship with Susan Wright; and Patricia Mountford, to whom he was engaged.

    · John Edmund Gardner, writer, born November 20 1926; died August 3 2007
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    John Gardner (British Writer)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gardner_(British_writer)

    Works
    Autobiography

    Spin the Bottle (1964)

    Boysie Oakes novels

    The Liquidator (1964)
    Understrike (1965)
    Amber Nine (1966)
    Madrigal (1967)
    Founder Member (1969)
    Traitor's Exit (1970)
    The Airline Pirates (1970) - published in the US as Air Apparent
    A Killer for a Song (1975)

    Two Boysie Oakes short stories appear in The Assassination File (A Handful of Rice, Corkscrew).
    Two Boysie Oakes short stories appear in Hideaway (Boysie Oakes and The Explosive Device, Sunset At Paleokastritsa).

    Derek Torry novels

    A Complete State of Death (1969) - reissued in the US as The Stone Killer
    The Corner Men (1974)

    Professor Moriarty novels

    The Return of Moriarty (1974)
    The Revenge of Moriarty (1975)
    Moriarty (2008)

    Herbie Kruger novels

    The Nostradamus Traitor (1979)
    The Garden of Weapons (1980)
    The Quiet Dogs (1982)
    Maestro (1993)
    Confessor (1995)

    Herbie Kruger also appears in The Secret Houses and The Secret Families.

    The Railton family novels

    The Secret Generations (1985)
    The Secret Houses (1988)
    The Secret Families (1989)

    James Bond novels

    Licence Renewed (1981)
    For Special Services (1982)
    Icebreaker (1983)
    Role of Honour (1984)
    Nobody Lives for Ever (1986)
    No Deals, Mr. Bond (1987)
    Scorpius (1988)
    Win, Lose or Die (1989)
    Licence to Kill (1989) – novelization of a film script
    Brokenclaw (1990)
    The Man from Barbarossa (1991)
    Death is Forever (1992)
    Never Send Flowers (1993)
    SeaFire (1994)
    GoldenEye (1995) – novelization of a film script
    Cold (1996) – published in the US as Cold Fall


    Detective Sergeant Suzie Mountford novels

    Bottled Spider (2002)
    The Streets of Town (2003)
    Angels Dining at the Ritz (2004)
    Troubled Midnight (2005)
    No Human Enemy (2007)

    Other novels

    The Censor (1970)
    Every Night's a Bullfight (1971) (Published in the US in a bowdlerized edition as Every Night's a Festival in 1972.)
    To Run a Little Faster (1976)
    The Werewolf Trace (1977)
    The Dancing Dodo (1978)
    Golgotha (1980) - (Published in the US as The Last Trump)
    The Director (1982) (A re-working of his 1971 novel Every Night's a Bullfight.)
    Flamingo (1983)
    Blood of the Fathers (1992) (as by "Edmund McCoy". Later published under his own name in 2004.)
    Day of Absolution (2000)

    Short story collections

    Hideaway (1968) (Contains two Boysie Oakes stories.)
    The Assassination File (1974) (Contains two Boysie Oakes stories.)
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    1930: Bernard Horsfall is born--Bishop's Stortford, Herfordshire England.
    (He dies 28 January 2013 at age 82--Isle of Skye, Scotland.)
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    Bernard Horsfall obituary
    Imposing stage and screen actor whose work ranged from
    Shakespeare to The Bill
    https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2013/jan/30/bernard-horsfall
    Michael Coveney | Wed 30 Jan 2013 13.14 EST
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    Bernard Horsfall in The Merry Widow, a 1981 episode of the ITV show, Crown Court.
    Photograph: ITV/Rex Features
    The character actor Bernard Horsfall, who has died aged 82, appeared in television, films and on the stage for more than half a century. Tall, imposing and authoritative, he appeared in many of the major television series from Z Cars and Dr Finlay's Casebook to Casualty and The Bill, and in Doctor Who took no fewer than four roles.

    In 1968 he played Lemuel Gulliver in The Mind Robber, where he was encountered by Patrick Troughton, the second Doctor, in the Land of Fiction. The following year he returned as a Time Lord in The War Games. In 1973, with Jon Pertwee now donning the time-traveller's cape, he played the Thal chieftain, Taron, in the six-part Planet of the Daleks. And finally, he was another Time Lord, Chancellor Goth, in the 1976 story The Deadly Assassin, famously battling with Tom Baker's Doctor inside the Matrix and holding him under water. This sequence drew complaints from the campaigner Mary Whitehouse, and was edited out of the repeat showings.
    His many film roles included Campbell in the sixth James Bond movie, On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), starring George Lazenby, and General Edgar in Richard Attenborough's Gandhi (1982) with Ben Kingsley. He had an extensive, distinguished stage career, too, playing the Ghost to Richard Burton's Hamlet at the Old Vic in 1953 and the Player King to Roger Rees's with the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1984, first in a series of prominent roles with the company in Stratford-upon-Avon and London in the late 1980s.
    Horsfall was born in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire, and always claimed he was a 25th-generation descendant of William the Conqueror. The son of an opera singer, Margaret Horsfall, nee Norton, and her RAF officer husband, Charles, Bernard grew up in Hindhead, Surrey, and Wisborough Green, West Sussex. Always drawn to the outdoor , adventurous life, he left Rugby school early to visit his favourite uncle, Jack Norton, in Canada, and took a job cutting down trees. Jack had been a first world war pilot, flown with TE Lawrence in Palestine and had run the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.

    Returning to London, Bernard trained as an actor at the Webber Douglas Academy and was soon in rep, at Dundee in 1952, at the Old Vic, the old Nottingham Playhouse in the mid-1950s (in a company that included Graham Crowden, Joan Plowright and Denis Quilley) and at the Birmingham Rep under John Harrison at the end of the 60s.

    He met and married the actor Jane Jordan Rogers while she was appearing at the Bristol Old Vic, and made his mark in movies such as The Steel Bayonet (1957), a second world war adventure featuring an unknown Michael Caine, and Guy Green's The Angry Silence (1960) in which Attenborough played a strike-breaker. His notable television work after Doctor Who included a performance as Melford Stevenson, QC, in a documentary drama about Ruth Ellis, the last woman hanged in Britain. Later well-known as a judge, Stevenson was the barrister who defended Ellis. He had a leading role as the doctor, Philip Martel, in the highly successful Channel Islands wartime drama, Enemy at the Door (1978-80).

    At the RSC in 1984, Horsfall was part of a great season that, in addition to Rees's Hamlet, included Kenneth Branagh as Henry V (Horsfall played a wonderful ageing hooligan of a Pistol) and Antony Sher as a speedy, spidery Richard III. He also appeared in Pam Gems's Camille, with Frances Barber, when Ron Daniels's RSC production transferred to the Comedy Theatre, London, in 1985.

    Back at Stratford, he was, says the director Terry Hands, "the epitome of warmth" as a genuinely funny Old Shepherd (his young sidekick was Simon Russell Beale) in The Winter's Tale in 1987 with Jeremy Irons as Leontes, and he also played the title role in Cymbeline (in a red dressing gown) and a brutally authoritarian Capulet in the Romeo and Juliet of Mark Rylance and Georgia Slowe.

    This period coincided with a family move from London to the Isle of Skye, where Horsfall rambled over mountains and became a dedicated crofter, producing fruit and vegetables.

    His renown as a wise and generous actor led to him becoming a natural father figure in any company he joined. Jonathan Kent cast him as Ventidius in Dryden's All For Love at the Almeida in 1991, and he expertly discharged the great suicide speech; James Laurenson and Diana Rigg were Antony and Cleopatra. In 1993 at the Birmingham Rep, he was described as "scurrilous, lofty and urbane" as Volpone. His last major film was Mel Gibson's Braveheart in 1995, and in 1998 he played a witty and touching Sir Patrick Cullen in Michael Grandage's revival of Shaw's The Doctor's Dilemma at the Almeida and on a National Theatre tour.

    He was another dignified old shepherd, Corin (doubled with Hymen, god of marriage), in the revival by Grandage of As You Like It at the Sheffield Crucible in 2000 that propelled Victoria Hamilton into the front rank. Grandage said that the older Horsfall got, the younger his outlook; he was always keenly interested in environmental matters.

    He is survived by Jane; their daughters, Hannah, an occupational therapist, and Rebecca, a theatre director and novelist; five grandchildren; and a sister. His son, Christian, died last year.

    • Bernard Arthur Gordon Horsfall, actor, born 30 November 1930; died 28 January 2013
    • This article was amended on 7 February 2013. The original referred to the Doctor Who character Taron as a Thai chieftain. This has been corrected.
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    Bernard Horsfall (1930–2013)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0395420/

    Filmography
    Actor (109 credits)

    2008 Stone of Destiny - Archdeacon
    2005 Doctors (TV Series) - Joseph Bryan
    - Locked Away (2005) ... Joseph Bryan
    2000 Murder Rooms: Mysteries of the Real Sherlock Holmes (TV Mini-Series) - Crawford Senior
    - The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes: Part 1 (2000) ... Crawford Senior

    1995 Queen of the East (TV Movie) - Sir William Pitt
    1988-1995 Casualty (TV Series)
    Gerald Lassiter / Dr. Alex Upchurch, Coroner / Tom Baxter
    - When All Else Fails (1995) ... Gerald Lassiter
    - Judgement Day (1991) ... Dr. Alex Upchurch, Coroner
    - Welcome to Casualty (1988) ... Tom Baxter
    1995 Braveheart - Balliol
    1993 Seekers (TV Series) - Major Hurley
    - Episode #1.2 (1993) ... Major Hurley
    1992 Nice Town (TV Mini-Series) - Peter Dobson
    - Idyll (1992) ... Peter Dobson
    - Unto Us a Child Is Born (1992) ... Peter Dobson
    - Immaculate Conception (1992) ... Peter Dobson
    1992 Between the Lines (TV Series) - Ch. Const. Gordon
    - The Chill Factor (1992) ... Ch. Const. Gordon
    1992 Virtual Murder (TV Series) - Professor Donn
    - A Torch for Silverado (1992) ... Professor Donn
    1992 The Advocates (TV Series) - Lord Thornhill
    - Episode #2.3 (1992) ... Lord Thornhill
    - Episode #2.2 (1992) ... Lord Thornhill
    - Episode #2.1 (1992) ... Lord Thornhill
    1991 Thatcher: The Final Days (TV Movie) - Alan Clark
    1991 For the Greater Good (TV Series) - Prime Minister
    - Minister (1991) ... Prime Minister
    1991 Poirot (TV Series) - Harrington Pace
    - The Mystery of Hunter's Lodge (1991) ... Harrington Pace

    1989 Chelworth (TV Mini-Series) - Albert Blackwell
    - You Can't Beat Mozart (1989) ... Albert Blackwell
    1989 The Bill (TV Series) - Dr. de Beyfus
    - Getting It Right (1989) ... Dr. de Beyfus
    1988 The Hound of the Baskervilles (TV Movie) - Frankland
    1986 First Among Equals (TV Mini-Series) - Sir Nigel Hartwell
    - Episode #1.5 (1986) ... Sir Nigel Hartwell
    - Episode #1.4 (1986) ... Sir Nigel Hartwell
    1984 Fox Mystery Theater (TV Series) - Doctor
    - A Distant Scream (1984) ... Doctor
    1984 Weekend Playhouse (TV Series) - Logan Mayhew
    - Grand Duo (1984) ... Logan Mayhew
    1984 Goodbye Days (TV Movie) - Armitage
    1984 Strangers and Brothers (TV Series) - Dr. Bradbury
    - Episode #1.13 (1984) ... Dr. Bradbury
    1984 The Jewel in the Crown (TV Mini-Series) - Major General Rankin
    - Regimental Silver (1984) ... Major General Rankin
    1982 Gandhi - General Edgar
    1982 Juliet Bravo (TV Series) - Jack Driscoll
    - A Breach of the Peace (1982) ... Jack Driscoll
    1982 Inside the Third Reich (TV Movie) - Fritz Todt
    1976-1982 Crown Court (TV Series) - Prosecuting Counsel / Mr. Baldwin
    - Face Value: Part 1 (1982) ... Prosecuting Counsel
    - The Merry Widow: Part 1 (1981)
    - Beyond the Call of Duty: Part 1 (1976) ... Mr. Baldwin
    1982 Badger by Owl-Light (TV Series) - Hardekker
    - Episode #1.3 (1982) ... Hardekker
    - Episode #1.2 (1982) ... Hardekker
    - Episode #1.1 (1982) ... Hardekker
    1982 Minder (TV Series) - Mr. Russel QC
    - Poetic Justice, Innit? (1982) ... Mr. Russel QC
    1981 Echoes of Louisa (TV Series) - Roger Burr
    - The Quarry (1981) ... Roger Burr
    - The Trip (1981) ... Roger Burr
    - The Ride (1981) ... Roger Burr
    - The Secret (1981) ... Roger Burr
    - The Meeting (1981) ... Roger Burr
    - The Homecoming (1981) ... Roger Burr
    1981 When the Boat Comes In (TV Series) - Rowse
    - Back to Dear Old Blighty (1981) ... Rowse
    1980 The Square Leopard (TV Series) - Det. Insp. Percival
    - Episode #1.4 (1980) ... Det. Insp. Percival
    1980 Ladykillers (TV Series) - Melford Stevenson, Q.C.
    - Lucky, Lucky Thirteen! (1980) ... Melford Stevenson, Q.C.
    1980 Turtle's Progress (TV Series) - Janos
    - Episode #2.4 (1980) ... Janos
    1978-1980 Enemy at the Door (TV Series) - Dr. Philip Martel / Dr. Philip Martell
    - Escape (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Education of Nils Borg (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - From a View to a Death (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Right Blood (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - War Game (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Jealousy (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Post Mortem (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Committee Man (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - No Quarter Given (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Angels That Soar Above (1980) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Judgement of Solomon (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Prussian Officer (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Pains and Penalties (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Treason (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Jerrybag (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - Officers of the Law (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Polish Affaire (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - V for Victory (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Laws and Usages of War (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martell
    - Steel Hand from the Sea (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - After the Ball (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - The Librarian (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel
    - By Order of the Fuhrer (1978) ... Dr. Philip Martel

    1978 Brass Target - Shelley
    1977 Jubilee (TV Series) - Mervyn Marsh
    - An Hour in the Life... (1977) ... Mervyn Marsh
    1977 Big Boy Now! (TV Series) - Alan Viner
    - Follow That Cat (1977) ... Alan Viner
    - Edgar's Other Woman (1977) ... Alan Viner
    - Supergirl (1977) ... Alan Viner
    - Ships with Everything (1977) ... Alan Viner
    - Poker Face (1977) ... Alan Viner
    1977 This Year Next Year (TV Mini-Series) - Lars Gunnerson
    - Profit and Loss (1977) ... Lars Gunnerson
    - Another Place (1977) ... Lars Gunnerson
    1976 Beasts (TV Series) - Clyde Boyd
    - The Dummy (1976) ... Clyde Boyd
    1968-1976 Doctor Who (TV Series)
    Taron / Chancellor Goth / Gulliver / ... 15 episodes
    - The Deadly Assassin: Part Four (1976) ... Chancellor Goth
    - The Deadly Assassin: Part Three (1976) ... Chancellor Goth
    - The Deadly Assassin: Part Two (1976) ... Chancellor Goth
    - The Deadly Assassin: Part One (1976) ... Chancellor Goth
    - Planet of the Daleks: Episode Six (1973) ... Taron
    1976 Within These Walls (TV Series) - Mr. Parrington
    - The Complaint (1976) ... Mr. Parrington
    1976 Whodunnit? (TV Series) - Mr. Wendell
    - Future Imperfect (1976) ... Mr. Wendell
    1976 John Macnab (TV Series) - John Palliser-Yeates
    - The Old Hero (1976) ... John Palliser-Yeates
    - The Return of Harold Blacktooth (1976) ... John Palliser-Yeates
    - Our Reputations at the Stake (1976) ... John Palliser-Yeates
    1976 Shout at the Devil - Captain Joyce
    1976 Red Letter Day (TV Series) - Nigel
    - The Five Pound Orange (1976) ... Nigel
    1975 The Hill of the Red Fox (TV Mini-Series) - Duncan Mor
    - Episode #1.6 (1975) ... Duncan Mor
    - Episode #1.5 (1975) ... Duncan Mor
    - Episode #1.4 (1975) ... Duncan Mor
    - Episode #1.3 (1975) ... Duncan Mor
    - Episode #1.2 (1975) ... Duncan Mor
    1975 The Changes (TV Mini-Series) - Mr. Gore
    - The Noise (1975) ... Mr. Gore
    1974 South Riding (TV Mini-Series) - David Brownlow
    - The Powers That Be (1974) ... David Brownlow
    1974 ITV Sunday Night Drama (TV Series) - Sweyn
    - The Ceremony of Innocence (1974) ... Sweyn
    1974 Gold - Dave Kowalski
    1974 Childhood (TV Series) - Dr. Braden
    - Easter Tells Such Dreadful Lies (1974) ... Dr. Braden
    1973 Freewheelers (TV Series) - Cunliffe
    - The Hoist (1973) ... Cunliffe
    - The Think Bank (1973) ... Cunliffe
    - Break-Up (1973) ... Cunliffe
    - Switched! (1973) ... Cunliffe
    - The Crypt! (1973) ... Cunliffe
    - Darkness at Noon (1973) ... Cunliffe
    1973 Harriet's Back in Town (TV Series) - Inspector Kelsey
    - Episode #1.76 (1973) ... Inspector Kelsey
    - Episode #1.75 (1973) ... Inspector Kelsey
    - Episode #1.74 (1973) ... Inspector Kelsey
    - Episode #1.73 (1973) ... Inspector Kelsey
    1972 Some Kind of Hero - George Crane
    1972 Doomwatch (TV Series) - Steven Granger
    - Sex and Violence (1972) ... Steven Granger
    1972 Crime of Passion (TV Series) - Det. Insp. Severin
    - Cecile (1972) ... Det. Insp. Severin
    1972 Love Story (TV Series) - Tony Walker
    - Never Too Late (1972) ... Tony Walker
    1971 The Persuaders! (TV Series) - Christianson
    - The Morning After (1971) ... Christianson
    1971 Suspicion (TV Series) - Klaus
    - Off Season (1971) ... Klaus
    1971 Mr. Horatio Knibbles - Mr. Bunting
    1971 Jackanory (TV Series) - Storyteller
    - The Sea Islanders: Part 5 - The Whole Truth (1971) ... Storyteller
    - The Sea Islanders: Part 4 - Friday's Decision (1971) ... Storyteller
    - The Sea Islanders: Part 3 - On the Beach (1971) ... Storyteller
    - The Sea Islanders: Part 2 - Penguin Island (1971) ... Storyteller
    - The Sea Islanders: Part 1 - The Far North Bus (1971) ... Storyteller
    1971 Quest for Love - Telford
    1971 Elizabeth R (TV Mini-Series) - Sir Christopher Hatton
    - Shadow in the Sun (1971) ... Sir Christopher Hatton
    1967-1970 Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) - Fidel Castro / Timekeeper
    - Revolutions: Fidel Castro (1970) ... Fidel Castro
    - The Timekeepers (1967) ... Timekeeper
    1970 Ivanhoe (TV Mini-Series) - Black Knight... 6 episodes
    - Saint Martin's Day (1970) ... Black Knight
    - Time of Trial (1970) ... Black Knight
    - Templestowe (1970) ... Black Knight
    - The Black Knight (1970) ... Black Knight
    - Condemned (1970) ... Black Knight
    -
    1969 Take Three Girls (TV Series) - Tony Fraser
    - Try Loving (1969) ... Tony Fraser
    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service - Campbell
    1969 Canterbury Tales (TV Series) - Arveragus
    - The Canon Yeoman's Tale/The Franklin's Tale (1969) ... Arveragus
    1969 Hadleigh (TV Series) - Charles Peters
    - M.Y.O.B (1969) ... Charles Peters
    - The Day of the Miuras (1969) ... Charles Peters
    1969 Department S (TV Series) - Captain Carter
    - Six Days (1969) ... Captain Carter
    - Six Days ... Captain Carter
    1969 Out of the Unknown (TV Series) - John Stewart
    - 1+1=1.5 (1969) ... John Stewart
    1969 Omnibus (TV Series documentary) - William Wordsworth
    - The Woman from the Shadows (1969) ... William Wordsworth
    1965-1968 The Avengers (TV Series)
    Captain Smythe / Fox / Jephcott
    - They Keep Killing Steed (1968) ... Captain Smythe
    - The Fear Merchants (1967) ... Fox
    - The Cybernauts (1965) ... Jephcott
    1968 Sanctuary (TV Series) - Father Carlo Frallini SJ
    - Diary and the Devil's Advocate (1968) ... Father Carlo Frallini SJ
    1968 Detective (TV Series) - Nigel Strangeways
    - The Beast Must Die (1968) ... Nigel Strangeways
    1968 Mogul (TV Series) - Peter
    - Give Me the Simple Life (1968) ... Peter
    1968 City '68 (TV Series) - Keith Lythgoe
    - The Jonah Site (1968) ... Keith Lythgoe
    1966-1967 Softly Softly (TV Series) - Gentleman John Cassidy / Jackson
    - The Bombay Doctor (1967) ... Gentleman John Cassidy
    - Barlow Was There: Part 1: Allegation (1966) ... Jackson
    1967 Dr. Finlay's Casebook (TV Series) - Adam Hadley
    - Criss-Cross (1967) ... Adam Hadley
    1958-1967 ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) - Dr. Ernst Bang / Sir Purback Temple / Valentine
    - ITV Summer Playhouse #8: One Fat Englishman (1967) ... Dr. Ernst Bang
    - The Killing of the King (1959) ... Sir Purback Temple
    - You Never Can Tell (1958) ... Valentine
    1957-1967 Armchair Theatre (TV Series) - Inspector / Interviewer
    - Any Number Can Play (1967) ... Inspector
    - The Last Flight (1957) ... Interviewer
    1967 Mrs Thursday (TV Series) - Norman Millett
    - The Old School Tie Up (1967) ... Norman Millett
    1967 The Saint (TV Series) - Bill Bast
    - The Death Game (1967) ... Bill Bast
    1966 Dixon of Dock Green (TV Series) - John Harris
    - The World of Silence (1966) ... John Harris
    1965 Theatre 625 (TV Series) - Palethorpe
    - The Minister (1965) ... Palethorpe
    1964 Guns at Batasi - Sgt. 'Schoolie' Prideaux
    1963 Maupassant (TV Series) - Harding
    - War (1963) ... Harding
    1963 Z Cars (TV Series) - Murdoch
    - The Bad Lad (1963) ... Murdoch
    1962 Harpers West One (TV Series) - Philip Nash
    - Episode #2.14 (1962) ... Philip Nash
    - Episode #2.8 (1962) ... Philip Nash
    - Episode #2.6 (1962) ... Philip Nash
    - Episode #2.3 (1962) ... Philip Nash
    - Episode #2.1 (1962) ... Philip Nash
    1962 Out of This World (TV Series) - Dr. Arthur Bailey
    - Divided We Fall (1962) ... Dr. Arthur Bailey
    1961 Family Solicitor (TV Series) - Francis Naylor
    - Test Case (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - House in Order (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Threats and Menaces (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Wage Snatch (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Slander (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Conflict of Laws (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Possession Order (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - First Eleven Plus (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Dangerous Driving (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Strike Action (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Cross Petition (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Man of Straw (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - Arson (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - The Case of the Dyed Hair (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    - The Meeting (1961) ... Francis Naylor
    1960 Pathfinders to Mars (TV Series) - Professor Hawkins
    - Sabotage in Space (1960) ... Professor Hawkins
    - The Imposter (1960) ... Professor Hawkins
    1960 Man in the Moon - Rex
    1960 Death of a Ghost (TV Series) - Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.6 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.5 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.4 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.3 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.2 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    - Episode #1.1 (1960) ... Albert Campion
    1960 Don't Do It Dempsey (TV Series) - Paul Gossett
    - Mothers' Help (1960) ... Paul Gossett
    1960 Captain Moonlight: Man of Mystery (TV Series) - Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.6 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.5 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.4 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.3 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.2 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    - Episode #1.1 (1960) ... Stephen Sycamore / Captain Moonlight
    1960 The Angry Silence - Pryce-Evans

    1959 Dancers in Mourning (TV Series) - Albert Campion
    - Part 6 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    - Part 5 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    - Part 4 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    - Part 3 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    - Part 2 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    - Part 1 (1959) ... Albert Campion
    1958-1959 BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV Series) - Philip Irwin / Frank Barrett
    - The Driving Force (1959) ... Philip Irwin
    - The Shadow of Doubt (1958) ... Frank Barrett
    1959 For Schools: Twelfth Night (TV Movie) - Sir Andrew Aguecheek
    1958 Cinderella (TV Movie) - Signor Benvenuto
    1958 Victory (TV Movie) - Captain Blackwood
    1958 The Riddle of the Red Wolf (TV Series) - Rompus
    - Poor Rufus! (1958) ... Rompus
    1957 The Critical Point (TV Movie) - Detective Sergeant Green
    1957 The One That Got Away - Lieutenant - Kent (uncredited)
    1957 High Flight - Radar Operator
    1957 Paradise Lagoon - Lifeboatman (uncredited)
    1957 The Steel Bayonet - Pvt. Livingstone
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    latest?cb=20110618130849

    1943: Mie Hama is born--Tokyo, Japan.

    1963: US President John F. Kennedy screens From Russia With Love at the White House.
    Then travels to Dallas, Texas.

    1983: Richard Loo dies at age 80--Los Angeles, California.
    (Born 1 October 1903--Maui, Hawaii.)
    1280px-NewYorkTimes.svg.png
    RICHARD LOO,
    ACTOR 5 DECADES
    Nov. 22, 1983

    Richard Loo, a Chinese-American actor best known for his many portrayals of Japanese villains in World War II movies, died in Los Angeles on Sunday night at the age of 80.

    Mr. Loo, who was born in Maui, Hawaii, appeared in nearly 150 films over the course of almost 50 years in the movie business. ''He was known as the man who died to make a living,'' said his daughter Beverly Jane Loo.

    ''He was always either stabbing himself or committing hara-kiri or kamikaze,'' she said. ''He always played the big honcho who was really going to make life tough for the Americans, the really nasty Japanese general or colonel who ended up killing himself as a point of honor because he never got the best of the Americans.''

    Among Mr. Loo's movies were ''The Purple Heart,'' ''God Is My Co-pilot,'' ''Story of Dr. Wessell,'' ''Keys of the Kingdom,'' ''The Good Earth,'' ''The Bitter Tea of General Yen,'' and ''Back to Bataan.''

    In later years, he frequently appeared on television, and was featured in the ''Kung Fu'' television series. He was also the subject of impersonation by others; during his own television heyday, Dick Cavett was fond of doing Richard Loo imitations, particularly a scene from ''Purple Heart'' in which Mr. Loo, as a Japanese general, interrogated American fliers shot down in a raid over Tokyo.

    According to Miss Loo, Mr. Loo did not mind the typecasting that dominated his career. ''He felt very patriotic about being in those movies,'' she said.
    Mr. Loo's last film was a 1974 James Bond movie called ''The Man With the Golden Gun,'' in which he played a Chinese capitalist who financed the villain.
    He is survived by his wife, Hope; two daughters, Beverly Jane, the head of Beverly Jane Loo Associates, a New York book publishing company, and Angela Levy of Los Angeles, and one grandchild. His former wife, Bessie Loo, served as his agent and maintains her own talent agency, Bessie S. Loo Associates, in Los Angeles.
    7879655.png?263
    Richard Loo (I) (1903–1983)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0519618/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Actor (172 credits)

    1981 The Incredible Hulk (TV Series) -Kam Chong
    - East Winds (1981) ... Kam Chong

    1977 The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries (TV Series) - Chen Lee
    - The Secret of the Jade Kwan Yin (1977) ... Chen Lee
    1977 Police Story (TV Series) - Eddie Lee
    - The Blue Fog (1977) ... Eddie Lee
    1976 The Quest (TV Series) - Dr. Li Po
    - Welcome to America, Jade Snow (1976) ... Dr. Li Po
    1976 Collision Course: Truman vs. MacArthur (TV Movie) - Chiang-Kai-Shek
    1974 The Man with the Golden Gun - Hai Fat
    1972-1974 Kung Fu (TV Series) - Master Sun / Ho Fai, The Weapons Master / Wu Chang / ...
    - Besieged: Cannon at the Gates (1974) ... Master Sun
    - The Devil's Champion (1974) ... Ho Fai, The Weapons Master
    - Arrogant Dragon (1974) ... Wu Chang
    - The Tong (1973) ... Chen
    - Blood Brother (1973) ... Master Sun
    1974 Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law (TV Series) - Tanaka
    - The Attacker (1974) ... Tanaka
    1973 McCloud (TV Series) - Y.S. Chen
    - The Solid Gold Swingers (1973) ... Y.S. Chen (uncredited)
    1973 Ironside (TV Series) - Lin Chu Tai
    - In the Forests of the Night (1973) ... Lin Chu Tai
    1972 The Delphi Bureau (TV Series) - Shen Si
    - The Deadly Little Errand (1972) ... Shen Si
    1972 The Sixth Sense (TV Series) - Matsuo
    - With This Ring, I Thee Kill! (1972) ... Matsuo
    1971 Chandler - Leo
    1971 One More Train to Rob - Mr. Chang
    1970 Which Way to the Front? - Japanese Naval Officer (uncredited)
    1970 One More Time (uncredited)
    1968-1970 It Takes a Thief (TV Series) - Wong / Dr. Langpoor / Clown
    - Project "X" (1970) ... Wong
    - Payoff in the Piazza (1969) ... Dr. Langpoor
    - A Case of Red Turnips (1968) ... Clown
    1970 Bewitched (TV Series) - Mr. Tanaka
    - Samantha's Better Halves (1970) ... Mr. Tanaka

    1969 Here Come the Brides (TV Series) - Chi Pei
    - Marriage, Chinese Style (1969) ... Chi Pei
    1969 Marcus Welby, M.D. (TV Series) - Kenji Yamashita
    - A Matter of Humanities (1969) ... Kenji Yamashita
    1968 Hawaii Five-O (TV Series) - Wong Tou
    - Twenty-Four Karat Kill (1968) ... Wong Tou
    1967 My Three Sons (TV Series) - Mr. Chang
    - Weekend in Paradise (1967) ... Mr. Chang
    1967 Family Affair (TV Series) - Mr. Chen
    - The Mother Tongue (1967) ... Mr. Chen
    1966 The Sand Pebbles - Major Chin
    1966 The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (TV Series) - Dr. Yahama
    - The Indian Affairs Affair (1966) ... Dr. Yahama
    1966 I Dream of Jeannie (TV Series) - Wong
    - Jeannie and the Kidnap Caper (1966) ... Wong
    1966 The Wild Wild West (TV Series) - Wang Chung
    - The Night the Dragon Screamed (1966) ... Wang Chung
    1966 The Wackiest Ship in the Army (TV Series) - Admiral Osuma
    - The Lamb Who Hunted Wolves: Part 2 (1966) ... Admiral Osuma
    - The Lamb Who Hunted Wolves: Part 1 (1966) ... Admiral Osuma
    1965 Burke's Law (TV Series) - Grass Slipper
    - Deadlier Than the Male (1965) ... Grass Slipper
    1965 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV Series) - Li Tung
    - Time Bomb (1965) ... Li Tung
    1965 Honey West (TV Series) - Tog - Chinese Fine Arts Thief
    - The Owl and the Eye (1965) ... Tog - Chinese Fine Arts Thief
    1965 I Spy (TV Series) - Mr. Tsung
    - So Long, Patrick Henry (1965) ... Mr. Tsung
    1963 Perry Mason (TV Series) - Mr. Eng
    - The Case of the Floating Stones (1963) ... Mr. Eng
    1963 Wagon Train (TV Series) - Liu Yang
    - The Widow O'Rourke Story (1963) ... Liu Yang
    1963 The Outer Limits (TV Series) - Li-Chin Sung
    - The Hundred Days of the Dragon (1963) ... Li-Chin Sung
    1963 The Dakotas (TV Series) - George Yang
    - The Chooser of the Slain (1963) ... George Yang
    1963 Hawaiian Eye (TV Series) - C.K. Yang
    - Two Too Many (1963) ... C.K. Yang
    1962 The Red Uncle (Short)
    1962 A Girl Named Tamiko - Otani
    1962 Diamond Head - Yamagata (uncredited)
    1962 Sam Benedict (TV Series) - Andrew Ling
    - So Various, So Beautiful (1962) ... Andrew Ling
    1962 Confessions of an Opium Eater - George Wah
    1962 The Beachcomber (TV Series) - Ah Wei
    - Charlie Six Kids (1962) ... Ah Wei
    1961 Espionage: Far East
    1961 Bonanza (TV Series) - General Mu Tsung
    - Day of the Dragon (1961) ... General Mu Tsung
    1961 7 Women from Hell - Sgt. Takahashi
    1961 Follow the Sun (TV Series) - District Attorney
    - The Woman Who Never Was (1961) ... District Attorney
    1961 Maverick (TV Series) - Lee Hong Chang
    - The Golden Fleecing (1961) ... Lee Hong Chang
    1960-1961 Hong Kong (TV Series) - Chung / Low
    - Suitable for Framing (1961) ... Chung
    - The Jade Empress (1960) ... Low

    1959 The Scavengers
    1958 Hong Kong Affair - Li Noon
    1958 The Quiet American - Mr. Heng
    1958 Tombstone Territory (TV Series) - Quong Key
    - Tong War (1958) ... Quong Key
    1957 Battle Hymn - Gen. Kim (scenes deleted)
    1956 Around the World in 80 Days - Hong Kong Saloon Manager (uncredited)
    1955-1956 TV Reader's Digest (TV Series) - Lew Gar Mun / Officer
    - The Smuggler (1956) ... Lew Gar Mun
    - The Brainwashing of John Hayes (1955) ... Officer
    1954-1956 Cavalcade of America (TV Series) - Ho Chung
    - Diplomatic Outpost (1956) ... Ho Chung
    - Ordeal in Burma (1954)
    1956 Four Star Playhouse (TV Series) - Jo-Kai
    - Wall of Bamboo (1956) ... Jo-Kai
    1956 The Man Called X (TV Series) -
    - Assassination (1956)
    1956 The Conqueror - Captain of Wang's Guard
    1956 Crossroads (TV Series) - Colonel
    - Calvary in China (1956) ... Colonel
    1956 Navy Log (TV Series) - General Hashimoto
    - Dr. Van (1956) ... General Hashimoto
    1955 Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing - Robert Hung
    1955 House of Bamboo - Inspector Kito's Voice (voice, uncredited)
    1955 Soldier of Fortune - Gen. Po Lin
    1954 The Bamboo Prison - Commandant Hsai Tung
    1954 My Little Margie (TV Series) - Mr. Tang
    - San Francisco Story (1954) ... Mr. Tang
    1954 December Bride (TV Series)
    - The Chinese Dinner (1954)
    1954 The Shanghai Story - Junior Officer
    1954 Living It Up - Dr. Lee
    1954 Hell and High Water - Hakada Fujimori
    1953 China Venture -0 Chang Sung
    1953 Fireside Theatre (TV Series) - Major Chang
    - The Traitor (1953) ... Major Chang
    - I Cover Korea (1953)
    1953 Summer Theatre (TV Series)
    - Foo Young (1953)
    1953 Mr. & Mrs. North (TV Series) - John Wing
    - Jade Dragon (1953) ... John Wing
    1953 Destination Gobi - Commanding Officer, Japanese POW Camp (uncredited)
    1953 Target Hong Kong - Fu Chao
    1952 5 Fingers - Japanese Ambassador (uncredited)
    1951 I Was an American Spy - Col. Masamato
    1951 Operation Pacific - Japanese Fighter Pilot (uncredited)
    1951 Chinatown Chump (Short) - Chinese Counterfeiter
    1951 The Steel Helmet - Sgt. Tanaka

    1949 Malaya - Colonel Genichi Tomura
    1949 The Clay Pigeon - Ken Tokoyama - aka The Weasel
    1949 State Department: File 649 - Marshal Yun Usu
    1948 Rogues' Regiment - Kao Pang
    1948 The Golden Eye - Undetermined Secondary Role (scenes deleted)
    1948 The Cobra Strikes - Hyder Ali
    1948 Half Past Midnight - Lee Gow
    1948 To the Ends of the Earth - Commissioner Lu (uncredited)
    1948 Women in the Night - Col. Noyama
    1947 Beyond Our Own - James Wong
    1947 Web of Danger - Wing
    1947 Seven Were Saved - Colonel Yamura
    1947 The Beginning or the End - Japanese Officer (uncredited)
    1946 Tokyo Rose - Colonel Suzuki
    1945 Prison Ship - Capt. Osikawa
    1945 First Yank Into Tokyo - Col. Hideko Okanura
    1945 Back to Bataan - Maj. Hasko
    1945 China's Little Devils - Colonel Huraji
    1945 China Sky - Col. Yasuda
    1945 God Is My Co-Pilot - Tokyo Joe
    1945 Betrayal from the East - Lt. Cmdr. Miyazaki, alias Tani
    1944 The Keys of the Kingdom - Lt. Shon
    1944 The Story of Dr. Wassell - Chinese Doctor on Train (uncredited)
    1944 The Purple Heart - General Ito Mitsubi
    1943 Rookies in Burma - Colonel Matsuda (uncredited)
    1943 Jack London - Japanese Ambassador (uncredited)
    1943 So Proudly We Hail! - Japanese Radio Announcer (voice, uncredited)
    1943 Destroyer - Japanese Submarine Commander (uncredited)
    1943 Behind the Rising Sun - Japanese Officer Dispensing Opium (uncredited)
    1943 Yanks Ahoy - Japanese Submarine Officer (uncredited)
    1943 China - Lin Yun
    1943 The Falcon Strikes Back - Jerry
    1943 The Amazing Mrs. Holliday - General Chan (uncredited)
    1943 Flight for Freedom - Mr. Yokahata (uncredited)
    1943 City Without Men - Japanese Spy (uncredited)
    1942 Star Spangled Rhythm - Emperor Hirohito - 'Sweater, Sarong & Peekaboo Bang' Number (uncredited)
    1942 Road to Morocco - Chinese Announcer (uncredited)
    1942 Flying Tigers - Dr. Tsing (uncredited)
    1942 Manila Calling - Filipino (uncredited)
    1942 Across the Pacific - First Officer Miyuma
    1942 Wake Island - Mr. Saburo Kurusu (uncredited)
    1942 Little Tokyo, U.S.A. - Oshima
    1942 Bombs Over Burma - Japanese Colonel
    1942 Submarine Raider - Chauffeur Suji (uncredited)
    1942 Remember Pearl Harbor - Mandolin-Playing Japanese Radioman (uncredited)
    1942 A Yank on the Burma Road - Commandant (uncredited)
    1941 Secret of the Wastelands - Quan
    1941 They Met in Bombay - Japanese Officer (uncredited)
    1941 Ellery Queen's Penthouse Mystery - Henchman (uncredited)
    1940 Doomed to Die - Tong Leader
    1940 The Fatal Hour - Jeweler

    1939 Barricade - Colonel Commander of Rescue Party (uncredited)
    1939 Daughter of the Tong - Wong - Hotel Clerk
    1939 Island of Lost Men - Gen. Ahn Ling
    1939 Lady of the Tropics - Delaroch's Chauffeur (uncredited)
    1939 Miracles for Sale - Chinese Soldier in Demo (uncredited)
    1939 Mr. Wong in Chinatown - Tong Chief
    1939 Panama Patrol - Tommy Young
    1939 Torchy Blane in Chinatown - Masked Chinese Hood (uncredited)
    1939 North of Shanghai - Jed's Pilot
    1938 Shadows Over Shanghai - Fong
    1938 Too Hot to Handle - Charlie (uncredited)
    1938 Blondes at Work - Sam Wong (uncredited)
    1937 Thank You, Mr. Moto - Cop at Shooting Site (uncredited)
    1937 West of Shanghai - Mr. Cheng
    1937 That Certain Woman - Elevator Operator (uncredited)
    1937 Outlaws of the Orient - The General (uncredited)
    1937 The Singing Marine - Shanghai Hotel Official (uncredited)
    1937 The Soldier and the Lady - Tartar (uncredited)
    1937 China Passage - Lia Sen's Husband (voice, uncredited)
    1937 Lost Horizon - Shanghai Airport Official (uncredited)
    1937 The Good Earth - Chinese Farmer (uncredited)
    1936 After the Thin Man - Lichee Club Headwaiter (uncredited)
    1936 Stowaway - Chinese Merchant (uncredited)
    1936 Mad Holiday - Li Yat (uncredited)
    1936/II Shadow of Chinatown - Chinese Man on Street (uncredited)
    1936/I Shadow of Chinatown - Loo, Chinese Man on Street [Chs. 5-7] (uncredited)
    1936 Roaming Lady - Chinese Seaman (uncredited)
    1935 China Seas - Chinese Inspector at Gangplank (uncredited)
    1935 Captured in Chinatown - Ling Hatchet Man (uncredited)
    1935 Shadows of the Orient - Yung Yow - Chinese Henchman (uncredited)
    1935 Stranded - Chinese Groom (uncredited)
    1934 The Mysterious Mr. Wong - Bystander Outside Store (uncredited)
    1934 Limehouse Blues - Customer at Harry Young's (uncredited)
    1934 The Painted Veil - Chinese Peasant (uncredited)
    1934 Student Tour - Geisha's Customer (uncredited)
    1934 Now and Forever - Hotel Clerk (uncredited)
    1932 The Bitter Tea of General Yen - Capt. Li
    1932 The Secrets of Wu Sin - Charlie San
    1932 War Correspondent - Bandit (uncredited)
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    Sergeant Tanaka in Sam Fuller's The Steel Helmet
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 48 of 65 - "Goldie's Gold Scam" in Africa.
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    James Bond Jr - Goldie's Gold Scam
    Season 1 - Episode 48
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807288/?ref_=ttep_ep48
    While in Africa, the group is attacked by a rhino wearing a strap with a micro chip in it. Tracking it back to its source, Bond and IQ uncover a plot by Goldfinger and Goldie Finger to seize all the gold mines in the area for themselves.[/img]
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    J.R. Morton ... (written by)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)
    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Oddjob (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Auric Goldfinger (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Goldie Finger (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 48 - Goldie's Gold Scam

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    1995: Jet Magazine features Tina Turner promoting GoldenEye on its cover.
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    2000: Electronic Arts publishes 007 Racing for PlayStation released in Brazil, Canada, and the US.
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    007 Racing
    Video Game | 2000 | T
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0268100/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl
    You are Bond, James Bond, behind the wheel of the famous Bond vehicles and a new rental car. When a freighter bound for Halifax, Canada was intercepted and eliminated with military precision, Bond was elsewhere, distracted by a decoy mission that was orchestrated by a Dr. Hammondd Litte indicating that his daughter Cherise was kidnapped. Bond was dispatched to New York City to meet up with Jack Wade and find out about the conspiracy. He discovered a truck load of cars and found information that led him to Mexico to end up being captured and brought to Louisiana to find out that Litte actually orchestrated the attack on the freighter and that his real plan was to unleash a deadly virus that would kill millions. Can Bond Stop Litte in his Aston Marton DB5, his Lotus Esprit, his BMW Z3, his BMW 750iL, or the new BMW Z8?
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Ian Fleming ... (James Bond creator)
    Richard Schenkman ... (dialogue)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Alistair Abell ... Georgi Koskov (voice)
    John Cleese ... R (voice)
    Tim Bentinck ... Hammond Little (voice)
    Adam Blackwood ... James Bond / Valentin Zukovsky (voice)
    Philip Maurice Hayes ... (voice) (as Phillip Maurice Hayes)
    Inez Jesionowski
    Bill Mondy ... Jack Wade (voice)
    Liesa Norman
    Caron Pascoe ... M (voice)
    Rebecca Reichert ... Cherise Little (voice)
    Kim Restell ... Dr. Melody Chase (voice)
    Elizabeth Carol Savenkoff ... Xenia Onatopp (voice)
    Sara Stockstad ... (voice)
    Cathy Weseluck ... (voice)
    Serena Whitters ... (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Miles Anderson ... (voice)
    Pierce Brosnan ... James Bond (archive footage)
    Richard Kiel ... Jaws (archive footage)
    Desmond Llewelyn ... Q (archive footage)

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    TV Ad


    007 Racing Soundtrack (28:03)


    Game Over Compilation

    2002: Die Another Day released in the UK, Ireland, and Switzerland.
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    2002: Meurs un autre jour released in France.
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    2002: James Bond 007 - Stirb an einem anderen Tag (James Bond 007 - Die of One Another Day) premiere at Berlin, Germany.

    2006: Kevin O'Donovan McClory dies at age 80--Dublin, Ireland.
    (Born 8 June 1924--Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin, Ireland.)
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    Kevin McClory
    Co-author of the 'Thunderball' screenplay who sued Ian Fleming
    Thursday 7 December 2006 01:00
    Kevin O'Donovan McClory, screenwriter and film producer: born Dublin 8
    June 1926; twice married (two sons, two daughters); died London 20
    November 2006.
    To devotees of James Bond history, the name Kevin McClory will be forever associated with Thunderball - the Ian Fleming novel, the court case surrounding it, and the film - and his myriad abortive attempts, countered by litigation, to launch an alternative James Bond film franchise.
    Born in Dublin in 1926, Kevin O'Donovan McClory was a descendant of the literary Brontë family through his grandmother Alice McClory. His parents were both actors on the Irish stage, which fired Kevin's early desire to become an actor, but this ambition was hampered by severe dyslexia at school, and was finally blocked by a nervous stammer that was caused by a traumatic incident during the Second World War; in 1943, when serving in the Merchant Navy, Kevin McClory's ship was torpedoed while in the North Atlantic. He drifted over 700 miles in a lifeboat in freezing conditions with other crew members for 14 days, before being picked up off the coast of Ireland as one of the few remaining survivors.

    In 1946, his desire still strong to be in show business and now with a greater appreciation of life, McClory talked his way into a £4-a-week job as a boom operator and "tea boy" at Shepperton Studios. Keen to be noticed, McClory worked in various capacities on classic British films including Anna Karenina (1948) and The Cockleshell Heroes (1955). It was during this early period at Shepperton that he formed a lifelong friendship with the director John Huston, another larger-than-life Irishman.

    McClory was Huston's assistant on pictures like The African Queen (1951) and Moulin Rouge (1952), before graduating to Assistant Director on Huston's version of the Herman Melville classic Moby Dick (1956), starring Gregory Peck. This was McClory's stepping stone to becoming jack-of-all-trades on the mammoth production Around the World in 80 Days (1956), with him as the producer Mike Todd's assistant, as Assistant Producer and as Assistant Director.

    McClory wanted more control over his own creative destiny and decided to write, produce and direct The Boy and the Bridge (1959). In the Bahamas, he met the wealthy Englishman Ivar Bryce, who formed Xanadu Productions with McClory to finance his first solo production. Bryce was a very close friend of the James Bond author Ian Fleming, and it wasn't long before, at Bryce's suggestion, McClory read several of Fleming's novels with a view to filming one of them.

    The young and enthusiastic Irishman realised that these books had great potential. And great earning potential. However, McClory thought very much in visual terms, a hangover from his childhood dyslexia, and believed that he, Fleming and Bryce should collaborate on an original, more cinematic screenplay. To this triumvirate, he introduced Jack Whittingham, then ranked among the top 10 screenwriters in the UK, whose work had been received with great critical and public acclaim in Ealing Studios films including Mandy (1952) and The Divided Heart (1954).

    Whittingham wrote a first-draft screenplay that eventually Ian Fleming would title Thunderball. The Bondwagon was about to start rolling, with the big bucks and the fame only a stone's throw away, or so McClory believed. Unfortunately for him, The Boy and the Bridge performed very badly at the box office and sank without a trace. Bryce and Fleming's initial enthusiasm for the young Irishman's handling the production of their first James Bond film project suddenly faded. Having expected the profits from The Boy and the Bridge to part-finance the Thunderball film, both Bryce and Fleming got cold feet and walked away from the project, leaving McClory high and dry.

    When Ian Fleming sat at his typewriter at his Jamaican home, Goldeneye, in January 1961 to write his ninth Bond novel, he was in ill-health with heart trouble and felt very much a spent force. Writing to William Plomer, an old friend from his days with Naval Intelligence, who always proof-read and pre-edited his Bond novels, Fleming complained that he was
    terribly stuck with James Bond. What was easy at 40 is very difficult at 50. I used to believe - sufficiently - in Bonds and blondes and bombs. Now the keys creak as I type and I fear the zest may have gone. Part of the trouble is having a wife and child. They knock the ruthlessness out of one. I shall definitely kill off Bond with my next book - better a poor bang than a rich whimper!
    Perhaps it was no surprise, then, that a tired writer would turn to a convenient formed idea. Why let it go to waste? So Fleming based his ninth novel, Thunderball, on the collaborative screenplay, without any idea of including any credit for McClory's input and Whittingham's screen treatment. It would prove to be a costly error in judgement.

    Before the publication of Thunderball on 27 March 1961 in London by Jonathan Cape, Kevin McClory obtained an advance proof copy of the novel. As soon as he realised that Fleming had plagiarised their collaborative screenplay, he sent a warning letter to the publishers that if they published the book as it stood he would take legal action. Receiving no answer, McClory sued. McClory was out to stop Jonathan Cape from representing Thunderball as the sole work of Fleming.

    At a hearing, a judge decided that, since the accused had insufficient time to mount a defence, and publication of Thunderball was already so well advanced it couldn't be stopped, McClory and Whittingham's application would be refused. A little over two weeks after the failed book injunction, Ian Fleming suffered a major heart attack during the regular Tuesday-morning conference at The Sunday Times. He was rushed to the London Clinic, where he remained for a month.

    The ensuing case that began on 20 November 1963 at the High Court in London was heavily covered in the media. Newspaper headlines screamed, "James Bond in a Thunderball clash!" Whittingham found it necessary to withdraw as co-plaintiff due to escalating costs, but, although in extreme ill-health, he returned loyally every day to support McClory. After nine days in court both Ivar Bryce and Ian Fleming decided to settle. McClory demanded £55,000.

    In the final outcome, McClory was awarded £35,000 and his court costs paid (totalling £52,000), plus the film and television rights to all the existing Thunderball screen treatments. However, even though he had won the case, he was unhappy with the financial result and never paid his lawyer's costs. He also did nothing to help Whittingham meet his crippling court costs.

    Fleming had two further serious heart attacks during the trial. On 12 August 1964, he suffered a final, fatal heart attack, aged 56, and died in the Kent and Canterbury Hospital.

    Thunderball was eventually made into a film in 1965 by the producers Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli & Harry Saltzman, who "presented' the film for their company EON Productions. McClory was billed as producer on the film and Thunderball credited as being "Based on an original story by Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham & Ian Fleming". The film grossed $141.2m worldwide. Whittingham died of a heart attack in Malta in 1973, his contribution to the cinematic legacy of James Bond all but forgotten and unrecognised.

    In 1983 Kevin McClory acted as executive producer on Never Say Never Again, a remake of Thunderball, for which Sean Connery returned after 12 years to star as James Bond, going head-to-head with Roger Moore as Bond in Octopussy. The film grossed an estimated £137.5m worldwide.

    One of McClory's closest friends during the late Fifties and Sixties was Jeremy Vaughn, who also knew Ian Fleming well as his neighbour in Jamaica. He told Robert Sellers, author of the upcoming The Battle for Bond, that
    Kevin was a smooth operator, an attractive character, but not a particularly pleasant one, certainly compared to his brother, Desmond, who was one of the kindest people you could ever meet. If a friend was in trouble, Desmond would always be there. Kevin would just tell you to piss off, if you weren't any good to him.

    He's been very cruel to a number of people over the years who thought they were his friends. The overdriving thing with Kevin was that he just wanted to be a celebrity, he wanted to be famous . . . He probably had some semi-professional technical interest in making a film, but he really wanted the glamour.
    McClory continued to be involved in legal wrangles over the years. In the 1990s, he announced plans to make Warhead 2000 AD, another adaptation of the Thunderball story, which was to have been made by Sony, with Timothy Dalton in the lead role, but this was eventually scrapped.

    "It was Kevin's burning ambition, these [Bond] movies," Vaughn said,
    but I don't think he gave a damn who he walked over and what he did in order to get there. Kevin had a project in life and that project was Kevin McClory.
    Graham Rye
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    Kevin McClory
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_McClory
    Second World War
    As a teenaged radio officer in the British Merchant Navy, McClory endured attacks by German U-boats on two different occasions. The first attack occurred on 20 September 1942 was while he was serving aboard The Mathilda. A U-Boat surfaced and attacked the ship with heavy machine gun fire. The crew of the ship fired back and the U-Boat retreated. The second attack occurred on 21 February 1943 when McClory was serving on the Norwegian tanker Stigstad, which was attacked by torpedo from multiple U-boats. The ship sank and McClory and the other survivors made it to a life raft. They survived in terrible conditions for two weeks and traveled more than 600 miles before being rescued off the coast of Ireland. Two seaman died on the raft and a third died soon after they were rescued. McClory suffered severe frostbite and lost the ability to speak for more than a year after the incident. When he recovered his voice he was left with a pronounced stammer. He served out the rest of the war in the British Navy.
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    Kevin McClory (1926–2006)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0565886/?ref_=nv_sr_5?ref_=nv_sr_5

    Filmography
    Producer (5 credits)

    1983 Never Say Never Again (executive producer)

    1976 Circasia (Short) (producer)

    1965 Thunderball (producer)

    1959 The Boy and the Bridge (producer)
    1956 Around the World in 80 Days (associate producer - uncredited)

    Sound department (5 credits)

    1953 Beat the Devil (boom operator - uncredited)
    1952 Moulin Rouge (boom operator - uncredited)
    1951 The African Queen (boom operator - uncredited)
    1950 The Mudlark (boom operator - uncredited)

    1948 Anna Karenina (assistant boom operator - uncredited)

    Miscellaneous Crew (5 credits)

    1983 Never Say Never Again (presenter)

    1957 Legend of the Lost (assistant to Henry Hathaway - uncredited)
    1956 Around the World in 80 Days (assistant to producer: foreign locations - as Kevin O'Donovan McClory)
    1952 Moulin Rouge (assistant: Mr. Huston - uncredited)
    1951 The African Queen (assistant: Mr. Huston - uncredited)

    Writer (3 credits)

    1983 Never Say Never Again (based on an original story by)

    1965 Thunderball (original story)


    1959 The Boy and the Bridge (writer)

    Second Unit Director or Assistant Director (2 credits)

    1956 Around the World in 80 Days (second unit director: foreign locations - as Kevin O'Donovan McClory)
    1956 Moby Dick (assistant director - uncredited)

    Director (1 credit)

    1959 The Boy and the Bridge

    Actor (1 credit)

    1965 Thunderball - Man Smoking at Nassau Casino (uncredited)

    Location management (1 credit)

    1955 The Cockleshell Heroes (location manager)

    Self (6 credits)

    2010 Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff (Documentary) - Himself - Interviewee
    2006 Thunderball: Ken Adam's Production Films (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2003 Brits Go to Hollywood (TV Series) - Himself
    - Sean Connery (2003) ... Himself
    1996 John Huston: An t-Éireannach (Documentary) - Himself

    1983 Never Say Never Again: Royal Film Premiere (TV Special short) - Himself

    1965 Thunderball: The London Pavillion Premiere (Documentary short) - Himself[/u\
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    2006: 007首部曲:皇家夜總會 (007 Shǒubù qǔ: Huángjiā yèzǒnghuì; 007 The Royal Nightclub) released in Hong Kong China.
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    2015: Spectre released in India.
    2019: GQ tells a tale of Bollinger and James Bond.
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    How Bollinger became the official
    Champagne of James Bond
    By Thomas Barrie | 20 November 2019

    The Champagne maison and Britain’s most famous spy have a storied history – and one that was celebrated with typical largesse in Paris this month

    The gilded rooms of the Hôtel De Crillon in Paris’ Eighth Arrondissement have seen a lot. Marie Antoinette lived here for a time during the French Revolution, when the then-palace overlooked the guillotine and the queen’s own eventual place of execution. Teddy Roosevelt stayed at the hotel, as did Winston Churchill. It was here that the League Of Nations – the inter-war predecessor to the United Nations – was signed into existence and here that the American delegation stayed for the peace negotiations after the First World War. Taylor Swift is a fan. So is Madonna.

    This month, the hotel added another line to its storied history as Bollinger, the house founded by the Comte de Villermont and his associates in 1829, celebrated four decades as the official Champagne of the James Bond franchise. To celebrate, Bollinger did what Champagne brands do best: they held a massive, decadent party. Under Napoleonic eagles, stucco colonnades and frescoes, the house revealed a limited-edition Moonraker-themed bottle and case: a reference to the 1979 Bond film in which the Champagne first appeared by official arrangement. On display was a case designed in pewter and wood veneer by Eric Berthes, inspired by the space-age Moonraker sets of production designer Sir Ken Adam, which opens at the push of a button to reveal a crystal ice bucket with a magnum of Bollinger 2007 (the “007” vintage, get it?). Q himself could hardly have done better.
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    The Moonraker-inspired case, which opens to reveal a magnum of Bollinger
    Historically, Bond was – naturally – a fan of all Champagne. But in 1979, over lunch, Christian Bizot and Cubby Broccoli, the legendary Bond producer, decided that the spy preferred Bollinger. The link made sense, given Bollinger’s relationship with the franchise extends back to 1956 – the Champagne appears in Live And Let Die, but its first mention was in the novel Diamonds Are Forever – and the British establishment’s penchant for Bollinger is well attested. In fact, Queen Victoria liked Bollinger so much that she granted Jacques Joseph Bollinger the first Royal Warrant awarded to a Champagne house in 1884, a fact proudly displayed at the brand’s headquarters in Aÿ-Champagne. It was here, down the road at the original production address of 16 Rue Jules Lobet and far from the sparkle of the Crillon, that Bollinger first conceived of their now-famous limited-edition Bond Champagnes, which began with Quantum Of Solace and a special magnum of Le Grande Année 1999 housed in a case shaped like a bullet. This was followed by the limited-edition Bond 2002 La Grande Année Brut (released for Skyfall in 2012) and the 2009 equivalent (for Spectre in 2015).
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    Sleepy, picturesque Aÿ itself might not seem like the place you’d expect Her Majesty’s agents to be caught lurking, but in fact, some 12 million bottles are stored under the tiny village in dank brick tunnels more than fit for a Bond action sequence. The chase scene would take place on forklift trucks, which race through the tunnels at such speed, apparently, that pedestrians have to turn on a special system of red alarm lights to let everyone else know they’re heading into the tunnels. Otherwise, a forklift might race around a corner and, well, it wouldn’t be pretty. But it would be a dramatic end for a henchman or two.

    Perhaps an idea for the next 40 years. Will Bond films still be in production in 2059? Definitely. Will Daniel Craig finally have retired, as he suggested two films ago? Who can say? But whatever incarnation the future 007 takes, one thing’s for certain: they’ll be sipping on Bollinger.

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    2020: No Time To Die onetime US release date, delayed to April 2021.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 21st

    1942: Al Matthews is born--Brooklyn, New York.
    (He dies 22 September 2018--Orihuela, Spain.)
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    Aliens actor Al Matthews dies aged 75
    https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/al-matthews-dead-age-aliens-grande-hill-death-a8552286.html

    Matthews also appeared on Grange Hill as the father of Benny Green and had his song 'Fool' reach number 16 in the UK Singles Chart in 1975
    Clarisse Loughrey | @clarisselou | Monday 24 September 2018 11:48
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    20th Century Fox
    Al Matthews, best known for playing Gunnery Sergeant Apone in Aliens (1986), has died aged 75.

    El Pais reports that the actor was found dead in his home, in Orihuela Costa, in the Spanish Mediterranean province of Alicante, on Sunday, after a neighbour called the emergency services.

    Born in Brooklyn in 1942, Matthews had served as a Marine in the Vietnam War. His website states: "I hold thirteen combat awards and decorations, including two purple hearts. I was the first black Marine in the 1st Marine Division in Vietnam to be meritoriously promoted to the rank of sergeant".

    Alongside his role in Aliens, Matthews also played the fire chief in Superman III (1983), a workman in Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981), and General Tudor in The Fifth Element (1997). He returned to the role of Sgt Apone nearly 30 years later, when he voiced the character in the video game Aliens: Colonial Marines (2013).

    He also had a strong career in the UK, where he appeared on Grange Hill as the father of Benny Green and had his song "Fool" reach number 16 in the UK Singles Chart in 1975. He retired in Spain in 2005, although his last film was this year's The Price of Death, which is currently in post-production.
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    Al Matthews (I) (1942–2018)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0559922/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Actor (35 credits)

    2018 The Price of Death - Williamson
    2013 Aliens: Colonial Marines (Video Game) - Sgt. Al Apone (voice)
    2011 Operation Flashpoint: Red River (Video Game) - Col. Shannon J.Hardaway (voice)

    1998 Short Stories About Love (TV Mini-Series)
    - Shlosha Kochavim (1998)
    1997 Tomorrow Never Dies - Master Sergeant 3
    1997 The Fifth Element - General Tudor
    1997 The Apocalypse Watch (TV Movie) - Wesley Sorenson
    1996 Ellington (TV Series) - J.P. Coates
    - Matchmaker (1996) ... J.P. Coates
    1995 Soul Survivors (TV Movie) - Grover Cleveland
    1994 Desmond's (TV Series) - Reverend Marvin Jones
    - Judgement Day (1994) ... Reverend Marvin Jones

    1989 Saracen (TV Series) - Dube
    - Three Blind Mice (1989) ... Dube
    1988 American Roulette - Morrisey
    1988 Stormy Monday - Radio DJ
    1987 Excuse Me But That's My Car (Short) - Winston Smith
    1987 Out of Order - U.S. DJ
    1987 London Embassy (TV Mini-Series) - Uwlie Cooper
    - The Man on the Clapham Omnibus (1987) ... Uwlie Cooper
    1987 Screen Two (TV Series) - Curtis Duchamps
    - Coast to Coast (1987) ... Curtis Duchamps
    1986 Big Deal (TV Series) - American punter
    - Panel Money (1986) ... American punter
    1986 Aliens - Sergeant Apone
    1986 The American Way - Benedict
    1985 Defense of the Realm - First U.S. Controller
    1984 The Comic Strip Presents... (TV Series) - Admiral
    - The Bullshitters: Roll out the Gunbarrel (1984) ... Admiral
    1983 Funny Money - 1st Hood
    1983 Superman III - Fire Chief
    1983 The Professionals (TV Series) - Faroud
    - The Ojuka Situation (1983) ... Faroud
    1982 The Sender - Viet Nam Veteran
    1982 Shelley (TV Series) - Newscaster
    - No News Is Good... (1982) ... Newscaster
    1982 Nancy Astor (TV Mini-Series) - Billy
    - The Longhornes of Virginia (1982) ... Billy
    1981 Ragtime - Maitre D'
    1981 The Final Conflict - Workman
    1980 BBC2 Playhouse (TV Series) - Oxford St. John
    - The Black Madonna (1980) ... Oxford St. John
    1980 Rough Cut - Ferguson
    1979-1980 Grange Hill (TV Series) - Mr. Green
    - Episode #3.10 (1980) ... Mr. Green
    - Episode #2.2 (1979) ... Mr. Green
    - Episode #2.1 (1979) ... Mr. Green

    1979 Yanks - Black G.I. at Dance
    1977 Bad Loser (Short)
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    "Fool", Al Matthews, 1975.


    1966: You Only Live Twice films Donald Pleasance as Blofeld.

    1985: A View to a Kill released in Australia.
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    1989: Peter Ray Burton dies at age 68--Chelsea, London, England.
    (Born 4 April 1921--Bromley, Kent, England.)
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    Peter Burton
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Burton

    Peter Ray Burton (4 April 1921 – 21 November 1989) was an English film and television actor.

    Early life
    Peter Ray Burton, was born in Bromley, Kent, to Frederick Ray Burton and Gladys Maude (née Frazer).

    Career
    He is perhaps best known for playing Major Boothroyd in the first James Bond film, Dr. No (1962). Burton made two uncredited reappearances in Bond films, first as an RAF officer in Thunderball (1965) and later as a secret agent in the satirical Casino Royale.
    In The Scarlet and the Black, the 1983 made-for-television docudrama concerning British, Irish, and U.S. counterintelligence agents working to rescue c. 4,000 Allied prisoners-of-war from Nazi deportation, Burton played the role of English aristocrat and British diplomat D'Arcy Godolphin Osborne, the 12th (and last) Duke of Leeds.[4]

    Burton guest starred in a number of television shows, including The Avengers, The Saint, Return of the Saint and UFO.
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    Peter Burton (I) (1921–1989)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0078252/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Actor (68 credits)
    1990 Number One Gun - Merlin
    1990 Press Gang (TV Series) - Mr. Campbell
    - At Last a Dragon (1990) ... Mr. Campbell

    1987 One by One (TV Series) - Golf Club Secretary
    - Remember the Humble Guinea-Pig (1987) ... Golf Club Secretary
    1986 C.A.T.S. Eyes (TV Series) - Doctor
    - Passage Hawk (1986) ... Doctor
    1985 The Doctor and the Devils - Customer
    1983 The Jigsaw Man - Douglas Ransom
    1983 The Nation's Health (TV Series) - David Marvill
    - Collapse (1983) ... David Marvill
    1983 The Scarlet and the Black (TV Movie) - Sir D'Arcy Osborne
    1981 Inchon - Adm. Sherman
    1980 Richard's Things - Colonel
    1980 The Professionals (TV Series) - Conroy
    - Involvement (1980) ... Conroy

    1979 The Bitch - Hotel Night Manager
    1978 Return of the Saint (TV Series) - Dr. Evans
    - The Arrangement (1978) ... Dr. Evans
    1978 Out (TV Series) - Card Player
    - Not Just Pennies (1978) ... Card Player
    1978 Leopard in the Snow - Mr. Framley
    1972 Lovebox - Charles Lambert (Charles and Margery) (as Peter Burdon)
    1971 A Clockwork Orange - Junior Minister - Minister Frederick's Aid
    1971 Carry On at Your Convenience - Hotel Manager
    1970-1971 UFO (TV Series) - Dr. Murray / Perry
    - Computer Affair (1971) ... Dr. Murray
    - Ordeal (1971) ... Perry
    - Close Up (1970) ... Dr. Murray (uncredited)
    1971 All the Right Noises - Stage Manager
    1971 Brett (TV Series) - Boone
    - Investment - Long Term (1971) ... Boone
    1970 Hell Boats - Admiral's Aide

    1969 Journey to the Far Side of the Sun - Medical Technician (uncredited)
    1968 Amsterdam Affair - Herman Ketelboer
    1967 Berserk - Gustavo
    1967 Man in a Suitcase (TV Series) - Anderson
    - The Sitting Pigeon (1967) ... Anderson
    1967 The Saint (TV Series) - Claude Molliere
    - The Gadget Lovers (1967) ... Claude Molliere
    1966 Judith - Conklin
    1966 The Avengers (TV Series) - Fleming
    - Small Game for Big Hunters (1966) ... Fleming
    1965 Thunderball - RAF Officer in Car (uncredited)
    1963 That Kind of Girl - Elliot Collier
    1963 The Swingin' Maiden - Thompson's Salesman
    1962 Lawrence of Arabia - Sheik in Arab Council (uncredited)
    1962 Dr. No - Major Boothroyd
    1962 The Six Proud Walkers (TV Series) - Det. Supt. Arrowsmith
    - All in the Family (1962) ... Det. Supt. Arrowsmith
    1961 The Pursuers (TV Series) - Paul De Bois
    - Breakout (1961) ... Paul De Bois
    1961 ITV Television Playhouse (TV Series) - Sir Ben Cheviot
    - Flight 447 Delayed (1961) ... Sir Ben Cheviot
    1961 Roommates - 1st Viola
    1961 Knight Errant Limited (TV Series) - John Barry
    - Tall, Dark Stranger (1961) ... John Barry
    1960 On Trial (TV Series) - Henry Matthews QC
    - W.T. Stead (1960) ... Henry Matthews QC
    1960 ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) - The Commodore
    - The Patchwork Quilt (1960) ... The Commodore
    1960 Interpol Calling (TV Series) - Art Expert
    - The Girl with Grey Hair (1960) ... Art Expert (uncredited)
    1960 Sink the Bismarck ! - Captain - HMS Solent - First Destroyer

    1959 Make Mine a Double - 2nd Pilot
    1958 White Hunter (TV Series) - Chauvet
    - The Girl Hunt (1958) ... Chauvet
    1958 A Night to Remember - 1st Class Steward (uncredited)
    1958 O.S.S. (TV Series) - Spanish Major
    - Operation Eel (1958) ... Spanish Major
    1957 The Betrayal - Tony Adams
    1957 Five on a Treasure Island - Quentin Kirrin
    1957 Hour of Mystery (TV Series) - Walter Hartright
    - The Woman in White (1957) ... Walter Hartright
    1956 Child in the House - Howard Forbes (uncredited)
    1956 Reach for the Sky - Peter / Coltishall Officer (uncredited)
    1956 The Third Key - Creasey
    1956 Spin a Dark Web - Inspector Collis
    1956 Johnny You're Wanted
    1955 Value for Money - Hotel Receptionist (uncredited)
    1955 Three Cases of Murder - Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs (segment "Lord Mountdrago") (uncredited)
    1954 The Green Scarf - Purser
    1954 The Gentle Falcon (TV Series) - 2nd Messenger / 1st Courtier
    - Home at Last (1954)
    - The Cry of the Falcon (1954)
    - Farewell Richard (1954) ... 2nd Messenger
    - A Strange Tournament (1954) ... 1st Courtier
    1954 They Who Dare - Marine Barrett
    1953 The Heart of the Matter - Perrot (uncredited)
    1953 Paratrooper - Minor Role (uncredited)
    1952 The Stolen Plans - Dr. Foster
    1952 The Frightened Bride - Graham Moore
    1950 The Wooden Horse - Nigel
    1950 What the Butler Saw - Bill Fenton
    1950 They Were Not Divided - Minor Role (uncredited)
    1950 Family Affairs (TV Series) - Captain Heddle
    - Ah! The Peace of It All (1950) ... Captain Heddle

    Miscellaneous Crew (1 credit)

    1979 The Bitch (dialogue coach)

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 49 of 65 - "Canine Caper" at Warfield, England.
    latest?cb=20150417205350
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    James Bond Jr - Canine Caper
    Season 1 - Episode 49
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807281/?ref_=ttep_ep49
    James, IQ and Gordo use a stray dog which follows Bond back to the Warfield to locate its master who had the security plan of Scotland Yard, who is abducted by Skullcap; Dr. Derange needs the microfilm so that he can break through Scotland Yard's security so that he can place his acid bomb in Scotland Yard's building foundation and destroy it.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Benjamin Pollack ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Skullcap (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 49 - Canine Caper

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    1995: Royal premiere of GoldenEye at the Odeon, Leicester Square, London.
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    2003: Entertainment Arts releases 007 - Everything or Nothing for Game Boy Advance.
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    James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing
    Video Game | 2003 } T
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0366629/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0
    007 and Serena St. Germaine discover that Katya Nadonova's project, nanobots designed to repair nuclear reactors; have been stolen by Nikolai Diavolo. Together the two set off to new Orleans and beyond to confront Diavolo.
    Directed by Scot Bayless
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Danny Bilson ... (story)
    Paul De Meo ... (story)
    Bruce Feirstein
    Ian Fleming ... (characters)
    Nuno Miranda ... (adaptation)
    Nuno Miranda ... (translation)
    Cast (in credits order)
    Pierce Brosnan ... James Bond (voice)
    John Cleese ... Q (voice)
    Willem Dafoe ... Nikolai Diavolo (voice)
    Judi Dench ... M (voice)
    Heidi Klum ... Katya Nadanova (voice)
    Shannon Elizabeth ... Serena St. Germaine (voice)
    Misaki Itô ... Miss Nagai (voice)
    Richard Kiel ... Jaws (voice)
    Mya ... Mya Starling (voice) (as Mya Marie Harrison)
    James Arnold Taylor ... Jack Mason, 003 / Yayakov's Thug (voice) (as James A. Taylor)
    Tim Bentinck ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Edita Brychta ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Vladimir Cuk ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Neil Dickson ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Samantha Eggar ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Alex Fernandez ... The General (voice)
    Carlos Ferro ... South American Guard (voice)
    Marc Graue ... Jean Le Rouge (voice)
    Boris Lee Krutonog ... Additional Voices (voice) (as Boris Krutonog)
    Vanessa Marshall ... Computer (voice)
    Kara Noble ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Dorota Puzio ... Additional Voices (voice) (as Durato Puzio)
    Victor Raider-Wexler ... Additional Voices (voice)
    Scott Rummell ... Additional Voices (voice) (as Scott Rummell Taylor)
    Keith Szarabajka ... Arkady Yayakov (voice) (as Keith Szarabaijka)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Samantha Newark ... (voice)
    Linda Wang ... (voice)
    Produced by
    Scott Bandy ... senior producer
    Scot Bayless ... executive producer
    Scott Blackwood ... producer
    Joe Rush ... producer
    Music by
    Sean Callery
    007 Everything or Nothing - E3 2003 Trailer (2:01)


    James Bond Everything or Nothing GBA - Theme OST


    Mya - Everything or Nothing (Jazz) (2:50)

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    Later Japan release
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    2006: German premiere of Casino Royale in Berlin.
    2008: Quantum of Solace released in Spain.

    2011: Syd Cain dies at age 93--London, England.
    (Born 16 April 1918--Grantham, Lincolnshire, England.)
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    Syd Cain obituary
    Production designer behind the deadly gadgets used by James Bond – and his foes
    https://www.theguardian.com/film/2011/dec/01/syd-cain
    Kim Newman - Thu 1 Dec 2011 13.29 EST
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    Syd Cain at Pinewood Studios with the model used in the explosive climax to
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969). Photograph: 007magazine.com
    The production designer Syd Cain, who has died aged 93, was one of many behind-the-scenes professionals elevated to something like prominence by the worldwide interest in the James Bond films. An industry veteran who began work in British cinema as a draughtsman in 1947, contributing to the look of the gothic melodrama Uncle Silas, Cain is credited on a range of film and television projects, but remains best known for his work in various design capacities on the 007 series, from Dr No in 1962 to GoldenEye in 1995.

    Born in Grantham, Lincolnshire, Cain served in the armed forces in the second world war, surviving a plane crash and recovering from a broken back. Working at Denham Studios in Buckinghamshire in the 1940s and 50s, he moved up from uncredited draughtsman (on Adam and Evelyne, The Interrupted Journey, You Know What Sailors Are and Up to His Neck) to assistant art director (for The Gamma People, Fire Down Below, Interpol, How to Murder a Rich Uncle and The World of Suzie Wong). During this time, he developed a habit of slipping his name on to the screen among documents provided as props. In Carol Reed's Our Man in Havana (1959), where the blueprints for a vacuum cleaner are mistaken for rocket secrets, he is listed on the papers as the designer of the device. His first credit as art director was on The Road to Hong Kong (1962), the British-produced last gasp of the series of Bob Hope/Bing Crosby comedies. Cain also worked on the Hope vehicle Call Me Bwana (1963), best remembered because of an in-joke reference to it in From Russia With Love, where a sniper is concealed behind a billboard advertising the film.

    Having worked as a draughtsman on Hell Below Zero (1954) and assistant art director on The Cockleshell Heroes (1956), both produced by Albert R Broccoli, he was chosen by Broccoli to work on the Bond films. Though uncredited, he worked with the production designer Ken Adam – in whose shadow he modestly remained for much of his career – on Dr No, taking over as art director when Adam was not available for the immediate follow-up, From Russia With Love (1963). This was the film that introduced the character of Q (Desmond Llewelyn). Cain was responsible for the design of the gadgets issued to Sean Connery's Bond, notably the briefcase with concealed sniper rifle and tear-gas talcum tin. For the villains, Cain also provided Rosa Klebb's shoes, with poison-tipped blade, and the chess-themed decor of Blofeld's lair.

    Later, he was production designer for On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969). With a new Bond (George Lazenby) and a move away from the gadgets and vast sets of Connery and Adam's later work, Thunderball and Goldfinger, this tried to seem less fantastical – the only contraption issued to Bond is a photocopier. Cain was the supervising art director on Roger Moore's first Bond film, Live and Let Die (1973), then left the series, eventually returning as a storyboard artist for Pierce Brosnan's 007 debut, GoldenEye.

    Arguably more impressive than his Bond associations, Cain worked with a number of notable film-makers throughout the 1960s and 70s, as assistant art director for Stanley Kubrick (Lolita, 1962), art director for Ronald Neame (Mister Moses, 1965) and François Truffaut (Fahrenheit 451, 1966), executive art director for Richard Lester (A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, 1966) and production designer for Ken Russell (Billion Dollar Brain, 1967), Alfred Hitchcock (Frenzy, 1972) and Jack Gold (Aces High, 1976).

    Contributing to lasting British pop-culture artefacts, he was also art director on the Cliff Richard vehicle Summer Holiday (1963) and production designer of the revival series The New Avengers (1976). After the popular, action-oriented Alistair Maclean adventure Fear Is the Key (1973), Cain became associated with a brand of high adventure that grew out of the Bond films, working with Peter R Hunt (director of On Her Majesty's Secret Service) on the Moore movies Gold (1974) and Shout at the Devil (1976), both set in Africa, and with the producer Euan Lloyd on a series of boozy, British macho epics – The Wild Geese (1978), The Sea Wolves (1980) and Who Dares Wins (1982).

    Cain retired as a production designer after Tusks (1988), but contributed storyboards to a select run of high-profile films, including Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988). His final credit was on the Michael Caine boxing movie Shiner (2000). In retirement, he illustrated children's books, wrote an autobiography (Not Forgetting James Bond: The Autobiography of James Bond Production Designer Syd Cain, 2002) and was a well-liked guest at Bond-themed fan events.

    Cain was married twice. His five sons and three daughters survive him.

    • Sidney Cain, production designer, art director and illustrator, born 16 April 1918; died 21 November 2011
    7879655.png?263
    Syd Cain (1918–2011)
    Filmography
    Production designer (17 credits)

    1988 Tusks
    1985 Wild Geese II
    1982 The Final Option
    1981 Loophole
    1980 Lion of the Desert
    1980 The Sea Wolves

    1978 The Wild Geese
    1976 The New Avengers (TV Series) (13 episodes)
    - Dirtier by the Dozen (1976)
    - Gnaws (1976)
    - Sleeper (1976)
    - Faces (1976)
    - Three Handed Game (1976)
    - The Tale of the Big Why (1976)
    - Target! (1976)
    - Cat Amongst the Pigeons (1976)
    - To Catch a Rat (1976)
    - The Last of the Cybernauts...? (1976)
    - House of Cards (1976)
    - The Midas Touch (1976)
    - The Eagle's Nest (1976)
    1976 Aces High
    1976 Shout at the Devil
    1974 Gold
    1972 Fear Is the Key (as Sidney Cain)
    1972 Frenzy
    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service
    1967 Billion Dollar Brain
    1966 Fahrenheit 451
    1965 The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders

    Art department (27 credits)

    2001 The Fourth Angel (storyboard artist)
    2000 Shiner (storyboard artist)

    1998 Tarzan and the Lost City (storyboard artist)
    1995 GoldenEye (storyboard artist)
    1994 The NeverEnding Story III (storyboard artist)
    1991 Robin Hood (storyboard artist - as Sydney Cain)

    1988 Who Framed Roger Rabbit (storyboard artist: UK)
    1984 Supergirl (research art director)

    1966 A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (executive art director)
    1962 Lolita (associate art director - as Sidney Cain)
    1960 The World of Suzie Wong (assistant art director - as Sydney Cain)
    1959 Our Man in Havana (assistant art director)
    1958 Tank Force (assistant art director)
    1957 High Flight (assistant art director)
    1957 How to Murder a Rich Uncle (assistant art director)
    1957 Fire Down Below (assistant art director)
    1957 Pickup Alley (assistant art director)
    1956 Zarak (assistant art director - uncredited)
    1956 The Gamma People (assistant art director)
    1955 The Cockleshell Heroes (assistant art director)
    1954 Up to His Neck (draughtsman - uncredited)
    1954 You Know What Sailors Are (draughtsman - uncredited)
    1954 Hell Below Zero (draughtsman - uncredited)

    1949 The Interrupted Journey (draughtsman - uncredited)
    1949 Madness of the Heart (draughtsman - uncredited)
    1949 Adam and Evalyn (draughtsman - uncredited)
    1947 The Inheritance (draughtsman - uncredited)

    Art director (10 credits)

    1973 Live and Let Die (supervising art director)
    1966 Fahrenheit 451
    1965 Mister Moses
    1965 McGuire, Go Home!
    1964 Agent 8 3/4
    1963 From Russia with Love
    1963 Call Me Bwana
    1963 Summer Holiday
    1962 Dr. No (uncredited)
    1962 The Road to Hong Kong
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    2012: The University of Hertfordshire awards an honorary Doctorate of Arts degree to Roger Moore, for outstanding contribution to UK film and television industry for over 50 years.
    2017: Dynamite Entertainment announces its third one-off comic (on M this time) to be released 7 February 2018.
    PJ Holden & Dearbhla Kelly, artists. Declan Shalvey, writer.
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    2017: Aston Martin reveals "the next" Vantage (based on the DB10).
    More than 500 horse power and 505 foot pounds of torque.
    2022: John Higgs discusses his book Love and Let Die - Bond, The Beatles, and the British Psyche at the Carpenter Room, Sheffield Central Library, Sheffield City, England.
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    Nov 21
    Love and Let Die: Bond, the
    Beatles and the British Psyche
    Join author John Higgs as he discusses his new book, the story of a clash between working class liberation and establishment control
    By Libraries Sheffield

    When and where
    Date and time
    Mon, 21 Nov 2022, 19:00 GMT

    Location
    Carpenter Room Sheffield Central Library Surrey Street Sheffield City Centre S1 1XZ United Kingdom
    About this event
    The Beatles are the biggest band there has ever been. James Bond is the single most successful movie character of all time. They are also twins. Dr No, the first Bond film, and Love Me Do, the first Beatles record, were both released on the same day - Friday 5 October 1962. Most countries can only dream of a cultural export becoming a worldwide phenomenon on this scale. For Britain to produce two on the same windy October afternoon is unprecedented.

    Bond and the Beatles present us with opposing values, visions of Britain, and ideas about male identity. Love and Let Die is the story of a clash between working class liberation and establishment control, and how it exploded on the global stage. It explains why James Bond hated the Beatles, why Paul McCartney wanted to be Bond, and why it was Ringo who won the heart of a Bond Girl in the end.

    Told over a period of sixty dramatic years, this is an account of how two outsized cultural monsters continue to define our aspirations and fantasies and the future we are building. Looking at these touchstones in this new context will forever change how you see the Beatles, the James Bond films and six decades.
    Refreshments provided.

    Signed copies of Love and Let Die will be available to purchase on offer at £15. Books supplied by Rhyme and Reason Independent Bookshop. Unfortunately we're unable to take card payments in the library.
    Sold Out]


  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 22nd

    1899: Hoagy Carmichael is born--Bloomington, Indiana.
    (He dies 27 December 1981 at age 82--Rancho Mirage, California.)
    LogoWhite_Britannica.png
    Hoagy Carmichael
    American composer, musician, and actor
    https://www.britannica.com/biography/Hoagy-Carmichael
    Written By: The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    Last Updated: Nov 18, 2019 See Article History
    Alternative Title: Hoagland Howard Carmichael

    Hoagy Carmichael, byname of Hoagland Howard Carmichael, (born November 22, 1899, Bloomington, Indiana, U.S.—died December 27, 1981, Rancho Mirage, California), American composer, singer, self-taught pianist, and actor who wrote several of the most highly regarded popular standards in American music.

    Carmichael’s father was an itinerant electrician, and his mother earned extra money for the family as a pianist for dances and silent movies; from her, Carmichael absorbed the basics of playing the piano. He was strongly influenced by ragtime music and by the music he heard from black families and churches in his neighbourhood. As a teenager, he made every effort to hear and play as much jazz as possible, studying in Indianapolis, Indiana, with pianist Reginald DuValle and traveling to Chicago to hear Louis Armstrong. While studying at Indiana University in Bloomington (LL.B., 1926), Carmichael led a small jazz band that had some success playing for college dances throughout the Midwest. In the spring of 1924, Carmichael became friends with Bix Beiderbecke after engaging the young cornetist to play for several fraternity parties. Carmichael’s first composition, “Free Wheeling,” was retitled “Riverboat Shuffle” when recorded by Beiderbecke and his band, the Wolverines, later the same year; the recording subsequently became a jazz classic.

    After graduating from college, Carmichael practiced law in Florida for a brief period. During this time, he happened to hear a recording of his song “Washboard Blues,” by Red Nichols and his Five Pennies. Surprised that the song had been recorded and encouraged by this mark of success, he abandoned law and moved to New York City to embark on a career as a musician and composer. He recorded a version of his song “Stardust” in 1927; the song, an instrumental until fitted with lyrics by Mitchell Parrish in 1929, attracted little notice at first. In 1930 Isham Jones and his Orchestra had a hit with the song, and it went on to become one of the most renowned and most recorded standards in all of American music. During his stay in New York, Carmichael became friends with the young lyricist Johnny Mercer; the two collaborated on several songs throughout the years, with “Lazy Bones” being their first hit in 1933. Other hits composed during Carmichael’s years in New York include “Lazy River,” “Rockin’ Chair,” and “Georgia” (also known as “Georgia on My Mind”).
    Hoagy-Carmichael.jpg
    Hoagy Carmichael.
    Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
    Carmichael moved to Hollywood, California, in 1936. There he composed songs for films and found additional success as a character actor, often playing the role of a philosophical and world-weary piano player, as in To Have and Have Not (1944). His hit songs for movies include “Two Sleepy People,” “Small Fry,” “Heart and Soul,” “Ole Buttermilk Sky,” “The Nearness of You,” and “In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening,” which won an Oscar for the best film song of 1951. One of his best-known compositions of the 1940s was “Skylark,” another collaboration with Mercer, and a song that reflected Carmichael’s jazz influences in that, according to one music scholar, it “seemed to have the improvisations built right into the melody.”

    As the golden age of American popular song waned during the advent of rock and roll in the 1950s, Carmichael continued to write songs—including such minor hits as “My Resistance Is Low” and “Winter Moon”—but had no more major successes as a songwriter. He also acted in a variety of television roles, such as his recurring dramatic part on the western series Laramie during the 1959–60 season. He never stopped composing, although most of his later songs were never recorded. One notable exception was a collection of children’s music released in 1971, Hoagy Carmichael’s Music Shop. Mostly, he devoted his later years to his hobbies of golf and coin collecting.

    Carmichael wrote two well-received volumes of memoirs, The Stardust Road (1946) and Sometimes I Wonder (1965). After Carmichael’s death, his family donated his archives and personal effects to his alma mater, Indiana University, which opened the Hoagy Carmichael Room in his honour in 1986.
    7879655.png?263
    Hoagy Carmichael (1899–1981)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005994/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (23 credits)

    1972 Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law (TV Series) - Uncle Walter
    - Smiles from Yesterday (1972) ... Uncle Walter
    1970 The Name of the Game (TV Series) - Willie Meeker
    - Echo of a Nightmare (1970) ... Willie Meeker

    1966 The Farmer's Daughter (TV Series)
    - Oh Boy, Is the Honeymoon Over (1966)
    1965 The Man Who Bought Paradise (TV Movie) - Mr. Leoni
    1964 Burke's Law (TV Series) - Carl Baker / 'Jango' Jordan
    - Who Killed Molly? (1964) ... Carl Baker
    - Who Killed Snooky Martinelli? (1964) ... 'Jango' Jordan
    1960 The DuPont Show of the Month (TV Series) - Narrator
    - Those Ragtime Years (1960) ... Narrator
    1959-1960 Laramie (TV Series) - Jonesy
    - Cemetery Road (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Midnight Rebellion (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Saddle and Spur (1960) ... Jonesy
    - The Protectors (1960) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - Hour After Dawn (1960) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - Ride or Die (1960) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - Street of Hate (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Duel at Alta Mesa (1960) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - Rope of Steel (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Company Man (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Death Wind (1960) ... Jonesy
    - The Legend of Lily (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Day of Vengeance (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Trail Drive (1960) ... Jonesy
    - Ride into Darkness (1960) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - The Pass (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Night of the Quiet Men (1959) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - The Lonesome Gun (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Bare Knuckles (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Man of God (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Dark Verdict (1959) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - The General Must Die (1959) ... Jonesy
    - The Run to Tumavaca (1959) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - General Delivery (1959) ... Jonesy
    - The Iron Captain (1959) ... Jonesy
    - The Lawbreakers (1959) ... Jonesy
    - The Star Trail (1959) ... Jonesy (credit only)
    - Fugitive Road (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Circle of Fire (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Glory Road (1959) ... Jonesy
    - Stage Stop (1959) ... Jonesy

    1958 Climax! (TV Series) - Jazzman
    - Sound of the Moon (1958) ... Jazzman
    1957 Playhouse 90 (TV Series) - Marty Dix
    - The Helen Morgan Story (1957) ... Marty Dix
    1956 The Joseph Cotten Show: On Trial (TV Series)
    Frazier
    - Death in the Snow (1956) ... Frazier
    1955 Lux Video Theatre (TV Series) - Sam
    - Casablanca (1955) ... Sam
    1955 Timberjack - Jingles
    1952 The Gulf Playhouse (TV Series) -
    - The Whale on the Beach (1952)
    1952 Belles on Their Toes - Thomas George Bracken
    1952 The Las Vegas Story - Happy
    1950 Young Man with a Horn - Willie 'Smoke' Willoughby

    1949 Johnny Holiday - Hoagy Carmichael
    1947 Night Song - Chick
    1946 The Best Years of Our Lives - Butch Engle
    1946 Canyon Passage - Hi Linnet
    1945 Johnny Angel - Celestial O'Brien
    1944 To Have and Have Not - Cricket
    1937 Topper - Hoagy - Piano Player (uncredited)

    Soundtrack (376 credits)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005994/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Music department (5 credits)

    2012 All American Alston (TV Movie)

    1992 George Shearing: Lullaby in Birdland (Video) (music: "Memphis in June")
    1990 Michael Bolton: Georgia on My Mind (Video short)

    1956 Alan Melville Takes You from A-Z (TV Series) (featuring the music of - 1 episode)
    - C (1956) ... (featuring the music of)

    1939 St. Louis Blues (songs by)

    Composer (1 credit)

    1964 De muziek van Hoagy Carmichael (TV Short)
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    Casino Royale, Ian Fleming, 1953.
    Chapter 5 - The Girl From Headquarters
    'He is very good looking. He reminds me rather of Hoagy Carmichael, but there is something cold and ruthless in his . . .'
    Chapter 8 - Pink Lights and Champagne
    As he tied his thin, double ended, black satin tie, he paused for a moment and examined himself levelly in the mirror. His grey blue eyes looked calmly back with a hint of ironical inquiry and the short lock of black hair which would never stay in place slowly subsided to form a thick comma above his right eyebrow. With the thin vertical scar down his right cheek the general effect was faintly piratical. Not much of Hoagy Carmichael there, thought Bond, as he filled a flat, light gunmetal box with fifty of the Morland cigarettes with the triple gold band. Mathis had told him of the girl's comment.
    Moonraker, Ian Fleming, 1955.
    Chapter XIV - Itching Fingers
    Commander Bond. James Bond. Clearly a conceited young man like so many of them in the Secret Service. And why had he been sent down instead of somebody she could work with, one of her friends from the Special Branch, or even somebody from MI5? The message from the Assistant Commissioner had said that there was no one else available at short notice, that this was one of the stars of the Secret Service who had the complete confidence of the Special Branch and the blessings of MI5. Even the Prime Minister had had to give permission for him to operate, for just this one assignment, inside England. But what use could he be in the short time that was left? He could probably shoot all right and talk foreign languages and do a lot of tricks that might be useful abroad. But what good could he do down here without any beautiful spies to make love to. Because he was certainly good-looking. (Gala Brand automatically reached into her bag for her vanity case. She examined herself in the little mirror and dabbed at her nose with a powder puff.) Rather like Hoagy Carmichael in a way. That black hair falling down over the right eyebrow. Much the same bones. But there was something a bit cruel in the mouth, and the eyes were cold. Were they grey or blue? It had been difficult to say last night. Well, at any rate she had put him in his place and shown him that she wasn't impressed by dashing young men from the Secret Service, however romantic they might look.

    "Stardust", Hoagy Carmichael.


    Have and Have Not, "Am I Blue", Hoagy Carmichael, 1944.


    Have and Have Not, "Georgia", Hoagy Carmichael, 1944.

    1923: Guy Doleman is born--Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand.
    (He dies 30 January 1996 at age 72--Los Angeles, California.)
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    Guy Doleman
    See the complete article here:
    Guy_Doleman.jpg
    Guy Doleman in The Prisoner (1967)
    Guy Doleman
    Born 22 November 1923
    Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand
    Died 30 January 1996 (aged 72)
    Los Angeles, California, U.S.
    Years active 1948–1992

    Guy Doleman (22 November 1923 – 30 January 1996) was a New Zealand actor.

    Early life
    Doleman was born in Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand, later moving to Australia.

    Career
    During the 1940s and '50s, Doleman was one of the busiest actors in Australia, appearing in the majority of films made there at the time, and being busy on radio, particularly in the drama Hagen's Circus, which made him a radio star in Australia. A history of Australian radio grouped Doleman with Peter Finch, Grant Taylor, Rod Taylor and Lloyd Berrell as part of "a wild but very colourful group of actors... who in their own way helped forge a wonderful ambience which was unique to Sydney radio. They had their friendly fights in studios and even took on gangs of hecklers in the backstreets of Kings Cross, with a sense of joy. Most times they came out on top in these scuffles."

    In 1952 he won a £300 Actor's Choice Award for his performance in the radio drama The Coward. He used this money to go to Hollywood for a film in September 1953, where he did a bit of television work, then returned to Australia.

    He was cast in Long John Silver (1954) but passed on the role because it meant he had to wear contact lenses – Rod Taylor took the part instead.[5] He had moved to London by the early 1960s. Later he returned to Australia.
    He is perhaps best known for his role as "Count Lippe" in the James Bond film Thunderball (1965) and as "Colonel Ross" in the three film adaptations of Len Deighton's Harry Palmer novels, starring Michael Caine, released between 1965 and 1967. He also played Number Two in the TV series The Prisoner (1967). Doleman's was the first of a pair of Number Twos who appeared in the first episode, "Arrival"; the second being played by George Baker.
    Death
    Guy Doleman died of lung cancer in Los Angeles on 30 January 1996 aged 72.

    Filmography
    Always Another Dawn (1948) - Warren Melville
    Strong Is the Seed (1949) - William Farrer

    The Kangaroo Kid (1950) - Sgt. Jim Penrose
    Kangaroo (1952) - Pleader (uncredited)
    The Phantom Stockman (1953) - Mr. Stapleton
    His Majesty O'Keefe (1954) - Herr Weber
    Dial M for Murder (1954) - Detective (uncredited)[6]
    Smiley (1956) - Bill McVitty
    The Adventures of Long John Silver (1957, TV Series) - Dr. Stanhope
    The Shiralee (1957) - Son O'Neill
    Smiley Gets a Gun (1958) - Quirk
    On the Beach (1959) - Lt. Cmdr. Farrel

    The Grey Nurse Said Nothing (1960, TV Movie)[7]
    The Square Ring (1960, TV Movie)
    Whiplash (1961, TV Series) - Sundowner / Raike Dartner / Norris
    Follow the Sun (1961, TV Series) - Alex Cooper
    ITV Play of the Week (1962-1963, TV Series) - Walter Ramsden / Captain Lee
    No Hiding Place (1962-1964, TV Series) - Melvyn Kerry / Felix Seymour / James Conway
    The Avengers (1963, TV Series) - Oliver Waldner
    Jezebel ex UK (1963, TV Series) - Robin Coleridge
    Captain Sindbad (1963)
    The Dickie Henderson Show (1963, TV Series)
    BBC Sunday-Night Play (1963, TV Series) - Managing Editor
    The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre (1963, TV Series) - Wayne Douglas
    The Hidden Truth (1964, TV Series) - Charles Medwin
    The System (1964) (aka: The Girl Getters) - Philip
    Boy with a Flute (1965, Short)
    Young Cassidy (1965) - Officer
    The Ipcress File (1965) - Colonel Ross
    Thunderball (1965) - Count Lippe
    The Idol (1966) - Martin Livesey
    The Power Game (1966, TV Series) - Stephen Gray
    Funeral in Berlin (1966) - Colonel Ross
    The Deadly Bees (1967) - Ralph Hargrove
    The Prisoner (1967, Episode: "Arrival") - Number Two
    Thirty-Minute Theatre (1967, Episode: "The Tape Recorder")
    Billion Dollar Brain (1967) - Colonel Ross
    A Twist of Sand (1968) - Patrol Boat Commander
    Strange Report (1969, TV Series) - Glyn Crowley

    Chilling (1974)
    The Six Million Dollar Man (1977, TV Series) - Henry Bulman
    Enigma (1977) - Maurice Mockcastle
    The Greatest Battle (1978) - General Whitmore

    A Dangerous Summer (1981) - Julian Fane
    Early Frost (1982) - Mike Hayes
    Goodbye Paradise (1983) - Quiney
    Matt Houston (1984, TV Series) - Richard / Rudy Bezmer
    The Colbys (1986, TV Series) - Peter Hackford
    The Shiralee (1987)
    Hell Raiders (1988)

    Tagget (1991, TV Movie) - Commander Arthur Green
    Murder, She Wrote (1992, TV Series) - Corsair (final appearance)

    Theatre Credits
    Little Lambs Eat Ivy, Minerva Theatre, Kings Cross, NSW, May 1949
    Edward, My Son, Theatre Royal, Sydney, NSW, 16 September 1949
    All for Mary national tour 1956-57
    The Piccadilly Bushman national tour Sept 1959-Feb 1960

    Select Radio Credits
    The Coward (1952)[8]
    Chips (1954)[9]
    The Orchard Walls (1954)[10]
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    1944: Paul Brooke is born--London, England.

    1961: Broccoli & Saltzman announce Sean Connery in the James Bond role and kick off a big publicity campaign.
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    1963: United States President John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas.

    1965: Mads Mikkelsen is born--Østerbro, Copenhagen, Denmark.
    1966: O.K. Connery (aka Operation Kid Brother; Operation Double 007) released in the US.
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    1980: Leonard Barr dies at age 77--West Hollywood, California.
    (Born 27 September 1903--West Virginia.)
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    Barr in Diamonds Are Forever, 1971
    Birth name Leonard Barra
    Born September 27, 1903, West Virginia, U.S.
    Died November 22, 1980 (aged 77), Burbank, California, U.S.
    Medium Stand-up, television, film
    Years active 1970–1980
    Genres One-liners
    Relative(s) Dean Martin (nephew)
    Notable works and roles Diamonds Are Forever
    Leonard Barr (born Leonard Barra; September 27, 1903 – November 22, 1980) was an American stand-up comic, actor, and dancer.

    Barr appeared several times with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis when they hosted the Colgate Comedy Hour. He had a brief role in The Sting, appropriately as a burlesque comic. That is also the way his character is listed in the credits—as an anonymous comedian. However, in the wings of the stage just before the comic's entrance, he has a brief conversation with Johnny Hooker (Robert Redford), who addresses him as "Leonard".
    He is perhaps best remembered internationally for his appearance in the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever in which he played Shady Tree, a stand-up comedian and smuggler in Las Vegas who was assassinated by henchmen Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd. He also appeared in The Odd Couple usually in the non-dialogue New York street scenes in the first season or 5 episodes later in 1975 with dialogue and, albeit unnamed, on an episode of M*A*S*H as a USO comedian. He also made numerous guest appearances on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Cameron Crowe briefly depicted Barr as a foul-mouthed real-life character in Almost Famous, his semi-autobiographical film of 2000.
    Personal life
    He was the uncle of Dean Martin (being the brother of Dean Martin's mother Angela).

    Death
    The 77-year-old Leonard Barr suffered a stroke on October 28, 1980, in his hotel room in West Hollywood and died on November 22, 1980, in a hospital in Burbank, California.
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    Leonard Barr (1903–1980)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0056536/?ref_=nmbio_bio_nm

    Filmography
    Actor (14 credits)

    1981 Under the Rainbow - Pops
    1980 Tenspeed and Brown Shoe (TV Series) - Comic
    - Pilot: Part 1 (1980) ... Comic

    1979 Skatetown, U.S.A. - 1977-1978 Szysznyk (TV Series)
    Leonard Kriegler
    - Youth of the Year (1978) ... Leonard Kriegler
    - Norton's Head Trip (1978) ... Leonard Kriegler
    - Hell on Wheels (1978) ... Leonard Kriegler
    - A Star Is Burned (1978) ... Leonard Kriegler
    - You Stomped on My Heart (1978) ... Leonard Kriegler
    1978 Battered (TV Movie) - Prof. Jeremiah Hayden
    1977 Record City - Sickly Man
    1977 Billy: Portrait of a Street Kid (TV Movie) - Hospital Roommate
    1976 The Tony Randall Show (TV Series) - Bellhop
    - Case: His Honor vs. Her Honor (1976) ... Bellhop
    1975 Little House on the Prairie (TV Series) - Proprietor
    - To See the World (1975) ... Proprietor
    1970-1975 The Odd Couple (TV Series) - Walter / Stickman / Mayor / ...
    - Old Flames Never Die (1975) ... Walter
    - The Hollywood Story (1974) ... Stickman / Mayor
    - To Bowl or Not to Bowl (1974) ... Arnold
    - Lovers Don't Make House Calls (1971) ... Panhandler (uncredited)
    - Oscar's Ulcer (1970) ... Old Playful Boxer on the Street (uncredited)
    1973 The Sting - Burlesque House Comedian
    1972 Evil Roy Slade (TV Movie) - Crippled Man
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever - Shady Tree
    1970 Love, American Style (TV Series) - Passing Buck (segment "Love and the Longest Night")
    - Love and the Big Date/Love and the Longest Night (1970) ... Passing Buck (segment "Love and the Longest Night")

    Soundtrack (2 credits)

    1967 The Dean Martin Show (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Episode #2.25 (1967) ... (performer: "Crazy Rhythm" - uncredited)
    1959 Gangster Story (music: "The Itch for Scratch")
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    1981: ABC-TV premieres Moonraker.
    1984: A View to a Kill films OO7 and Zorin fighting at the top of the Golden Gate Bridge at Stage C Pinewood Studios.

    1999: The World Is Not Enough European Charity London premiere at the Odeon Theater, Leicester Square, London.
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    2002: Die Another Day released in the US and Puerto Rico.
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    2002: Meurs un autre jour released in Canada.
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    2002: Muere otro día released in Spain. (Catalan: Mor un altre dia.)
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    2002: למות ביום אהר (Lamut B'Yom A'her; To Die the Next Day) premieres in Israel. (premiere)
    2002: Smierc nadejdzie jutro (Death Will Come tomorrow) released in Poland.
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    2006: "You Know My Name" (the grittier version) charts at #20 as a UK Single Download.
    2006: Casino Royale released in Belgium, France, and Switzerland.

    2012: Skyfall released in Australia, Republic of Macedonia, New Zealand.
    2017: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond: Solstice.
    Ibrahim Moustafa, artist. Ibrahim Moustafa, writer.
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    JAMES BOND: SOLSTICE ONE-SHOT
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513026279001011
    Cover A: Ibrahim Moustafa
    Writer: Ibrahim Moustafa
    Art: Ibrahim Moustafa
    Publication Date: November 2017
    Page Count: 40 Pages
    ON SALE DATE: 11/22
    Dynamite is proud to present their first ever James Bond Holiday special. This one-shot Bond adventure is perfect for both the new and hard-core Bond fan.
    007 accepts an unofficial mission. He travels to Paris, in pursuit of a Russian. But is Bond the hunter, or the hunted?

    A stunning thirty-page tale by superstar writer/artist IBRAHIM MOUSTAFA (Savage Things, Mockingbird, Jaeger).
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    2021: Man of Many interviews No Time To Die stunt driver Mark Higgins.
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    Interview: James Bond ‘No Time to Die’ Stunt Driver
    Mark Higgins
    Man of Many, 22 Nov 2021 | News

    We recently had the chance to attend the Aston Martin Complex at Silverstone for a special launch event in celebration of James Bond’s latest movie ‘No Time to Die’. On a day that reads more like imagination than reality and far from something, you would consider work, we had the chance to speak with Daniel Craig’s stunt driver, Mark Higgins, another lucky bloke like us whose job it is to push these classics to their limits on the track.

    Here’s how it went down.
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    Image: Max Earey
    Outside on the asphalt, lined up in all their glory were three cars we only thought we’d see together as Matchbox cars, a modern-day DBS, an 80s V8 (similar to the Vantage) and a 60s DB5. Just to have the three cars there to look at was exciting, but to know we’d be able to take each for a drive was something else.

    We started with the ‘easiest’ to drive of the bunch, and jumped behind the wheel of the DBS, a twin-turbo V12 monster that does 0-100km/h in 3.4sec, it’s far from run of the mill. The DBS was featured in both Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace (remember the opening scene with the chase through the tunnels around Lake Garda in Italy). After a lap as a passenger to ‘learn the racing line’ we jumped behind the wheel and went for a spin. With brake markers to keep alert for, apex’s to hit and a flappy paddle gearbox, you couldn’t wipe the smile off your face.

    Next up was the V8, the ‘winterised’ version of the Vantage Volante from The Living Daylights. At over 2 tonnes it was not your quintessential nimble ‘Bond car’, but it made up for that with brute power, a familiar 5-speed stick-shift and a timeless V8 rumble – a throwback to the British muscle. It was a rare lovely sunny day at Silverstone, and manhandling the heavy V8 round the Stowe track was exhilarating but sweaty business.

    It wasn’t long before we were handed the keys to the creme de la creme, the iconic DB5. Sitting behind the wood trim finish steering wheel and analogue dials instantly transports you to the French Riviera. Firing up the E46 BMW M3 sourced 4.0L inline 6 and idling towards the track paralleled the feeling of Christmas eve as a child. The DB5 won’t set any track records but it is the most beautiful driving experience and is no surprise Daniel Craig is recalling it for ‘No Time to Die’.
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    Image: Max Earey
    Interview with Mark Higgins, James Bond Stunt Driver
    We had the opportunity to meet with Mark Higgins one-to-one and hear from him what it takes to become a Bond stunt driver and his experiences on set. We also had the unrivalled experience to sit in the passenger seat as Mark put the stunt car around the track, mostly sideways and with a trail of tyre smoke. Can you believe this is his job?!

    MOM: How did you get started in stunt driving?
    Mark: I’ve worked in motorsport for probably 30 years, my background is rally driving. I’d done the odd TV thing here and there, sort of Top Gear-ish. And a friend of mine, who is Ben Collins, who was the original Stig, we were at a do one night, and he was asked to find some drivers for Quantum of Solace. So he sort of mentioned it to me, would I be interested? Of course, after a glass of wine or so, I’d have said yes to anything, but I said yes, thinking nothing more of it. And then March time came, I get a phone call, “Are you free for the next three months?” We flew off to Italy. And that was the start of Bond for me.

    MOM: And then you followed the franchise through since then?
    Mark: Yeah, I mean, I did a few other films, Fast & Furious, I’ve done some big, Star Wars, Batman, those types of films in between. But I’ve been lucky enough to stay involved with the franchise. We did Skyfall. I basically was the baddy in Quantum of Solace, you know, chasing the cars down. Because it was a gravelly type scene, it’s just a rally driver, and that’s how I got the job.

    MOM: So is driving in a Bond film the pinnacle of stunt driving?
    Mark: Yeah, it’s easy for me to say that now because I’m very lucky enough to be involved in it, but yeah, I think everybody wants to be in a Bond film. Of all the films it’s got the kudos, it’s got the history, it’s very iconic, and wherever you go around the world everybody’s heard of a Bond film. I think when I watched my first Bond film with my dad, it was probably Moonraker or something, when I was a kid, to ever think I’d be in a movie, let alone actually driving the Bond cars, you have to pinch yourself, and it’s great to be involved in such a thing.

    MOM: So if you weren’t driving the DB5, what’s your Bond car of choice?
    Mark: Very difficult one to answer, because the most iconic Bond car is, of course, the DB5. And now we’ve got the modified one here, which is great to drive. I think, talking about Bond, another car that you associated, maybe the Lotus. The underwater Lotus was quite a cool car to be in. It might not be the best handling and the best one to actually drive and skid around, but it’s still a very iconic, cool Bond car.

    MOM: So, is it hard to jump back into a regular car after filming, or is it a breath of fresh air?
    Mark: Well, thankfully on set, we’d only get taken in a minibus, so we’re not diving down the roads quickly. It’s quite interesting with my rally background, you do a rally stage and then you drive on the road in between. So you’ve been going flat out through the trees at 120 miles an hour, to then go back into normal road regulations. But now it’s quite nice to be chauffeured around when you’ve done your bit.

    MOM: How much training goes into stunts? Do you get multiple attempts or is it typically just one go at it?
    Mark: We’ll do rehearsing. We rehearse with the cars to make sure they’re doing what we want them to do. We’ll sort of set out the scene of the location with cones and what have you, and then get all the other vehicles involved, so we do practise that. So when we go to shoot for the first time, we’re not wasting time at the venue because the venue is very expensive. It’s very time consuming for the cameras. And I would say nearly every scene we do, we might do it four, five, even ten times, because there are different angles they want to get from it. And the camera is often looking at something totally different than what we think they’re looking at.

    When you do a scene with a big stunt in it, for example, depending on how big it is, you might do it once. Or if you’re lucky, twice, depending on if you’ve been blowing things up, how many spare items you’ve got to blow up. So it’s quite intense when you do a big scene like that, that you’ve got to get it right or it can be very expensive.

    MOM: So what stunt excites you most in No Time To Die?
    Mark: Well, my other passion is motorbikes. I’m not very good on two wheels, but I love bikes. Watching Paul Edmonson who jumped the bike off the tower, was quite a cool thing to do. I don’t think you ever get the impression of how sort of dangerous it actually was when you see it on film, we’ve seen it in the trailer, but when you actually looked over the wall at what he was jumping off of, it was quite special.

    MOM: If you could only have one gadget or weapon added to the DB5, what would it be and why?
    Mark: If it was a car I could take care of occasionally, it would probably be the ejector seat. I’m sure I could find many uses for that in certain scenarios. So yeah, I’d put the ejector seat in there. It’s not on this particular DB5. It was on the old school one, but that would be quite cool.

    To witness Marks stunts for yourself, check out James Bond’s latest mission ‘No Time to Die’ in cinemas now.
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    Image: Max Earey
    Man of Many
    Man of Many is Australia’s largest men’s lifestyle site and a proudly independent online destination for the latest in products, technology and style, delivering a comprehensive guide to modern life. From lifestyle and grooming to fashion and fitness, our dedicated team is focused on driving the cultural conversation and providing a premium platform for editorially-driven commerce and news. Articles included in this profile are usually written by expert contributors to the site.


  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    edited November 2023 Posts: 13,785
    November 23rd

    1990: Roald Dahl dies at age 74--Oxford, Oxfordshire, England.
    (Born 13 September 1916--Llandaff, Cardiff, Wales.)
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    Roald Dahl: a life filled with tales of the unexpected
    https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/roald-dahl-a-life-filled-with-tales-of-the-unexpected/34998768.html
    Roald Dahl was born 100 years ago in September and lived a life
    scarred by tragedy and marred by his own difficult personality.
    But his magical characters are more alive than ever
    Wednesday 12 September 2018
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    Roald Dahl and Patricia Neal (recovering from a stroke, hence the eye patch) in 1965, with their children Theo, baby Ophelia and Tessa, at their home in Great Missenden.
    Emily Hourican - August 29 2016 2:30 AM

    Roald Dahl was born 100 years ago, on September 13, to Norwegian parents in Cardiff. He died 26 years ago, yet his books, specifically his children's books, are still bought in huge numbers (over 200 million worldwide) and regularly adapted for film, TV and stage. Matilda has been playing on Broadway since 2013 and, of course, The BFG has just been released in a new, big-screen version directed by Spielberg. Roald also created a dynasty and established Dahl as a surname that manages to be both thoroughly establishment and fascinatingly bohemian.

    His remarkable imagination - exuberant, vengeful, often nauseating - and ability to create characters, usually orphans, filled with a pathos that makes us burn with indignation, are what have kept Dahl's books alive, but the whiff of sulphur that always hung around the man hasn't gone away either. Because as much as he is acknowledged a wonderful writer, with a rare understanding of children's psychology, he was also a difficult, often cruel man, with a heap of unpalatable views.

    Most recently, as Spielberg prepared for the release of The BFG, he was ambushed by allegations of Dahl's anti-Semitism, specifically a quote Dahl gave to The New Statesman: "There is a trait in the Jewish character that does provoke animosity, maybe it's a kind of lack of generosity towards non-Jews . . . even a stinker like Hitler didn't just pick on them for no reason."

    Spielberg, himself Jewish, of course, and visibly horrified, was forced to try and defend Dahl, and by extension himself, saying he had "no excuse" for not researching Dahl's public statements, but adding: "Later, when I began asking questions of people who knew Dahl, they told me he liked to say things he didn't mean just to get a reaction. And all his comments . . . he would say for effect, even if they were horrible things."
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    Dahl's second wife, Felicity, beneath his portrait.
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    It is difficult to judge and condemn the products of a previous era by our own much-changed standards. But even so, Spielberg's defence seems weak and Dahl's words far less the act of a provocateur than the musings of a bigot.

    Probably the best defence - if one is to be admitted - is Dahl's own life; the many tragedies he faced, the strange mixture of courage and cruelty he displayed. Bad things happen in Roald Dahl books - James's parents die, Mr Fox gets his tail shot off, the child (never named) from The Witches spends his life as a mouse - and they are full of disgusting, terrible people, such as James's aunts, Matilda's father, George's grandmother. These people and events are faithfully rendered, with no glossing-over or soothing euphemisms, and the reason for it becomes very obvious with even a passing knowledge of Dahl's life.

    He may have been dashing, handsome, brilliant - his second wife, Felicity Crosland, described him as the "sexiest seducer in Washington" - but Dahl was also known as 'Roald The Rotten'; domineering, inconsistent and driven by his memories of tragedy. Granddaughter Sophie described him as "a very difficult man - very strong, very dominant".

    The little girl with the big eyes in The BFG is based on Sophie, but the book is dedicated to Olivia, Dahl's eldest daughter, who he adored and who died of measles encephalitis when she was just seven. It was a terrible loss, one that had heart-breaking echoes of the death from appendicitis, also at the age of seven, of Roald's elder sister, Astri.

    A month after her death, Roald's father, who never recovered from the blow, died of pneumonia.

    Roald was just three at the time. From the age of eight, he was sent off to a series of boarding schools, where he was mostly miserable and homesick. That may have been the experience of most small boys dispatched in that particularly English tradition; the difference with Roald is that he never forgot. Nor, perhaps, did he ever recover.

    Reviewer Kathryn Hughes once said: "No matter how you spin it, Roald Dahl was an absolute sod. Crashing through life like a big, bad child, he managed to alienate pretty much everyone he ever met."

    His nickname when young was 'Apple' because he was his mother's favourite. He wrote to her every day from boarding school, but never confessed the depths of his loneliness and misery. Instead, he put a brave face on the regular bouts of violence and ritual humiliation that were so much part of the boarding-school experience then and this daily exercise in glossing over the wretched truth may very well have been the early training in storytelling he needed.

    After school, Dahl travelled the world, working for Shell oil, then joined the RAF when the Second World War broke out. A dashing, daring pilot, he spent much of the war in the US, sleeping with society beauties and passing on whatever bits of intelligence he gleaned from pillow talk. Felicity Crosland described Dahl, 6ft 6ins and a fine sportsman, as "wildly attractive and handsome, in his RAF uniform, speaking English, a fighter pilot - completely seductive. And he was charming and intelligent. A lot of women fell for him."

    Dahl, in turn, fell for the actress Patricia Neal, who he met at a dinner party hosted by playwright and screenwriter Lillian Hellman. Neal's career had started in a blaze of glory - before she was 21, she won a Tony award for her Broadway debut. Then she moved to Hollywood, where she started in the film adaptation of Ayn Rand's best-selling, ground-breaking novel The Fountainhead, and fell passionately in love with Gary Cooper.

    The affair lasted three years, during which time Neal got pregnant and had an abortion.

    Later, she wrote: "If I had only one thing to do over in my life, I would have that baby" - but Cooper refused ultimately to leave his wife.

    The Fountainhead was a disaster, followed by a couple more turkeys, and by the age of 27, Neal was back in New York, heartbroken, barely over a nervous breakdown, with her career in tatters. This was the point at which she met Dahl.

    Years later, in her autobiography As I Am, Neal wrote that she knew she didn't love Dahl from the moment they married in 1953 but she wanted to have "beautiful children" with him. And initially, the marriage seemed to be working. Neal's career revived and she won an Oscar for Best Actress in 1963 for Hud. Meantime, the couple were indeed having "beautiful children", five in all: Olivia, Tessa, Theo, Ophelia and Lucy.

    Seven years after their marriage, the couple's baby son, Theo, four months old, was crushed between a bus and a taxi while out with a nanny and left brain-damaged. The accident was witnessed by Tessa.

    Theo had eight brain operations and Dahl, unhappy with the shunt put in to drain the fluid that clogged his brain, spent two years designing and manufacturing a better version. He decided to move the family back home to England, settling in Gypsy House in the village of Great Missenden. But just a few years later, seven-year-old Olivia, the eldest, died of measles encephalitis, a tragedy that left Dahl "limp with despair".

    Patricia Neal did some of her best work in this period, then suffered a series of strokes when she was 39 and pregnant with her fifth child.

    After a lengthy operation on her brain, Patricia couldn't talk or walk and was largely paralysed.

    Here, Dahl showed himself to be a man of complete determination and a certain vision, but touched with coldness, even sadism.

    He essentially forced Patricia to get well. If she wanted something, he held it out of reach until she asked for it. He badgered her to walk, to move, to read and memorize and forced her to do hours of painful physical and speech therapy.

    For those watching, there were many pitiful moments, but in the end, Dahl's strange, stubborn insistence came good. Six months after the brain operation Neal gave birth to a healthy daughter, Lucy. Shortly after that, he decided she was ready to give a speech to a charity dinner for brain-damaged children. Although terrified, she did, to thunderous applause. "I knew at that moment that Roald the slave driver, Roald the bastard, with his relentless scourge, Roald the Rotten, as I had called him more than once, had thrown me back into the deep water. Where I belonged," she later said.

    He may have forced Neal to get well again, but there didn't seem any way of saving the marriage. Dahl began an affair with one of Neal's best friends, Felicity Crosland, and in 1983 the couple divorced and he remarried. To Patricia's fury, their children mostly knew of and condoned the affair. Ophelia Dahl, who was 14 when her parents divorced, later said: "All of us realised that he had found the love of his life with Liccy (Felicity) and there's always a sense of relief when that happens."

    Throughout, Dahl had been writing, finding early and considerable success with Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, published in 1964 and a classic ever since.

    At the same time, he was also writing adult fiction, including pornography for Playboy - friend and fellow writer Noel Coward once said of his adult fiction: "The stories are brilliant and the imagination is fabulous. Unfortunately, there is, in all of them, an underlying streak of cruelty and macabre unpleasantness and a curiously adolescent emphasis on sex" - and was often very dismissive of children's literature and his own role within it.

    Of course, the streak of "cruelty and macabre unpleasantness" that Coward detected was very much present in his children's books too.

    It seemed also to be present in his life. As a father, Dahl was irascible and inconsistent; protective and manipulative, controlling and kind; a tough combination. Tessa, the daughter next to Olivia in age, was frequently compared with the child her father mourned so obviously - "my older sister Olivia had been the love of Daddy's life . . . both of us contracted measles, but she had died" - and always unfavourably.

    "In our family, you got attention only if you were brain-damaged or dead or terribly ill. There was no reward for being normal," she once said. And so Tessa gave up on being 'normal', instead becoming wild, precocious and deeply unhappy.

    In a piece written in 2012, she talks of being brought to see psychiatrist Anna Freud after Theo's accident. Freud recommended therapy for the whole family, but Dahl had a mistrust of something that he believed had left various friends unable to write because they "had all their nooks and crannies flattened like pancakes", so he insisted on medication instead. Freud refused, so Dahl found another doctor, less scrupulous, to prescribe, and Tessa, from the age of four, was medicated.

    By her teenage years, Tessa was given Quaaludes, a sedative, by her father, who brought them home from America, and regularly drank alcohol with him. She had developed, she says "narcissistic character disorders" and was "the problem child who became the scapegoat." But she insists: "My parents did their best."

    Tessa, like her mother, was a beauty. By her teenage years, she had become a gossip-column fixture, for dating Peter Sellers and Brian de Palma, among others. Sophie was her first child, from a short affair with actor Julian Holloway when Tessa was 19. Later, she married twice, and had three more children.

    She battled drug addiction and crippling depression and began a long search for meaning, visiting ashrams, falling under the spell of various gurus.

    She also began to write - articles, children's books and one novel. Dahl, although publicly supportive, was privately competitive: "After I sold my first children's book, he had struggled up to his hut with agonised hips to fetch his royalty statements - to prove to me that I would never make as much money as him, however successful I became."

    And yet despite, or more likely because of, Dahl's emotional distance, he was the great focus of Tessa's life.

    "I loved him with an undiluted and unmet passion. He was my major motivation as my whole life consisted of proving to him that, although my sister died, I was still worthy of life and love."

    Someone once said that all siblings have different parents. Dahl was perhaps a different kind of father to his other children.

    Ophelia is a social justice and healthcare advocate, while Lucy, the youngest and a screenwriter in Hollywood - she wrote Wild Child, made into a film with Natasha Richardson - remembers a generous, magical kind of parent.

    "He absolutely hated children being bored. He used to say boredom was death," she recalls, and so he bought a Morris Minor for them to drive around a track he had created.

    As a grandfather, Dahl seems to have hit his stride. For Tessa's daughter, Sophie, whose young life was spent trailing along on her mother's search for happiness, peace and enlightenment, he was a fixed and stable point.

    "Wonderful, really wonderful," is how she describes him.

    He had an old gypsy caravan in his garden, which Sophie and her friends used as a playhouse.

    "It was brutally uncomfortable and really cold, but I would stay in there with my friends and so we'd have midnight feasts of chocolate in bed. Then, in the morning, we'd appear in the house and he'd make us all breakfast."

    Sophie now lives in Gipsy House with her husband, singer-songwriter Jamie Cullum, and their two children.

    By the time Dahl died in 1990, aged 74, 4,000 letters a week were arriving to the local post office for him. Last year, 80,000 people visited the museum dedicated to him in Great Missenden.

    They don't go despite the core of darkness in his books, but because of it. The enduring magic of Dahl's world is the way it acknowledges the nasty side of life, has irresistible fun with it, then allows good to triumph.
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    Roald Dahl (1916–1990)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001094/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Writer (76 credits)

    Matilda (based on the book by) (announced)
    Willy Wonka (creator) (announced)

    2020 The Witches (novel) (post-production)
    2017 Tom and Jerry: Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (Video) (based on the novel "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" by)
    2016 Revolting Rhymes Part Two (TV Short) (based on the book by)
    2016 Revolting Rhymes Part One (TV Short) (based on the book by)
    2016 Welcome to the Basement (TV Series) (screenplay - 1 episode)
    - You Only Live Twice (2016) ... (screenplay)
    2016 The BFG (based on the book by)
    2016 In the Ruins (Short) (short story)
    2016 Lamb to the Slaughter (Short) (novel)
    2015 The Taste (Short) (based on a short story by)
    2015 Roald Dahl's Esio Trot (TV Movie) (based on the novel by)
    2013 Baa Baa Black Sheep (Short) (story)
    2013/I Cheap Thrills (short story "Man from the South" - uncredited)
    2012 Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory in the Playroom (Video short) (book "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" - uncredited)
    2012 Bang-lure (Short) (story)
    2012 Chippendale (Short)
    2009 Fantastic Mr. Fox (novel)
    2008 Three Little Pigs (Short) (writer)
    2007 Jackanory Junior (TV Series)
    2005 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (book)
    2005 Imagine (TV Series documentary) (quotations - 1 episode)
    - Fantastic Mr Dahl (2005) ... (quotations - uncredited)
    2005/I The Bet (Short) (story)
    2002 Lamb to the Slaughter (story)
    2000 Genesis and Catastrophe (Short) (story)

    1999 Inaudito (Short) (story)
    1997 The Enormous Crocodile (TV Movie)
    1996 Matilda (book)
    1996 James And The Giant Peach (based on the book by)
    1995 Alien Tales (Video Game) (synopsis: Matilda)
    Jackanory (TV Series) (book - 14 episodes, 1968 - 1986) (novel - 6 episodes, 1979 - 1995)
    - The Twits (1995) ... (novel)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Part Five (1986) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Part Four (1986) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Part Three (1986) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Part Two (1986) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Part One (1986) ... (novel)
    - George's Marvellous Medicine: Grandma Gets the Medicine (1986) ... (novel)
    - George's Marvellous Medicine: The Cook-Up (1986) ... (novel)
    - George's Marvellous Medicine: The Marvellous Plan (1986) ... (novel)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1979) ... (novel)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Down to Earth (1968) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Adventures in the Air (1968) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Danger - Sharks! (1968) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: Strange Creatures (1968) ... (book)
    - James and the Giant Peach: The Mysterious Peach (1968) ... (book)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: A Surprise for Charlie (1968) ... (book)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: A Shock for Veruca and Violet (1968) ... (book)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: The Chocolate Room (1968) ... (book)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Fudgemallow Delight (1968) ... (book)
    - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Golden Tickets (1968) ... (book)
    1995 Pisvingers! (Short) (story "The Swan")
    1992 Idealnaya para (stories)
    1990 Dirty Beasts (TV Movie)
    1990 Revolting Rhymes (TV Movie)
    1990 The Magic Finger (TV Movie)
    1990 The Silent Hunt (novel)
    1990 The Witches (book)

    1989 Breaking Point (TV Movie) (novel "Beware of the Dog")
    1989 Danny the Champion of the World (TV Movie) (novel)
    1988 Velká rosáda (TV Movie) (adaptation)
    Tales of the Unexpected (TV Series) (writer - 15 episodes, 1979 - 1981) (story - 11 episodes, 1979 - 1988)
    - The Surgeon (1988) ... (story)
    - The Sound Machine (1981) ... (writer)
    - The Boy Who Talked with Animals (1981) ... (story)
    - Parson's Pleasure (1980) ... (story)
    - Vengeance Is Mine Inc. (1980) ... (writer)
    - Mr Botibol's First Love (1980) ... (story)
    - Genesis & Catastrophe (1980) ... (story)
    - The Umbrella Man (1980) ... (story)
    - Depart in Peace (1980) ... (writer)
    - Georgy Porgy (1980) ... (story)
    - My Lady Love, My Dove (1980) ... (writer)
    - Taste (1980) ... (writer)
    - Poison (1980) ... (story)
    - The Hitch-Hiker (1980) ... (story)
    - Galloping Foxley (1980) ... (story)
    - Skin (1980) ... (writer)
    - Royal Jelly (1980) ... (writer)
    - The Way Up to Heaven (1979) ... (writer)
    - A Dip in the Pool (1979) ... (writer)
    - Edward the Conqueror (1979) ... (writer)
    - Neck (1979) ... (writer)
    - The Landlady (1979) ... (writer)
    - Lamb to the Slaughter (1979) ... (writer)
    - William and Mary (1979) ... (writer)
    - Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel's Coat (1979) ... (writer)
    - The Man from the South (1979) ... (story)
    1988 The Book Tower (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
    - Episode #10.1 (1988) ... (writer - segment ": "Boy")
    1987 The BFG (novel)
    1985 Alfred Hitchcock Presents (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - Pilot (1985) ... (story - segment "Man from the South")
    1984 Kobra (Short) (short story "Poison")
    1983 Kalle och chokladfabriken (TV Mini-Series) (novel)

    1976 James and the Giant Peach (TV Movie) (based upon a novel by)
    1976 Le care mogli (TV Movie) (play)
    1975 A Gigot (Short) (short story "Lamb to the Slaughter")
    1975 Hundert Mark (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
    - Des Pfarrers Freude ... (writer)
    1975 Uit de wereld van Roald Dahl (TV Series) (story - 5 episodes)
    - Een frisse duik (1975) ... (story)
    - De verrassing (1975) ... (story)
    - Op weg naar de hemel (1975) ... (story)
    - Vergif (1975) ... (story)
    - De weddenschap (1975) ... (story)
    1974 Genesis and Catastrophe (Short) (short story "Genesis and Catastrophe")
    1973 Et lite grøss? (TV Mini-Series) (short story "The Landlady" - 1 episode)
    - Vertinnen (1973) ... (short story "The Landlady")
    1971 Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (book "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory") / (screenplay)
    1971 The Road Builder
    1968 Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (screenplay)
    1968 Late Night Horror (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
    - William and Mary (1968) ... (writer)
    1967 You Only Live Twice (screenplay)
    1967 Teatterituokio (TV Series) (short story "Taste" - 1 episode)
    - Maku (1967) ... (short story "Taste")
    Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) (story - 2 episodes, 1965) (writer - 1 episode, 1967)
    - Taste (1967) ... (writer)
    - Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel's Coat (1965) ... (story)
    - Parson's Pleasure (1965) ... (story)
    1966 Des Pfarrers Freude (TV Movie) (story)
    1964 36 Hours (story "Beware of the Dog")
    1962 That Was the Week That Was (TV Series)
    1961 'Way Out (TV Series) (by - 1 episode)
    - William and Mary (1961) ... (by)
    Alfred Hitchcock Presents (TV Series) (based on a story by - 3 episodes, 1958 - 1961) (story - 2 episodes, 1958) (story by - 1 episode, 1960) (teleplay - 1 episode, 1958)
    - The Landlady (1961) ... (based on a story by)
    - Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel's Coat (1960) ... (based on a story by)
    - Man from the South (1960) ... (story by)
    - Poison (1958) ... (story)
    - Dip in the Pool (1958) ... (based on a story by)
    - Lamb to the Slaughter (1958) ... (story) / (teleplay)
    1959 Rendezvous (TV Series) (short story: "Beware of the Dog" - 1 episode)
    - Blind Landing (1959) ... (short story: "Beware of the Dog")
    1958 Suspicion (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - The Way Up to Heaven (1958) ... (story)
    1956 Le coup du berger (Short) (story - uncredited)
    1955 Cameo Theatre (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - The Man from the South (1955) ... (story)
    1955 Star Tonight (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - Taste (1955) ... (story)
    1954 Danger (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - A Dip in the Pool (1954) ... (story)
    1954 The Philip Morris Playhouse (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - Taste (1954) ... (story)
    1952 Lux Video Theatre (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - The Taste (1952) ... (story)
    1952 CBS Television Workshop (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - The Sound Machine (1952) ... (story)
    1950 Suspense (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - Poison (1950) ... (story)

    Actor (2 credits)
    1965 Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) - Narrator
    - Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel's Coat (1965) ... Narrator (voice)
    1961 'Way Out (TV Series) - Host
    - 20/20 (1961) ... Host
    - Side Show (1961) ... Host
    - Hush-Hush (1961) ... Host
    - The Overnight Case (1961) ... Host
    - The Croaker (1961) ... Host
    -
    Soundtrack (2 credits)

    2005 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (lyrics: "Augustus Gloop", "Violet Beauregarde", "Veruca Salt", "Mike Teavee")

    1996 James And The Giant Peach (lyrics: "Eating The Peach")
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    2002: Madonna’s Die Another Day single peaks at #1, Canadian Soundscan Singles Sales chart.
    Stays there (on and off) 7 weeks.
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    2006: Casino Royale released in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Switzerland, Croatia, and the Netherlands.
    2006: 007 - Casino Royale released in Slovenia.
    2006: James Bond 007 - Casino Royale released in Germany and Portugal.
    2006: Казино ројал (Kazino rojal) released in Serbia.
    2006: 007 カジノ・ロワイヤル (007: Kajino rowaiyaru) opens the Tokyo International Cine City Festival.
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    2022: For US releases, Bond films are recognized as becoming a Thanksgiving-aligned franchise.
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    How James Bond Became a Thanksgiving Holiday
    Franchise
    By Richard Fink | Published Nov 15, 2022

    The James Bond movies have typically been released around Thanksgiving weekend, so what makes a UK spy great to watch on an a American holiday?

    Thanksgiving weekend has often been a big time for movies, as the five-day holiday weekend gives for more chances for families that have gathered together to celebrate the holiday the chance to go out to the movies. There have been certain staples over the years. Disney has often opened an animated feature film over the holiday weekend. Harry Potter, Twilight, and The Hunger Games all used the week before Thanksgiving to achieve incredible box office numbers. Yet one franchise has been a staple of the holiday season without anyone really noticing: James Bond.

    James Bond has been a box office draw since his debut film in 1962's Dr. No. The super spy has been the star of 25 official films from Eon Pictures. The franchise is celebrating its 60th anniversary, and is in a transition period between Bond actors. With all the James Bond movies on Prime Video now, and for those needing to get in the Thanksgiving spirit, this is how and why Bond is such a staple of the Thanksgiving holiday season.
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    Pierce Brosnan James Bond GoldenEye 1995 Eon
    MGM / UA
    James Bond Release History
    From Dr. No in 1962 until The Man With The Golden Gun in 1974, the James Bond films typically were released during the holiday season around December as it was one of the most profitable times to release a movie. However, in 1975 the release of Jaws shifted the release calendar to make the summer movie season the most profitable time for big budget fair which was only solidified in 1977 with the release of Star Wars. 1977 saw the first James Bond movie released in the summer, The Spy Who Loved Me. The next seven Bond movies were released during the summer movie season.

    After a seven-year hiatus, Bond returned with Goldeneye in 1995 and the film was given a November 17 release date, the Friday before Thanksgiving. Goldeneye was a box office hit and set the Pierce Brosnan era as a staple of the holiday season. While Tomorrow Never Dies got a December release date (opening the same day as Titanic), both The World Is Not Enough and Die Another Day were released the Friday before Thanksgiving.
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    Daniel Craig in a Barbour Jacket in Skyfall
    Sony Pictures
    Craig Bond Films Bring the Franchise to New Heights
    Daniel Craig marked not only a new James Bond but a new continuity. However, many rules of the franchise remained the same, and one of them was that prime November release date. Casino Royale opened on November 17, 2006. While the movie did not take the number one spot at the box office (it was beaten by Happy Feet), Casino Royale held exceptionally well the following weekend during the Thanksgiving holiday and ended up bringing $167 million domestic and $605 million worldwide.

    The following three Daniel Craig James Bond movies, Quantum of Solace, Skyfall, and Spectre opened on the second weekend of November as the weekend before Thanksgiving had since become the main weekend for YA novel adaptations. Quantum of Solace may not have received the positive reviews that Casino Royale did, but it did see a slight increase at the domestic box office. Skyfall on the other hand shattered all expectations to become the highest grossing Bond movie and the first in the franchise to cross $1 billion worldwide. Spectre may not have performed at the level of Skyfall but $880 million worldwide is still nothing to be ashamed of.

    The tradition did break with the release of No Time To Die but not for lack of trying. The studio original set it for release in November 2019 but was delayed following original director Danny Boyle's departure. The film was set for April 2020 but was delayed due to COVID-19 and the studio set it for release on November 12, 2020 in the UK and Thanksgiving weekend of November 25, 2020 in the United States. However, the movie was delayed multiple times and finally was released in theaters on October 8, 2021.
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    Daniel Craig as James Bond in Spectre
    Sony Pictures
    Why Does Bond Work With The Holiday Season
    It is odd that a franchise focused on a British secret agent would feel so right with a uniquely American holiday. Yet there is something about Bond movies that just feel right at home in November. Typically, the movies open a few weeks earlier in the UK, but in the United States, Bond has been a part of the holiday season for two decades. Part of the reason could be the cold London setting fits the weather of the holiday season while the unique locations offer a break from the traditional November weather that feels like an escape.

    Yet another major aspect would be the target audience. Bond is an old franchise, now celebrating 60 years. A good portion of the audience who went to go see the original films as kids are now old enough to not only be parents but grandparents and even great-grandparents. It is a franchise that has grown up with its audience, catering to an older movie going crowd that may not go out to the movies as much but will go for a Bond film.

    That also has the impact of making them generational films, as they will go with younger relatives and, pun intended, form a bond watching them. It becomes a shared experience, one that can become associated with the holiday. Everyone coming together to enjoy a meal and then afterwards deciding to go out to a movie together and James Bond can appeal to all ages. Thanksgiving just feels like it is missing something when a James Bond movie isn't around.

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    2022: The Mary Sue confirms James Bond films as Thanksgiving films.
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    Thanksgiving Is James Bond’s Holiday
    By Rachel Leishman | Nov 24th, 2022

    When you think of Thanksgiving, you don’t typically think of something that is incredibly British, and while I have two franchises I associate with the holiday, one at least makes sense (that’d be the Rocky movies) but the other… well, doesn’t. I’m talking of course about how I think that the James Bond movies are linked to Thanksgiving. You know, the British spy series?

    Hear me out though: It’s because of its releases. Growing up with Pierce Brosnan as my Bond, it seemed like there was always a new movie about James Bond and his spy adventures coming out around the holiday (and he even had a Bond girl named Christmas).

    There’s nothing in this franchise that links it to any holidays really, and if there is, it is just happenstance. But these are spy movies most of all. They’re not movies meant to be an emotional holiday tradition. I’ve just made it so because they love to release these movies in November for whatever reason, and thus my brain expects James Bond at Thanksgiving time. And can you blame me? It’s why I was so angry when No Time To Die changed its release date to a different holiday.

    But it also has to do with the fact that I feel like AMC or some channel like it would play the Bond movies? That or my brother would pretend like they just happened to be on television and we would watch them because he loved them just as much as I do. The point is, the holiday was always filled with Bond and his Bond girls, and I guess that’s why, to me, this is a Thanksgiving franchise.

    Does it make sense? Absolutely not.
    Not once is this movie set with a turkey dinner or someone saying that they’re thankful for James and his work. It’s not one of those kinds of “holiday” connections (looking at you, Die Hard), but it is just something that feels right for this time of year.

    If anything, it shows what release timing can do to our feelings about movies. Again, this movie franchise often has Bond on a beach somewhere, so it isn’t the cozy Thanksgiving feel you can get away with by claiming that Knives Out is a Thanksgiving movie. But with this franchise, it is completely about when it hits theaters.

    That is, arguably, what I would say is the case for most “Thanksgiving” movies. We all know that Spider-Man (2002) is a Thanksgiving movie (if you didn’t before, you do now), and that’s just because Peter has Thanksgiving dinner with Aunt May, MJ, Harry, and Norman. Point is: We play fast and loose with Thanksgiving movies because there are very few overt examples.

    That’s why I think the James Bond franchise is a Thanksgiving tradition. Maybe if I am loud enough, others will join in with my absolutely nonsense stance that this franchise belongs to the Thanksgiving holiday, but hey, at least every November I have an excuse to watch James Bond run around in fancy cars and nice suits!


    —The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 24th

    1959: Jack Whittingham meets Ian Fleming and Ivor Bryce in New York.

    1965: Variety reports Tom Jones signed up for the Thunderball title song, plus (not entirely correctly) that Shirley Bassey recorded a John Barry-Leslie Bricusse tune for the end titles.
    1966: You Only Live Twice films the throwing star and Blofeld. Actor Donald Pleasance is photographed on set.
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    1981: Altin Tabancali Adam (The Golden Gun Man) released in Turkey.
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    But not this one from 1970
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    1983: Octopussy released in Australia.
    Australian Daybill
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    1983: Τζέημς Μποντ, πράκτωρ 007: Επιχείρηση Οκτάπουσι (James Bond, Agent 007: Enterprise Octopus) released in Greece.
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    1995: GoldenEye released in the UK, Ireland, and Poland.
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    2006: Casino Royale released in Austria, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Romania, and Sweden.
    2006: 007: Casino Royale released in Spain.
    2006: Казино Pоял released in Bulgaria.
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    2014: The Sony Corp. entertainment computer network is hacked, releasing sensitive information including details of the Spectre script. The biggest cyberattack to that date in the US. North Korea denies involvement. The FBI investigates.

    2018: Ricky Jay (Richard Jay Potash) dies at age 70--Los Angeles, California.
    (Born 26 June 1948--Brooklyn, New York City, New York.)
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    Ricky Jay, Master Magician and
    Actor in ‘Deadwood,’ ‘Boogie
    Nights,’ Dies at 72
    https://variety.com/2018/film/news/ricky-jay-dead-dies-magician-boogie-nights-1203035879/
    https://twitter.com/Variety_PatS
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    Ricky Jay 'Life of Pi' film premiere at the 50th Annual New York Film Festival, America - 28 Sep 2012
    CREDIT: Dave Allocca/Starpix/REX/Shutter
    Ricky Jay, a master magician who also acted in films and TV shows such as “Boogie Nights,” “House of Games” and “Deadwood,” died Saturday in Los Angeles. He was 72.

    Jay’s manager, Winston Simone, said he died of natural causes, adding, “He was one of a kind. We will never see the likes of him again.”

    His attorney Stan Coleman confirmed his death. His partner in the Deceptive Practices company, Michael Weber, tweeted, “I am sorry to share that my remarkable friend, teacher, collaborator and co-conspirator is gone.”

    A New Yorker profile called him “the most gifted sleight of hand artist alive,” and Jay was also known for his card tricks and memory feats.

    He appeared in several David Mamet movies, including “House of Games,” “The Spanish Prisoner,” “Things Change,” “Redbelt” and “State and Main.”

    Steve Martin, with whom he appeared in “The Spanish Prisoner,” described Jay in the New Yorker profile, “I sort of think of Ricky as the intellectual élite of magicians. He’s expertly able to perform and yet he knows the theory, history, literature of the field.”

    In “Deadwood,” he played card sharp Eddie Sawyer during the first season, and also wrote for the show.
    In the 1997 James Bond film “Tomorrow Never Dies,” Jay played a cyber-terrorist to Pierce Brosnan’s Bond.
    He also provided the narration for movies such as Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Magnolia.” His one-man Broadway show directed by Mamet, “Ricky Jay and His 52 Assistants,” was recorded for an HBO special in 1996.

    With Weber, he created the Deceptive Practices company, which provided solutions to movies and TV productions such as the wheelchair that hid Gary Sinise’s legs in “Forrest Gump.” They also worked on films including “The Prestige,” “The Illusionist” and “Oceans Thirteen.”

    Jay, who was born Richard Jay Potash in Brooklyn, was introduced to magic by his grandfather. He began performing in New York, opening for rock bands. Jay first worked in film with on Caleb Deschanel’s “The Escape Artist.”

    A documentary about his life, “Deceptive Practice: The Mysteries and Mentors of Ricky Jay,” was released in 2012.

    A student of all facets of magic, prestidigitation and trickery, he maintained a large library of historic works and wrote two books, as well as numerous articles for the New Yorker; he also frequently lectured at museums and universities.
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    Ricky Jay (1946–2018)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0419633/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Trivia
    Ricky Jay (Henry Gupta) is also an acclaimed magician, who holds a world record for the fastest throwing playing cards. The producers initially wanted a scene where he threw playing cards at Bond. They set up the scene to block, Ricky was fifty or seventy-five feet away, and was asked to hit Pierce Brosnan in the face. Ricky warned them it wasn't a good idea, safety wise. After they convinced him to do it, he agreed, and hit Pierce right above the eyes. To his disappointment, for some reason, they never asked him to repeat it on film. Gupta is shown throwing cards in the DVD deleted scenes.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Cofb-jJiFk

    Filmography
    Actor (41 credits)

    2019 Sneaky Pete (TV Series) - T.H. Vignetti
    - The Sunshine Switcheroo (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The Little Sister (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The California Split (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The Invisible Man (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The Brooklyn Potash (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti (voice, uncredited)
    - The Vermont Victim & The Bakersfield Hustle (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The Stamford Trust Fall (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    - The Huckleberry Jones (2019) ... T.H. Vignetti
    2015 The Automatic Hate - Josh / Howard's son
    2014 Getting On (TV Series) - Thoracic Surgeon
    - Turnips... North Day... Yes, yes. (2014) ... Thoracic Surgeon
    2013 Breathe Life Radio TV (TV Series)
    2013 Teen Titans Go! (TV Series short) - Narrator
    - Double Trouble (2013) ... Narrator (voice)
    2011 The End of 'Sluggers' (Short)
    2010 Lost Masterpieces of Pornography (Video short) - Narrator
    2009-2010 Flashforward (TV Series) - Ted Flosso / Man in Warehouse
    - Revelation Zero: Part 2 (2010) ... Ted Flosso
    - Revelation Zero: Part 1 (2010) ... Ted Flosso
    - Playing Cards with Coyote (2009) ... Man in Warehouse
    2009 Lie to Me (TV Series) - Mason Brock
    - Fold Equity (2009) - .. Mason Brock

    2009 Intense - John
    2007-2009 The Unit (TV Series) - Agent Kern
    - Bad Beat (2009) ... Agent Kern
    - Pandemonium: Part Two (2007) ... Agent Kern
    - Paradise Lost (2007) ... Agent Kern
    - Bedfellows (2007) ... Agent Kern
    2008 The Brothers Bloom - Narrator (voice)
    2008 Redbelt - Marty Brown
    2008 The Great Buck Howard - Gil Bellamy
    2006-2007 Kidnapped (TV Series) - Roger Prince
    - Mutiny (2007) ... Roger Prince
    - Gone Fishing (2007) ... Roger Prince
    - Number One with a Bullet (2006) ... Roger Prince
    - Pilot (2006) ... Roger Prince
    2006 The Prestige - Milton
    2005 Last Days - Detective
    2004 Deadwood (TV Series) - Eddie Sawyer
    - Sold Under Sin (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Jewel's Boot Is Made for Walking (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Mister Wu (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - No Other Sons or Daughters (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Suffer the Little Children (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Bullock Returns to the Camp (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Plague (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - The Trial of Jack McCall (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Here Was a Man (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    - Reconnoitering the Rim (2004) ... Eddie Sawyer
    2004 Incident at Loch Ness - Party Guest
    2001 Heist - Don 'Pinky' Pincus
    2001 Heartbreakers - Dawson's Auctioneer
    2000 State and Main - Jack
    2000 The X-Files (TV Series) - The Amazing Maleeni / Herman Pinchbeck / Albert Pinchbeck
    - The Amazing Maleeni (2000) ... The Amazing Maleeni / Herman Pinchbeck / Albert Pinchbeck

    1999 Magnolia - Burt Ramsey / Narrator
    1999 Mystery Men - Vic Weems
    1997 Tomorrow Never Dies - Henry Gupta
    1997/I Hacks - The Hat
    1997 Boogie Nights - Kurt Longjohn
    1997 The Spanish Prisoner - George Lang
    1995 The Ranger, the Cook and a Hole in the Sky (TV Movie) - Hawkes
    1993 Magiskt (TV Series) - Magic film clip
    - Special guest: John Houdi (1993) ... Magic film clip
    - Special guest: John Houdi (1993) ... Magic film clip
    - Special guest: Lars-Peter Loeld (1993) ... Magic film clip
    1990-1992 The Secret Cabaret (TV Series) - Special appearance
    1992 Ring of the Musketeers (TV Movie) - Kerns (as Rickey Jay)
    1992 The Water Engine (TV Movie) - Ratty Inventor
    1991 Civil Wars (TV Series) - Lenny NiCastro
    - Pilot (1991) ... Lenny NiCastro
    1991 The Thrill Is Gone (TV Movie) - Dealer
    1991 Homicide - Aaron

    1988 Things Change - Mr. Silver
    1987 House of Games - George / Vegas Man
    1985/II A Midsummer Night's Dream (TV Movie) - Philostrate
    1983 Simon & Simon (TV Series) - Bird
    - Red Dog Blues (1983) ... Bird

    Miscellaneous Crew (21 credits)

    2008 The Great Buck Howard (technical consultant: magic)
    2007 Ocean's Thirteen (consultant)
    2006 The Prestige (technical advisor: magic)
    2006 The Illusionist (technical advisor: magic)
    2001 The Affair of the Necklace (technical consultant)
    2001 Heist (technical consultant)
    2001 Heartbreakers (technical consultant: con games)

    1998 The Parent Trap (technical consultant)
    1997 The Spanish Prisoner (technical consultant)
    1995 Congo (illusion creator) / (technical consultant)
    1994 Forrest Gump (illusion wheelchair designer)
    1994 Wolf (technical consultant)
    1994 I Love Trouble (technical consultant)
    1992 Leap of Faith (consultant: cons and frauds)
    1992 Sneakers (sleight of hand consultant)
    1990 The Magic Balloon (Short) (technical consultant)

    1987 House of Games (consultant: confidence games)
    1987 The Believers (technical consultant)
    1984 The Natural (technical consultant)
    1983 New Magic (Documentary short) (magic advisor)
    1982 The Escape Artist (technical advisor)
    Hide Hide Writer (5 credits)
    2007 The Unit (TV Series) (story - 1 episode)
    - Bedfellows (2007) ... (story)
    2004 Deadwood (TV Series) (written by - 1 episode)
    - Jewel's Boot Is Made for Walking (2004) ... (written by)
    1996 Ricky Jay and His 52 Assistants (TV Movie)
    1990-1992 The Secret Cabaret (TV Series) (12 episodes)

    1989 Learned Pigs and Fireproof Women (TV Special)

    Music department (1 credit)

    1985/II A Midsummer Night's Dream (TV Movie) (music effects)
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    2020: Sotheby's auctions Lot 160 Italian James Bond film festival poster Tutti Contro James Bond (All Against James Bond) from 1975.
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    Tutti Contro James Bond / All
    Against James Bond (1975)
    Poster, Italian, James Bond film
    festival
    https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/original-film-posters/tutti-contro-james-bond-all-against-james-bond
    Estimate: 1,000 - 1,600 GBP

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    2020: Yaroslav Horak dies at age 94--Sydney, Australia.
    (Born 12 June 1927--Harbin, China.)
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    In Memoriam: James Bond comic artist Yaroslav
    Horak
    By John Freeman on December 5, 2020

    We’re sorry to report the passing of James Bond newspaper strip artist Yaroslav Horak, who passed late last month, aged 93. He passed away peacefully at his rest home in Australia, after a decade-long battle with Alzheimer’s Disease.

    Born in Manchuria to the son of a Russian mother and Czech father in 1927, Yaroslav was renowned for his dynamic black and white art for James Bond 007, which he drew for the Daily Express from 1966 to 1977, taking over from John McLusky.
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    James Bond – The Man with the Golden Gun
    Horak and his family migrated to Sydney, Australia before World War Two, first working as an artist as a portrait painter but switching to illustration for the larger Australian magazine publishers. His appreciation for storytelling, art and adventure led him into writing and illustrating comic strips, and became one of Australian’s most prolific cartoonists, producing thousands of pages of comics in Australia before moving to England in 1962.

    In his detailed biography on Comics Down Under Kevin Patrick notes Horak’s first published comics work, “Grey Thorne, Counter Espionage Agent”, appeared in Frank Johnson Publications’ Gem Comics in 1947.

    He created his first recurring character, “Rick Davis, Special Correspondent”, as a supporting feature in H.J. Edwards’ top-selling Action Comic. This was followed by “The Skyman”, which ran in both Action Comic and John Dixon’s Tim Valour Comic. This aviation-themed series was the first comic to carry the artist’s Anglicised by-line, “Larry Horak”.

    (Documenting the holdings of Horak’s held by the National Library of Australia, Liesl Mitchell notes it was publisher John Edwards who gave Horak the name “Larry” by which he is also known. This was not to the artist’s liking and he only managed to shed this imposed name when he moved to Europe).
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    Art from Jet Fury #17 via Pikitia Press
    Horak’s first solo comic book, Mr Combat, for Elmsdale Publications, was published in 1950, but his “globetrotting crime-buster” was cancelled after just three issues. But “Jet Fury”, a series which began as a supporting feature in Michael Chance Comic, about a masked aviator who flew to global trouble-spots aboard the Comet, an “anti-gravity” jet, firmly established his reputation as a comics artist. Its popularity led to the title being re-named as Jet Fury Comic with its 16th issue in 1951.

    Other early credits include The Mask – The Man of Many Faces for Atlas Publications – but Comics Down Under notes the ran foul of Queensland’s Literature Board of Review, which objected to the character’s full-face mask, and imposed a state-wide sales ban on the comic, forcing Atlas Publications to reluctantly cancel the title with its third issue in 1954.

    Disillusioned, Horak turned to newspaper strips, creating “Captain Fortune“, running in Sydney’s Sun-Herald from December 1957 until July 1962; and drawing “Mike Steel – Desert Rider“, for Woman’s Day magazine, written by editor Keith Findlay (under the pseudonym “Roger Rowe”), running from August 1962 until January 1969.
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    Moving to England in 1963, he secured work from DC Thomson his known credits including “Johny Hop” for The Victor, telling the adventures of Constable Bill Lennox and his Aboriginal tracker companion, Wally Omes, in Outback Australia in 1964, followed by “The Bent Copper” for The Hornet, about ex-Scotland Yard detective John Bright, who sought revenge against the criminal who framed him for a crime he did not commit, published in 1965.
    Between 1963 and 1966, he also drew stories for Fleetway’s War Picture Library and Battle Picture Library, before replacing John McLusky on the James Bond newspaper strip, at the suggestion of writer Peter O’Donnell, drawing some 33 adventures starring the secret agent between 1966 and 1984.

    Horak’s take on the secret agent resembled Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosnan, long before either actor took up the role on the big screen.

    He first drew adaptations of The Spy Who Loved Me, The Man with the Golden Gun, Octopussy, The Hildebrand Rarity, and The Living Daylights, followed by an adaptation of Colonel Sun (the Bond novel written by Kingsley Amis).

    It was Horak’s acclaimed adaptation of The Man with the Golden Gun, published between January 1966 and September 1966, that led to writer Jim Lawrence being given permission by the Fleming Trust to write original Bond stories for Horak to draw, including River of Death, Trouble Spot and The Girl Machine.
    Horak returned to Australia in 1975, drawing a newspaper strip adaptation of the Australian TV show Cop Shop for Sydney’s Sun-Herald, which ran from 1980 to 1983, collected in a tie-in magazine.

    His final comics project was his own – the SF series, “Andea”, published by Australia’s Daily Mirror, centring on a glamorous female extra-terrestrial who travelled to Australia from the distant planet Xavax.

    “‘Andea’ showcased Horak’s storytelling skills to brilliant effect,” notes Kevin Patrick, “with his intricate plots, fantastic characters, and exquisite artwork demonstrating his complete mastery of the medium throughout the series’ seven-year run. It was a fitting end to Yaroslav Horak’s incomparable career as one of Australia’s great comic artists.”

    Refocusing on painting in later life, Horak was awarded the Ledger of Honour in recognition of his contributions to Australian comics, as part of the Ledger Awards for 2018.

    Our sympathies to his family at this time, who requested that donations in his memory be made to Dementia Australia.

    Yaroslav Horak, artist, born 12th June 1927, died 24th November 2020. Survived by his wife, Jacqueline and children Anton, Natasha and Damon
    Comics Down Under
    Yaroslav Horak: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
    While recently browsing through a box of old magazines and newspapers in an antiques shop, I came across a tattered and torn copy of The News, a tabloid newspaper produced by the Australian Journalists Association and the Printing Industry Employees' Union during a wartime industrial dispute with Sydney Newspaper Proprietors' Association. This copy of The News, dated Tuesday, 17 October 1944, caught my eye because it contained a brief profile of a talented young high-school student from Sydney, Yaroslav Horak (See image). The text of the article reads as follows:
    Sixteen-year-old Russian, Yaroslav Horak, of Centennial Park, pupil of St Mary's Cathedral High School, displays a poster he has entered in the Australia-wide Second Victory Loan School contests. Born in Manchuria, Yaroslav came to Australia four years ago. He has since learnt to speak English fluently.
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    Yaroslav Horak, of course, went on to become a talented and highly sought-after comic book artist in Australia following World War Two, creating such popular characters as Jet Fury (originally a back-up feature in Michael Chance Comics), along with The Mask, which was controversially banned by Queensland's Literature Board of Review in 1954, at the height of anti-comics hysteria in Australia (A comprehensive interview with Yaroslav Horak was published in the Australian Cartoonists' Association's Inkspot magazine in 2009).
    Emigrating to Great Britain in the 1960s, Horak worked for British comics publishers, such as IPC's popular Battle Picture Library series, and went on to succeed John McLusky as the illustrator of the James Bond comic strip appearing in The Daily Express newspaper (An informative profile of Horak's work on James Bond appears on the Dave Karlen Original Art Blog).
    Posted 25th June 2015 by Kevin Patrick
    A blog for original comic art collectors! Please visit my other blog, TARZAN FOREVER!, and my original art web site at... Dave Karlen Original Art
    Dave Karlen Original Art Blog
    Yaroslav Horak on James Bond
    Tuesday, August 19, 2008

    Russian born Yaroslav Horak began his early career as a portrait sketch artist, but soon switched to illustration for the larger Australian magazine publishers after migrating to Sydney. His successful comic series The Mask, ran afoul with Victoria's State censors, but was soon followed by his daily outback adventure strip Mike Steel for Sydney's, The Woman's Day. A quick talent for animation and storyboards also kept Horak busy on many different projects. When given the James Bond strip in 1965, Horak's adaptation of The Man with the Golden Gun was highly praised in the new direction he approached the series. The syndicate was so pleased with their creative team that Jim Lawrence was given permission by the Fleming Trust to produce original stories for Horak to draw. Overall they worked on thirty-three thrilling Bond tales for the Daily Express and other various newspaper syndicates in Europe.

    [MORE]
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    In the UK recently he presented Pierce Brosnan with a portrait of the "Brosnan Bond", at a UK fan club occasion, in Horak's new rough style. I have a full size copy of it and he also did one of Ursulla Andress, which he didn't get to present to her for some reason, the large original ink on paper is of her in a bikini depicted from Dr. No. with two diving knives.
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    Yaroslav Horak
    See the complete article here:


    War Picture Library
    WPL 214 Rough Justice 1963
    WPL 303 Death Or Dishonour 1965
    WPL 304 Battle Drill 1965
    WPL 315 Cross For Courage 1965
    WPL 323 Passage Of Arms 1966
    WPL 648 The Curse 1971
    BPL 156 The Savage Sands 1964
    BPL 173 The Stronghold 1964
    BPL 190 Killers Code 1965
    BPL 197 Gun Crazy 1965
    BPL 231 Victory Cry 1965

    James Bond strips
    Title | Writer | Published date | Serial no.
    The Man with the Golden Gun | Jim Lawrence 10 January 1966 – 9 September 1966 1-209
    The Living Daylights | Jim Lawrence 12 September 1966 – 12 November 1966 210-263
    Octopussy | Jim Lawrence 14 November 1966 – 27 May 1967 264-428
    The Hildebrand Rarity | Jim Lawrence 29 May 1967 – 16 December 1967 429-602
    The Spy Who Loved Me | Jim Lawrence 18 December 1967 – 3 October 1968 603-815
    The Harpies | Jim Lawrence 10 October 1968 – 23 June 1969 816-1037
    River Of Death | Jim Lawrence 24 June 1969 – 29 November 1969 1038–1174
    Colonel Sun | Jim Lawrence 1 December 1969 – 28 August 1970 1175–1393
    The Golden Ghost | Jim Lawrence 21 August 1970 – 16 January 1971 1394–1519
    Fear Face | Jim Lawrence 18 January 1971 – 20 April 1971 1520–1596
    Double Jeopardy | Jim Lawrence 21 April 1971 – 28 August 1971 1597–1708
    Starfire | Jim Lawrence 30 August 1971 – 24 December 1971 1709–1809
    Trouble Spot | Jim Lawrence 28 December 1971 – 10 June 1972 1810–1951
    Isle Of Condors | Jim Lawrence 12 June 1972 – 21 October 1972 1952–2065
    The League Of Vampires | Jim Lawrence 25 October 1972 – 28 February 1973 2066–2172
    Die With My Boots On | Jim Lawrence 1 March 1973 – 18 June 1973 2173–2256
    The Girl Machine | Jim Lawrence 19 June 1973 – 3 December 1973 2257–2407
    Beware Of Butterflies | Jim Lawrence 4 December 1973 – 11 May 1974 2408–2541
    The Nevsky Nude | Jim Lawrence 13 May 1974 – 21 September 1974 2542–2655
    The Phoenix Project | Jim Lawrence 23 September 1974 – 18 February 1975 2656–2780
    The Black Ruby Caper | Jim Lawrence 19 February 1975 – 15 July 1975 2781–2897
    Till Death Do Us Apart | Jim Lawrence 7 July 1975 – 14 October 1975 2989-2983
    The Torch-Time Affair | Jim Lawrence 15 October 1975 – 15 January 1976 2984-3060
    Hot-Shot | Jim Lawrence 16 January 1976 – 1 June 1976 3061-3178
    Nightbird | Jim Lawrence 2 June 1976 – 4 November 1976 3179-3312
    Ape Of Diamonds | Jim Lawrence 5 November 1976 – 22 January 1977 3313-3437
    When The Wizard Awakes | Jim Lawrence 30 January 1977 – 22 May 1977 1-54
    Sea Dragon | Jim Lawrence 1977 55-192
    Death Wing | Jim Lawrence 1977-1978 193-354
    The Xanadu Connection | Jim Lawrence 1978 355-468
    Shark Bait | Jim Lawrence 1978-1979 469-636
    Snake Goddess | Jim Lawrence 1983-1984 822-893
    Double Eagle | Jim Lawrence 1984 894-965
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    2022: The ice Q restaurant re-opens at Sölden, Tyrol, Austria.
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    Gourmet restaurant ice Q in Sölden, Tyrol
    SOPHISTICATED GOURMET DELIGHTS & GREAT MOMENTS
    See the complete article here:
    Welcome at Austria’s highest located toque-rated gourmet restaurant ice Q in Sölden, 3,048 metres above sea level. Surrounded by over 250 superb three-thousand metre mountains. Where freedom reaches for the stars. Where the skies are so close that you want to touch them. At the spectacular shooting location for the James Bond SPECTRE movie.

    Where sophisticated gourmet delights combine with fine wines and dreamy panoramas to create one exceptional symbiosis. In the ice Q gourmet restaurant and in the ice Q Lounge, which has a panorama terrace, you get to re-experience what is unique.

    In the mountain restaurant ice Q in Sölden – belonging to the 5-star hotel Das Central and awarded 2022 by Gault Millau with 2 toques – you get to feel life with all your senses. Right at the Gaislachkoglbahn in Sölden. For the most exclusive break in the Austrian Alps.
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    Opening hours - Winter 2022/2023
    Unique ice Q restaurant in Solden in Austria
    Highest located gourmet restaurant in Austria

    ICE Q IS OPEN AGAIN ON NOVEMBER 24 2022!
    Open daily from 9 am to 4 pm
    Warm meals served from 11.30 am to 3 pm
    Reservation time: from 12 noon to 1.45 pm & from 2 to 4 pm

    CONTACT & RESERVATIONS
    Phone: 0043 664 96 09 368
    E-Mail: [email protected]

    GOOD TO KNOW
    Reservations are recommended at anytime!
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    We ask for understanding, that a table by the window cannot be guaranteed. Except in combination with a Chef’s Table booking.

    LOCATION & GETTING HERE
    Car parking available at the valley station of the Gaislachkogl cable car.
    Cuisine. Panorama. Experience.
    FINE DINING & HEARTY TAPAS IN OUR MOUNTAIN RESTAURANT ice Q
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    ice Q Restaurant
    Treat yourself to some exquisite food & wine at the ice Q gourmet restaurant at an altitude of 3,048m. In addition to our special history, ice Q is also defined by a fascination for sophisticated gourmet cuisine. From exquisite wines from the best winegrowers to the finest cuisine, exquisite snacks and the breath-taking backdrop of the Ötztal Alps.
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    Wine & Tapas Lounge
    The ice Q Tapas Lounge is one of the best-kept insider tips of the winter. Snazzy snacks, exquisite tapas and sophisticated refreshments for the fastidious gourmet means gourmet time at the summit of alpine lifestyle. Enjoy some time out at the peak of the Alpine lifestyle while soaking up the unique panoramic views.
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    Summit Dinner
    Every Wednesday at sunset – from the end of December until the end of March – the ice Q restaurant is transformed into a beaming paradise. Up at 3000m sea level we serve you a toque-awarded menu as part of our Summit Dinner. Please make your reservation in advance!
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    PINO 3000
    3 COUNTRIES - 3 WINEMAKER'S = 1 WINE

    Wine PINO 3000 on the Gaislachkogl
    Bringing together the mountains & vines
    Our exceptional Pinot Noir
    A great idea of the 5-star hotel Das Central in Sölden meets the passion of three renowned winegrowers from Austria, Germany and Italy here. The result – one outstanding Pinot Noir, which matures on the summit of the Gaislachkogl at 3,048 metres in precious ‘barrique’ oak barrels, portraying the unique altitude climate and the spirit of the Ötztal Alps.
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    5-star hotel DAS CENTRAL in Sölden, Tyrol
    Das Central - Alpine. Luxury. Life.

    Sölden’s 5-star hotel Das Central impresses with its combination of Tyrolean cosiness and Alpine lifestyle. Fastidious Alpinists and gourmet aficionados alike from across the globe cherish what is offered. Especially the culinary fare in the à la carte gourmet restaurant Ötztaler Stube which is devoted to Alpine cuisine and knows just how to forge a link between the traditional and the luxurious in a manner which is unique, and has been rightly awarded with 3 toques by Gault Millau. Accompanied by over 30,000 bottles of fine wines from the superb range available in the hotel. With the ice Q restaurant, Das Central now carries on with this great passion up above 3,000 m altitude.
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    CINEMATIC INSTALLATION '007 ELEMENTS'
    On a secret mission
    James Bond in ice Q in Sölden

    Fast. Adrenaline-charged. Explosive – the coolest agent of all time in Sölden. The ice Q restaurant is the most spectacular shooting location in the Austrian Alps. Find out everything about the James Bond’s SPECTRE here with us.
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    James Bond cinematic installation 007 ELEMENTS in Sölden, Austria
    In the footsteps of James Bond
    007 ELEMENTS

    Discover the cinematic installation ’007 ELEMENTS’ on the summit of the Gaislachkogl in Sölden in Tyrol! State-of-the-art technology, puristic architecture and a concomitant sound backdrop make the new James Bond adventure realm the ‘place-to-be’ in the Tyrol Alps. 007 ELEMENTS puts the focus primarily on SPECTRE and the scenes shot in Sölden, but also touches upon other chapters of the 24 James Bond movies. Our recommendation: Combine your visit in our ice Q restaurant with a visit at 007 ELEMENTS!
    Action Hall with the original aircraft from James Bond SPECTRE
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    Tech Lab - a unique place in 007 ELEMENTS
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 25th

    1976: The Spy Who Loved Me films Jaws exiting the train, his final scene filmed.
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    1977: 007 - La spia che mi amava released in Italy.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 51 of 65 - "Ol' Man River" in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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    James Bond Jr - Ol' Man River
    Season 1 - Episode 51
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807112/?ref_=ttep_ep51
    Captain Walker D. Plank plans to flood New Orleans by destroying the levee with a large amount of explosives placed in a fake River Queen. During evacuation, Plank attempts to use this to his advantage to gain access to the U.S. Mint and steal the printing press.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Ed Gilbert ... Captain Walker D.Plank (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 51 - Ol' Man River

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    1997: Filmtracks.com publishes Christian Clemmensen's review of the Tomorrow Never Dies score.
    (Revised 3 March 2008.)
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    EDITORIAL REVIEW
    FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #47
    WRITTEN 11/25/97, REVISED 3/3/08

    Tomorrow Never Dies: (David Arnold) If one thing is certain about Pierce Brosnan's tenure as British agent James Bond, it's the superiority of Tomorrow Never Dies. Everything clicked in this, the second of his films as 007. His performance reached back to the confidence of Sean Connery, the love interest came packaged as Michelle Yeoh (who is more Bond's equal than just another conquest), a previous flame's death provokes a malice in Bond loyal to the books' original intent, the villain is charmingly enthusiastic and has a cool new stealth weapon as a toy, and David Arnold's score combined the best of the John Barry years with the younger composer's techno-saavy sensibilities. While Goldeneye had revived the series by becoming the first $100 million grossing Bond film, Tomorrow Never Dies was far better packaged and drew greater interest from hardcore fans of the franchise's classics. With John Barry now out of the picture (despite his seeming renewed interest in scoring another Bond film during the Brosnan years), Arnold was a perfect successor. His love of the franchise and knack for imitating the expansive style of Barry in his early scores, not to mention his British heritage, made him the logical choice. And fans weren't disappointed. The score than Arnold assembled for Tomorrow Never Dies is a sophisticated and intelligent tribute to the classic Barry scores while pushing the envelope with synthetic rhythms and drum pads to aide the traditional orchestra in joining Bond in a rapidly evolving technological age. The trademark action style that Arnold established in Stargate and Independence Day is combined with a distinct return to the flamboyant style of the jazzy Bond scores of the 1960's, and with the presence of the synthetic elements native to Arnold's roots in the rock genre, every variety of Arnold fan had something to look forward. Arnold would become the franchise's regular voice, allowing the subsequent films to really define his career (with very few notable scores for non-Bond films mixed in between). He would continue pushing the synthetic side of his music for the franchise until a somewhat dissatisfying score for Die Another Day would pull Arnold back to the combo style of Tomorrow Never Dies in the outstanding Casino Royale.

    Arnold was obviously keenly aware that the Bond frachise's scores had their own unique formula while Barry was in charge, and that formula would continue here. The franchise theme by Monty Norman is quoted liberally in Tomorrow Never Dies, with its incorporation ranging from full-blown three-minute tributes to clever counterpoint against the new themes for the film. Arnold's full expressions of the Norman theme are extremely astute in an instrumental sense. Even the opening fifteen seconds of the score offers brass and cymbal accents true to Barry's introductions. The muted trumpets, solo flute, and electric guitar performances in "Company Car" provide the most true and entertaining modern performance of the Norman concept available. This three-minute cue establishes a standard by which fans and students of the franchise can worship and study. Acoustically, the recording is flawless. Aside from the statements of Norman's theme throughout the score, Arnold wrote one of the franchise's best title songs and integrated its theme extremely well throughout the entire score. With all the wailing brass flair of Goldfinger, his title theme is both seductively alluring and strikingly defiant, an easily memorable aspect of the film. In the opening action sequence before the credits ("White Knight"), Arnold introduces the theme with nobility at the 7:10 mark (in between ample development of Norman's theme). This theme punctuates many of the action sequences and is given an Eastern personality in "Kowloon Bay" before a last monumental statement for strings and bold brass counterpoint at the resolution of the film. A theme for Teri Hatcher's role as the villain's wife and former Bond lover is provided twice in Tomorrow Never Dies. As they reunite, Arnold allows the Barry-like idea to flourish with the full ensemble (once again in layered strings under brass counterpoint) before a solo woodwind echos accompany her demise. A deliberate, pounding motif for the villain Elliot Carver and his stealth ship is sparsely utilized throughout the score (its fullest appearance is at 3:55 into "The Sinking of the Devonshire"), though it receives some intriguing, less obvious exploration in "Underwater Discovery." If the score for Tomorrow Never Dies has a weakness, it's in the largely understated musical representation for Carver, as well as other "badguy" elements such as in "Doctor Kaufman."

    To counter the theme for Carver's wife earlier in the film, Arnold writes a theme for Michelle Yeoh's agent and the Eastern locations of the story. It's only receives brief treatment, but it is quite gorgeous on solo guitar and piano in the early portions of "Bike Shop Fight" and "Kowloon Bay." A full rendition in the latter cue, merging with the title theme, is a highlight of the score. Faint hints of this theme come through in the very last minute of the score, though this progression seems to be a nod to Barry's You Only Live Twice. And that brings up another important point about Tomorrow Never Dies: the many references to previous scores in the franchise. In the opening battle, Arnold states a fragment of From Russia With Love. The following cue offers brass wails identical to later action sequences in Goldfinger. In both "White Knight" and more obviously at 0:45 into "Hamburg Break In," Arnold quotes the five-note bass sequence that preceded Tina Turner's song for Goldeneye, arguably the most memorable element from the soundtrack of that film. He would not make the same number of references in his scores for the subsequent Brosnan/Bond films, though he does make a clever reference to the title theme for Tomorrow Never Dies during a conversational cue after Bond's early rescue in Die Another Day. In retrospect, Tomorrow Never Dies is a much better score than many gave it credit for being at the time. Some listeners were turned off by the extensive synthetic percussion used in "Back Seat Driver" and "Hamburg Break Out," among a few others, and these cues are indeed less effective outside the context of the film (where they come in conflict with the better balance of the surrounding material). But the varied, slapping percussion of "Bike Chase" is a perfect combination of both worlds, and its highly effective sound would set the stage for cues like the one for the opening chase sequence in Casino Royale. For the most part, the balance in mixing in Tomorrow Never Dies is outstanding, and the gorgeous piano solos in several cues are testimony to this clarity. Subsequent Arnold scores tended to get muddy in their rowdy action cues, especially in Die Another Day, though a total lack of theme in that later score is the greater problem.

    As anyone can expect, not everything with Tomorrow Never Dies went well. First and foremost, the song situation would be very dissatisfying for both Arnold and Bond fans alike. While the recording of the title song by k.d. lang would match the style and theme of Arnold's score with incredible cohesion and effectiveness, the producers of the film saw fit to hire a bigger name to provide a replacement song for the traditional opening credits sequence. This move was unfortunate not only because of Arnold's song was superior and in spirit of the franchise, but also because of lang's sulty voice and spirited performance. The replacement song is performed by Sheryl Crow, whose popularity at the time was seen as an asset, but whose beach-bum voice and lazy performance was a disgrace to the film. The video game score for Tomorrow Never Dies would heavily favor the use of Arnold's song theme, retitled "Surrender," over the presence of Crow's song. With critics, fans, and producers all easily recognizing the superiority of the lang song, Arnold was rewarded with the opportunity to write his own song for The World is Not Enough two years later (before suffering from extraordinary frustration trying to adapt Madonna's non-thematic song into the score for Die Another Day). A more minor criticism of Tomorrow Never Dies responds to the fact that Arnold only used his trademark, beautiful choir for a short snippet of "The Sinking of the Devonshire," though given that this cue sounds awkward in its sudden shift to Stargate during the slow-motion sinking and death sequence, that's not necessarily a negative. A truly major problem with Tomorrow Never Dies, however, was its album release. Much to the angst of Arnold, a hectic and disorganized post-production schedule for the film caused the music to be recorded chronologically in small portions over a matter of many months. As a result, the original 1997 album release by A&M Records could only feature the score material that had been mixed and mastered from the first half of the film. The entire last third of the score was missing from this product, including all of the Eastern-flavored cues and the pivotal "Bike Chase" and "All in a Day's Work" music of over ten minutes. This omission, which didn't make sense to consumers at the time, combined with the replacement of lang's song from the title credits, caused Bond fans to go stir crazy immediately.

    After much fuss and delay, controversy and discussion, most of the remaining music from the film was finally made available on a commercial release from Chapter III Records in 2000 (along with a concurrent release of Tommy Tallarico's score for the Tomorrow Never Dies video game). At the time, The World is Not Enough was failing to muster the same approval as its predecessor, and the latter film's release date forced Chapter III to hold back the expanded version of Tomorrow Never Dies by several weeks. Despite providing 26 minutes of score not available on the previous album, the Chapter III product does have its share of flaws. Although the packaging and press information advertised it as being "complete," it's actually missing several important pieces of music from the film. One major omission is the track "Station Break," the four-minute cue that plays as Bond takes Elliot Carver off the air and Arnold provides a darkly dramatic performance of the love theme that foreshadows an uncertain future for the Paris character. Ironically, this cue appeared in full on the 1997 album. Additionally, several very short snippets of music remain missing on album, including the film's ending to "White Knight." The second major drawback to the expanded album is the lack of the k.d. lang song. None of the songs on the original album appears on the expanded volume, likely due to financial reasons. The eleven-minute interview with Arnold at the end of the 2000 album is interesting; the questions are intelligent and the interview is mixed nicely with some of Arnold's cues. But it's not something you'll find yourself listening to a second time. A perfect album could have resulted if the interview were dumped in favor of "Station Break" and "Surrender," but failing that, fans of the film and franchise are forced to own both products. The sound quality on both albums is equally vibrant. For the most hardcore of fans, there do exist 2-CD bootlegs that are indeed complete, featuring the isolated DVD score, the two songs, and bonus material totalling over 140 minutes in length. Overall, Tomorrow Never Dies remains ahead of Casino Royale as the definitive David Arnold entry in the James Bond franchise. Perhaps it is no coincidence that the best film of the Brosnan era featured the best score during that period.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough preview screening in the UK.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in Australia.
    1999: A világ nem elég (The World Not Enough) released in Hungary.
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    1999: Ha-Olam E'ino Maspik released in Israel.
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    2008: Media recognize Quantum of Solace topping box office for a full month in the United Kingdom.
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    Bond makes it a month at top of box office
    By Reuters Staff

    File picture shows Daniel Craig at the the Italian premiere of the latest James Bond movie 'Quantum of Solace' in Rome, November 5, 2008. REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi

    LONDON (Reuters) - The latest James Bond film “Quantum of Solace” has notched up a month at the top of the box office, blowing away the competition for a fourth straight weekend according to Screen International.

    The 22nd official Bond film, with Daniel Craig in his second outing as 007, earned another 2.8 million pounds for a total of 45.1 million pounds so far.

    Its nearest rival, director Ridley Scott’s espionage drama “Body of Lies” which came in at No. 2, could only manage 991,979 pounds, despite boasting stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe.

    New at three was “My Best Friend’s Girl,” with Kate Hudson, Jason Biggs and Dane Cook in a sex-and-swearing, love-triangle comedy.

    “High School Musical 3: Senior Year,” with Zac Efron, Vanessa Anne Hudgens and Ashley Tisdale was down one place at four while “Zack and Miri Make a Porno” slipped a place to five with its tale of two friends going triple-XXX to pay their rent.

    Down four places at six was “Max Payne,” a video game spin-off with Mark Wahlberg as a lone avenger in New York.

    Ricky Gervais was down two at seven as the cantankerous dentist in “Ghost Town.”

    Horror thriller “Quarantine” made its debut at No. 8 with a documentary-style tale of madness, death and zombies in a locked tenement building.

    The animated evil scientists of “Igor” were unchanged at nine while Bollywood movie “Dostana” was down from six to 10.
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    2011: English actor Ben Whishaw is revealed as "Q" for BOND 23.
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    New Q cast for next Bond -
    report

    Ben Whishaw is to play Q in the new James Bond film.
    Fri, 25 Nov, 2011 - 09:44

    The 31-year-old actor has been cast as the MI6 gadget master in 'Skyfall' and for the first time in the franchise's history Q will be younger than 007, who will be played again by 43-year-old Daniel Craig.

    A source told The Sun newspaper: "Female fans will now have more than Daniel to gush over now Ben's been cast as Q. He'll be a big draw. It's a bold decision as it means Q will be younger than Bond for the first time.

    "His role will be very different from previous Qs. He'll be far more serious, as is the trend with the new films."

    Q last appeared in 2002's 'Die Another Day', with John Cleese in the role, after he took over from the late Desmond Llewelyn, who played the inventor for 36 years.

    This is not the first time Ben has starred in a movie alongside Daniel Craig. In 2004, they appeared together in gangster movie 'Layer Cake'.

    'Skyfall' – which will be directed by Sam Mendes and is the 23rd Bond movie – is due for release next October.
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    2020: One-time scheduled release date for No Time To Die in the US.
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    2022: The Times suggests what makes James Bond and Daniel Craig tick.
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    The Times Diary: What makes
    James Bond tick?
    Patrick Kidd | Friday November 25 2022

    He may have handed in his Walther PPK but Daniel Craig can’t quite escape James Bond. The actor was the star guest at a 60 Years of Bond party hosted by Omega on Wednesday night and suggested that every 007 is defined by their watch. While his predecessor Piers [sic] Brosnan’s were elegant and came with a built-in laser beam, Craig said he insisted on something chunkier, telling the producers:
    “I want to wrap it round my fist and punch someone in the nose with it.”
    This was a change from Roger Moore, who used the magnet in his watch to unzip dresses. Strangely, Bonds seldom just want a watch that keeps good time. That must explain why they do so much running.

    [MORE}
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    2022: Bond actor Daniel Craig proposes (the United States' own) Thanksgiving is his favorite holiday.
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    Daniel Craig reveals Thanksgiving is his
    ‘favourite holiday’ now
    News Desk | November 25, 2022

    LOS ANGELES - Daniel Craig has shared that Thanksgiving Day is now his favourite holiday since he became a U.S. citizen in 2019. The James Bond famed actor also revealed that enjoy and celebrate the holiday every year. In a latest appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Thursday, the Spectre actor, 54, talked about his love of the fall holiday.
    “I do understand Thanksgiving. It’s about giving thanks as I understand it,” Craig said.
    Craig, who is a British-born actor, announced in 2019 that he had been granted US citizenship, eight years after his wife, Rachel Weisz, became an American citizen in 2011. The No Time to Die star, who lives in New York City with his family – said he had been celebrating Thanksgiving for several years now. “I’ve been celebrating it for quite a long time, I think it’s probably my favourite holiday,” he said. “Good things are hard to do. I’m incredibly proud to be part of this, to have an American passport and call myself an immigrant in this country,” he added. Craig also admitted he’s “not so good” with the trimmings, such as stuffing. “I think it’s an abomination.” “You stuff it up the chicken-turkey!,” Craig said of the classic Thanksgiving festive dish. “I think it should be cooked separately. It’s good, but I don’t think you should bring it anywhere near the bird.” Craig’s latest film Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery is currently streaming on Netflix.




  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 26th

    1939: Anna Mae Bullock (Tina Turner) is born--Nutbush, Tennessee.
    (She dies at 24 May 2023 at age 83--Küsnacht, Switzerland.)

    1959: During a meeting in the Bahamas, Jack Whittingham signs a £5,000 contract that gives Kevin McClory rights to Thunderball.

    1963: An out-of-court settlement between Ian Fleming and Kevin McClory and Jack Whittingham gives McClory credit on all reprints of Thunderball--plus the film rights.
    1964: Jonathan Cape publishes Ian Fleming's Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang Volume 2 (of 3).
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    1965: NBC television airs David Wolper's documentary The Incredible World of James Bond (replacing The Man from U.N.C.L.E. for that Friday night schedule).
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    Original television advertisement designed prior to Sean Connery quitting the project
    Directed by Jack Haley Jr.
    Produced by David L. Wolper
    Written by Jack Haley Jr. & Al Ramrus
    Narrated by Alexander Scourby
    Production company - Wolper Productions
    Distributed by United Artists Television
    Release date November 26, 1965 (U.S.)
    Running time 51 min.
    Country - United States
    The Incredible World of James Bond was a 1965 television special produced by David L. Wolper for United Artists Television to showcase the James Bond film series and promote the upcoming December 1965 release of the film Thunderball.

    In the United States, the show replaced The Man From U.N.C.L.E. on NBC on Friday, 26 November 1965; the day after American Thanksgiving that unofficially begins the shopping frenzy for Christmas. It was the highest rated American television show for the week.

    Plot and production
    The show featured film scenes of the worldwide popularity of James Bond novels, films, and tie-in merchandise, black and white scenes of Ian Fleming at his home Goldeneye in Jamaica giving comments on his writing, a biography of James Bond with footage of Glencoe, Eton, Fettes College, and Royal Marine Commandos on exercise, home movie footage shot by production designer Ken Adam in the Bahamas during the production of Thunderball, and scenes from four Bond films.

    Behind the scenes footage from the making of Thunderball included scenes of the preparation and filming of a scene of a rocket firing motorcycle destroying Count Lippe's car, a choreographed fist fight in a studio mock up of the cabin of the Disco Volante, a photo shoot of the Bond girls on a beach in the Bahamas, and a scene of the Aston Martin DB5 driving away from the Château d'Anet that was not seen in the finished film.

    Director Terence Young, producers Albert R. Broccoli, Harry Saltzman, Kevin McClory, editor Peter R. Hunt and action director and stuntman Bob Simmons are shown during sequences. The "James Bond Theme" and other music from the Bond film soundtracks are heard with the gun barrel titles and 007 logo from the Goldfinger film trailer appearing in the opening titles.

    The narration was to have been originally given by Sean Connery. However, when Connery read the script and found out they were referring to James Bond as an actual person he refused to do the show. Telephone calls from Joan Crawford who was a major shareholder in Pepsi Cola, the sponsor of the show, failed to sway Connery and his narrating chores were taken by Alexander Scourby.

    Pepsi Cola used the special to unveil commercials for its latest products.

    The special is available as a featurette on the "James Bond Ultimate Edition" DVD of Thunderball.

    Pepsi Cola and Frito Lay also sold promotional James Bond tie-in toys and a record album titled The Incredible World of James Bond. The album featured the original soundtrack music and cover versions of four of the themes from the first three Bond films played by United Artists Records house band The Leroy Holmes Orchestra. The back of the album cover was full of photographic stills from the Bond films. The record was later reissued with an attractive Frank Gauna designed album cover on Unart Records in 1967 with two music tracks deleted to fit on the budget album.
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    1982: Octopussy films the assault on Kamal Khan’s fortress.
    1985: Variety reports Roger Moore giving notice to producer Cubby Broccoli he will not return.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 52 of 65 - "Between a Rock and a Hard Place" in Australia
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    James Bond Jr - Between a Rock and a Hard Place
    Season 1 - Episode 52
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2382320/fullcredits?ref_=tt_ov_st_sm
    James and his friends race against time to get to an advanced prototype fighter jet which has crashed somewhere in wild country of Australia before Dr. Derange and his henchmen get there first.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Jeffrey Scott ... (story)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Oddjob (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)
    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 52 - Between a Rock and a Hard Place

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    1999: Boxtree publishes The James Bond Girls by Graham Rye.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in the UK, Ireland, Iceland, and South Africa.
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    2002: Die Another Day released in the Republic of Macedonia.

    2011: Skyfall filming at the Ascot Racecourse (doubling for the Shanghai airport terminal).
    2012: The South China Morning Post posts Jason Y Ng's review of Skyfall.
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    Movie Review: Skyfall
    As I see it by Jason Y Ng
    Movie Review: Skyfall
    Published: 12:11pm, 26 Nov, 2012
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    What Daniel Craig lacks in good looks and hair, he more than makes up for in quiet confidence and depth.
    English author Ian Fleming wrote his first James Bond novel, Casino Royale, in 1952. It became an instant hit. Other bestsellers like From Russia, with Love, Dr. No and Goldfinger soon followed. In all, Fleming published 14 full length novels and nine short stories under the series. If the British Empire has lost much of its former glory, then Fleming’s flamboyant spy character promises to restore some of it with his snazzy handguns, tailored suits and wry sense of humor.

    In 1961, Fleming sold the film rights to Eon Productions, owned by filmmakers Harry Saltzman and Albert Broccoli. Since then, every Bond film has been made by the same studio. In the past 50 years, the film series has grossed nearly US$13 billion in total box office earnings (inflation adjusted), second only to the Harry Potter franchise. That the Broccolis have kept the film rights within the family and overseen the production of every installment has contributed to the series’ enduring success and lasting relevance.

    That brings us to Skyfall, the latest Bond film that opened a month ago. With the memories of the universally scorned Quantum of Solace still fresh in our minds, Eon Productions this time went with a director with more weight: Oscar-winning Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Road to Perdition). And it worked. Skyfall is every bit as compelling as Casino Royale and comes close to Goldfinger, the gold standard of Bond films.

    The movie opens with an elaborate chase scene in Istanbul, culminating in a hand-to-hand combat on top of a speeding train and ending in 007 being shot by another MI6 agent. Bond then falls – presumably to his death – into a raging river, which reminds me of the cathartic bridge jump in Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms. But that’s not the end of our spy hero. Bond soon resurrects to tackle villain Raoul Silva, an ex-MI6 spy who has stolen the names of undercover agents as part of an elaborate scheme to exact revenge on his ex-boss M. The movie is a cross between Mission Impossible (remember the stolen “NOC list”?) and the Batman franchise. Indeed, Mendes borrows heavily from Christopher Nolan who has reinvented the superhero genre by making his villains more contemplative, self-righteous and apocalyptic.

    Back in 2005 when Daniel Craig was tapped to be the fifth generation James Bond, many questioned whether he could fill the role. But Craig has proven his critics wrong and is now hailed as the best Bond ever. What he lacks in good looks and hair, he more than makes up for in quiet confidence and depth. In Skyfall, his character shoots with poise, cuts himself up without a wince, and heck, he even walks into a girl’s shower without looking like a fool or a pervert! That alone makes him every man’s hero and every woman’s dream. Craig, now 44, can make at least two or even three more Bond films before he is too old is to do a chin-up. After all, Roger Moore was 57 when he made his last Bond film A View to Kill.

    Other than Craig, Skyfall owes much of its success to a star-studded supporting cast. Spanish actor Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men, Vicky Cristina Barcelona), one of the most talented character actors of our time, plays the diabolical and sexually ambiguous villain. His presence is large enough to maintain the tension throughout the movie but not too large to upstage Craig. Shakespearean actor Ben Wishaw (Perfume, Bright Star) plays quartermaster Q brilliantly. He lights up the screen and leaves the audience craving for more. French actress Bérénice Marlohe makes a dark femme fatale, although she isn’t as dynamic as Eva Green and her character dies too early in the movie. Last but not least, there is Dame Judi Dench, who portrays M with equal grit and vulnerability. Dench is one of the handful of actresses who can rival Meryl Streep in versatility and the number of Oscar nominations.

    Skyfall is about an aging spy who goes back to the basics. It is about being old-fashioned without being old. It will go down in film history as one of the strongest entries in the Bond canon. My only gripe is that, even in this day and age, Asia is still portrayed by Hollywood with stereotypical exoticism. In Skyfall, Bond arrives in Macau and is taken by a bamboo raft to a floating casino in the middle of a lantern-lit lake before he tackles a pair of sumo wrestler-like hit men in a pit filled with man-eating lizards. That must have given Stanley Ho a few chuckles.
    Born in Hong Kong, Jason is a globe-trotter who spent his entire adult life in Europe, the United States and Canada before settling back in his birthplace to rediscover his roots. He is a full-time lawyer and a freelance writer who raves and rants about Hong Kong and its people. Jason is the bestselling author of HONG KONG State of Mind and No City for Slow Men.

    2015: Spectre special screening hosted by the UK Embassy at Tegucigalpa, Honduras.
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    Bond is GREAT: British Embassy hosts
    private screening of SPECTRE in
    Honduras
    The British Embassy hosted a 'Bond is GREAT' private
    screening of SPECTRE in Tegucigalpa.

    Published 27 November 2015
    From: British Embassy Guatemala City (for Honduras)
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    Ambassador Carolyn Davidson
    On Thursday 26 November the British Embassy together with Sony Pictures Entertainment, hosted a private screening to celebrate the release of Bond’s latest movie, SPECTRE, premiered in November around the world, including Honduras.

    Her Excellency Carolyn Davidson, British Ambassador to Honduras, welcomed authorities, political figures, prominent business leaders and members of Honduran society to an elegant cocktail reception at City Mall, a luxury shopping mall in the heart of Tegucigalpa.

    To mark the event, the British Ambassador to Honduras said:
    James Bond is one of the greatest film franchises of all times, and the UK is a world leader in movie production and the creative industries. $2.4bn were spent on UK film production last year, as many directors and producers recognised the talent and expertise of British filmmakers. SPECTRE has been the most popular film in the world for the last two weeks and I hope it will encourage many people in Honduras, and elsewhere, to go and visit some of the stunning locations in the UK featured in the film I would also like to thank the sponsors of tonight’s gala: Heineken, Belvedere Vodka, Land Rover and Sony Entertainment.
    As the reception drew to a close, guests made their way up to a special private screening of SPECTRE at Cinemark VIP, following the film’s official release in Honduras at the beginning of the month.
    2019: The Hong Kong Watch Auction moves some Bond-related items.
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    The Hong Kong Watch Auction: NINE
    Hong Kong Auction 25-26 November 2019
    https://www.phillips.com/auctions/auction/HK080319/filter/makers=Corum!Omega
    Auctions
    25 November at 6:30pm HKT
    Session 1 (Lot 801-853)
    26 November at 12:00pm HKT
    Session 2 (Lot 854-1121)
    JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong
    88 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong (map)
    22 November 10am-6pm
    23 November 10am-7pm
    24 November 10am-6pm
    25 November 10am-6pm
    Contact [email protected]
    1046
    Omega
    Ref. 2537.80
    Model: Seamaster “40 Years of James Bond”
    A fine and attractive limited edition stainless steel diver’s wristwatch with date, gas escape valve, bracelet guarantee and presentation box, numbered 06317 out of a limited edition of 10007
    Estimate HK$16,000 - 30,000
    Sold for HK$30,000
    Omega - A fine and attractive limited edition stainless steel diver’s wristwatch with date, gas escape valve, bracelet guarantee and presentation box, numbered 03689 out of a limited edition of 11007 pieces
    1047
    Omega
    Ref. 212.30.41.20.01.005
    Model: Seamaster “50 Years of James Bond”
    A fine and attractive limited edition stainless steel diver’s wristwatch with date, gas escape valve, bracelet guarantee and presentation box, numbered 03689 out of a limited edition of 11007 pieces
    Estimate HK$24,000 - 40,000
    1048
    Omega
    Ref. 233.32.41.21.01.001
    A very fine limited edition stainless steel “Spectre 007” diver’s wristwatch with international warranty card and presentation box, numbered 5731 out of a limited edition of 7007 pieces

    歐米茄,型號233.32.41.21.01.001,限量版精鋼自動上弦腕錶,特別為電影007鬼影帝國,限量發行7007枚,編號第5731 號,約2015年製。附錶盒、國際保證卡和配件

    Circa 2015
    41mm Diameter
    Case, dial, movement and clasp signed

    Estimate
    HK$63,000 - 100,000
    €7,200-11,400
    $8,100-12,800

    Sold for HK$68,750

    Manufacturer: Omega
    Year: Circa 2015
    Reference No: 233.32.41.21.01.001
    Movement No: 87’624’420
    Case No: 5731/7007
    Model Name: Seamaster 300, “Spectre”
    Material: Stainless steel
    Calibre: Automatic, cal. 8400, 38 jewels
    Bracelet/Strap: Omega Nato strap
    Clasp/Buckle: Stainless steel Omega buckle
    Dimensions: 41mm Diameter
    Signed: Case, dial, movement and clasp signed
    Accessories: Further accompanied by International Warranty card dated 18 November, 2015 and stamped Watches of Switzerland, Cardiff, Certificate of Authenticity numbered 5731/7007, Pictograms card with limited edition number 5731, stainless steel Omega link bracelet with 007 deployant clasp, Omega lug tool, operating instruction manual, polish cloth, Omega cloth pouch, Spectre 007 presentation box and outer packaging.
    Catalogue Essay

    In 2015, the 24th James Bond film “Spectre” premiered pitting Bond against the global crime syndicate “Spectre”. The “Spectre 007” Seamaster replicated the watch worn by the British spy and was released in a limited edition of 7007 examples. The stainless steel wristwatch had several unique characteristics including a black ceramic bi-directional bezel with 12-hour scale in Liquidmetal™. The dial was given a vintage feel with aged hour markers, Broad Arrow hands and a lollipop center seconds hand. The sapphire crystal display back was engraved “Spectre” along with the timepieces edition number, while the Nato strap holder was engraved 007.

    The present Omega “Spectre” 007 wristwatch is in near new condition and has probably only been worn a handful of times. Complete with guarantee and presentation box, this model is a modern reinterpretation of a classic mid-20th century timepiece and embodies not only the ethos of Omega but of that of James Bond.

  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 27th

    1928: Ronald William "Josh" Kirby is born--Waterloo, England.
    (He dies 23 October 2001 at age 72--Shelfanger, England.)
    1961: Samantha Bond is born--Kensington, London, England.

    1981: Lotte Lenya (Karoline Wilhelmine Charlotte Blaumauer) dies at age 83--New York City, New York.
    (Born 18 October 1898--Vienna-Penzing Austria, Hungary.)
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    Award-winning Austrian actress and singer Lotte Lenya (b. Vienna-Penzing, Austria-Hungary, October 18, 1898; d. New York City, November 27, 1981), transplanted to the United States for the latter part of her career, is best remembered by music-lovers for her interpretations of songs by her husband Kurt Weill (1900–1950), and by moviegoers for her performances in The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961) and From Russia With Love (1963). She was nominated for an Academy Award® for the former film; from her Broadway performances, which spanned over three decades, she had one Tony Award® (The Threepenny Opera 1957) and was nominated for another (Cabaret 1967).

    Karoline Wilhelmine Charlotte Blamauer was born into a working class family in an outlying district of Vienna. At the age of sixteen she moved to Zurich in Switzerland, where she studied classical ballet, singing, and acting, and made a stage debut under the name of Lotte Lenja. In 1921, against the cosmopolitan but precarious backdrop of the Weimar Republic, she moved to Berlin and began rounds of theatrical auditions. In 1924, through playwright Georg Kaiser, she met composer Kurt Weill – actually he had played the piano for her at an audition two years earlier but she had taken no notice of him – and they married early in 1926.

    In collaboration with Bertholt Brecht, Weill wrote the leading part of Jenny in Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera) as a vehicle specifically for Lenya, and the first performance in 1928 was a big breakthrough for both of them. Soon she was very busy in the theatre, especially in works created by the Weill-Brecht team: Happy End (1929), Der Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny 1930), and Die sieben Todsünden (The Seven Deadly Sins 1933), produced in exile in Paris.

    In 1933, with the rise of Nazism and the banning of Weill’s works in Germany, both Lenya and Weill fled to France – although they were now estranged and going through a divorce (Weill was a workaholic and not especially communicative). Weill began work on an unprecedentedly ambitious spectacle-opera with text by Franz Werfel entitled Der Weg der Verheißung (The Promised Road), in the midst of which, in 1935, Lenya and Weill came to be reconciled. They emigrated together to the United States and were married again in 1937.

    Lenya sang the roles of Miriam and the Witch of Endor in Weill’s new opus, now called The Eternal Road, for 153 performances at the Manhattan Opera House in early 1937. The cast included 245 actors and singers, wearing a total of 1,772 costumes, and the show – a frightening depiction of Jews hiding from a pogrom in a synagogue that included several generous slices of Biblical history – lasted over six hours. It has not been staged since.

    Two successful musicals, Knickerbocker Holiday (1938), with book and lyrics by Maxwell Anderson and introducing the immortal “September Song,” and Lady in the Dark (with Ira Gershwin, 1941) established Kurt Weill’s reputation on Broadway, and the couple was able to move upstate to New City in Rockland County. Their marriage would last until Weill’s death in 1950.

    Lenya meanwhile appeared in Anderson’s Candle in the Wind (1941). Her next role was in a Weill “operetta,” The Firebrand of Florence (1945), that was such a box-office disaster that Lenya decided to quit the stage. But in 1951, a little more than a year after her husband’s death, she returned as Xantippe in Maxwell Anderson’s short-lived Barefoot in Athens.She starred again as Jenny in the English-language revival of The Threepenny Opera (1954, 1955), winning the 1956 Tony® for Best Featured Actress in a Musical.
    Lotte Lenya’s American film career began when she was sixty-three, with The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone (1961), and hit a high point in 1963 when she played Rosa Klebb, the Spectre agent with poisoned blades in the toes of her boots, in From Russia with Love. She played the title role in Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder on German television in 1965, and the Gypsy in Tennessee Williams’s sleeper Ten Blocks on the Camino Real on National Education Television in 1966. The same year on Broadway she originated the role of Fräulein Schneider in Kander and Ebb’s musical Cabaret.
    Lenya was married three more times in the thirty-one years between Weill’s death and her own. She established the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music, which is still active in the promotion of Weill music and theatre, in 1962. Cancer was the cause of her death in 1981; she is entombed alongside Weill in a mausoleum in Mount Repose Cemetery in Haverstraw, New York. A musical play, Lovemusik, a meditation on the relationship of these two musical and theatrical greats, was produced on Broadway in 2007.

    – LEC
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    Lotte Lenya (1898–1981)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0502322/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Actress (10 credits)
    1980 Mahagonny (voice)

    1977 Semi-Tough - Clara Pelf
    1974 CBS Daytime 90 (TV Series) - Rosa Harcourt
    - Trio for Lovers (1974) ... Rosa Harcourt
    -
    1969 The Appointment - Emma Valadier
    1966 Ten Blocks on the Camino Real (TV Movie) - The Gypsy
    1965 Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder - Eine Chronik aus dem Dreißigjährigen Krieg (TV Movie) - Mutter Courage
    1964 Bertolt Brecht: Übungstücke für Schauspieler (Short)
    1963 From Russia with Love - Rosa Klebb
    1961 The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone - Contessa Magda Terribili-Gonzales

    1931 The 3 Penny Opera - Jenny (as Lotte Lenja)

    Soundtrack (6 credits)

    2017 Popular Voices at the BBC (TV Mini-Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Truth Tellers at the BBC (2017) ... (performer: "Alabama Song")
    2016 Uncle Howard (Documentary) (performer: "September Song")
    2007 The Savages (performer: "Salomon-Song")
    2001 Guileless Guile (Short) (performer: "Denn wie Man sich bettet")

    1997 Seven Years in Tibet (performer: "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer/The Ballad of Mack the Knife")

    1952 Because of My Hot Youth (performer: "Die Seeräuber-Jenny. Ur Die Dreigroschenoper")
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    1982: 유 아 이 즈 온 리 (Yoo ah-ee-jeu own-lee) released in the Republic of Korea.
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    1987: Lashana Lynch is born--London, England.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 53 of 65 - "Sherlock I.Q." in London, England.
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    James Bond Jr - Sherlock I.Q.
    Season 1 - Episode 53
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807119/?ref_=ttep_ep53
    In London, James and IQ come from a Sherlock Holmes convention, but Baron von Skarin, with his henchmen Jaws and Nick Nack, use a prototype super tank they stole and attack the city, but then a knock on the head causes IQ to think he is Sherlock Holmes.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love.
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Baron Von Skarin (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws / John Q.Law (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 53 - Sherlock IQ
    Part 1

    Part 2

    Part 3

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    1995: Documentary 007: The Return presenting the new film and the Royal Premiere airs on British television.
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    007: The Return (1995)
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0934770/fullcredits?ref_=tt_cl_sm#cast
    1h | Documentary | TV Movie 27 November 1995
    Promotional documentary television special celebrating the release of the then new James Bond film GoldenEye (1995) including cast interviews, clips from the movie and a cross to the Royal Premiere of the film.
    Director: Bob Cousins
    Star: Mariella Frostrup
    1997: A&M releases David Arnold's Tomorrow Never Dies soundtrack.
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    2002: Die Another Day released in Belgium and the Philippines.
    2006: Daniel Craig in The Irish Examiner proposes "I wouldn't dye for Bond".
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    Craig: 'I wouldn’t dye for Bond'
    See the complete article here:
    New James Bond Daniel Craig refused to dye his blond locks
    dark brown for his role in new 007 smash Casino Royale.
    Mon, 27 Nov, 2006 - 07:26

    The actor faced a barrage of criticism when he was chosen to play the world's most famous secret agent, with opponents saying he was too short, too ordinary-looking and too blond to play Bond.

    But while the 38-year-old actor agreed to undertake a punishing gym regime to build up a 007 body, he drew the line when directors asked him to change his hair colour for the movie.
    He admits: "I was asked to dye my hair brown to play this role but it was out of the question. I suggested instead that I could cut my hair really short to create a more brutal appearance."
    2008: Quantum of Solace released in New Zealand.

    2010: Irvin Kershner dies at age 87--Los Angeles, California.
    (Born 29 April 1923--Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.)
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    Irvin Kershner obituary
    Chosen to direct The Empire Strikes Back, he turned in one of the best sequels – and highest box-office earners – of all time
    The Empire Strikes Back - Irvin Kershner
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    Irvin Kershner's The Empire Strikes Back (1980). Photograph: Allstar/Cinetext/ Lucasfilm
    Ronald Bergan | Mon 29 Nov 2010
    The film director Irvin Kershner, who has died aged 87, was known in the trade as a hired gun. His most famous film, The Empire Strikes Back (1980), the fifth episode in the Star Wars saga, is most commonly linked to its executive producer, George Lucas. Never Say Never Again (1983) is celebrated as the film in which Sean Connery made his comeback as James Bond after 12 years away from the role, the director merely providing the vehicle. Kershner's first feature, Stakeout On Dope Street (1958), was made under the aegis of Roger Corman, who usually gained the main credit for the films he produced. Yet, eclectic as Kershner seemed, his best films reveal a visual flair, with an eye for the telling detail and a sympathy for the rebel.
    The Philadelphia-born Kershner's background was in painting, photography and design. He took a degree at Temple University's Tyler School of Art in his home town. He studied painting under Hans Hoffman in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and photography at the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles. During the second world war, he served in the US air force as a flight engineer on B-24 bombers.

    After the war, Kershner began his film career at the University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television, teaching photography and taking film courses under Slavko Vorkapich, the great montage artist. Kershner next accepted a job as still photographer for the US state department in the Middle East, which eventually led to an assignment as a director and cinematographer of documentaries in Iran, Greece and Turkey with the United States Information Agency, including titles such as Malaria, Locust Plague and Childbirth. When he returned to the US, he worked as writer, director, cinematographer and editor on Confidential File (1953-55), a documentary television series that recreated the events behind contemporary news headlines.
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    Kershner on the set of RoboCop 2. Photograph: Deana Newcomb/AP
    Kershner and his cameraman Haskell Wexler experimented with a mixture of cinéma vérité and narrative conventions in Stakeout On Dope Street, about a trio of youths who discover a cache of uncut heroin and try to sell it. Despite the heavy warning against the evils of drug peddling, the film, shot on location using handheld cameras and a cast of unknowns, was a lively feature debut.

    Kershner followed it with another taut low-budget crime story, The Young Captives (1959), whose publicity shrieked "Teenage elopers' love turns to terror as they battle crazed killer!" The plot concerned a couple who pick up a psychopathic hitchhiker. The Hoodlum Priest (1961) was, despite its mildly provocative title, a mostly routine crime melodrama based on a true story about a Jesuit priest known for his work among ex-cons. Well photographed by Wexler, Kershner's restrained documentary approach counteracted Don Murray's movie-star good looks and the dollops of do-good philosophy.

    Kershner's use of locations, such as a wintry Montreal in The Luck of Ginger Coffey (1964), which starred Robert Shaw and Mary Ure as an Irish immigrant couple coping with unemployment and separation, and New York in A Fine Madness (1966), was particularly effective. In the latter, a sour screwball comedy, Sean Connery rants and raves as a radical poet, telling a group of women: "Open your corsets and bloom, let the metaphors creep above your knees."

    Kershner continued to get fine performances from stars such as George C Scott, turning on the charm in The Flim-Flam Man (1967), and George Segal in Loving (1970), a touching and sharp drama of a commercial artist rebelling against the routine of marriage and career. In Up the Sandbox (1972), Barbra Streisand rebels against her domesticity by having garish fantasies, one involving seduction by Fidel Castro.

    In 1970, Kershner was to have directed A Man Called Horse, about an Englishman captured and ultimately converted by the Sioux, but he was taken off the project, without even receiving credit for his work on the screenplay. However, he got to direct the sequel, The Return of a Man Called Horse (1976), which, while subtly avoiding the exploitative aspects of the original film, still has Richard Harris, in the title role, suspended by clamps to his pectoral muscles, in a 20-minute sequence. The film, which gets closer to the Native American experience than most previous attempts, also has one of the longest pre-credit sequences, lasting 17 minutes.

    Subsequently, Kershner's films got flashier and more expensive. Eyes of Laura Mars (1978) was glossy gore, with Faye Dunaway as a chic New York photographer who is psychically linked to a murderer. When Lucas decided not to direct a sequel to Star Wars (1977) himself, he chose Kershner out of a possible 100 directors. He felt that Kershner, who had remained apart from the Hollywood system and was a student of Zen Buddhism, would appreciate the film's philosophical implications, and would be able to explore mythology and the subconscious fantasy life of children. Besides, Lucas thought The Return of a Man Called Horse was one of those rare sequels that was actually better than the first movie.

    Kershner's contribution to The Empire Strikes Back was considerable. He spent several hours a day for a year storyboarding the action himself, getting his perspective on each scene. "According to the books, I didn't even exist," Kershner said. "Of course, I couldn't have made the movie without George; on the other hand, they couldn't have made that movie without me." The Empire Strikes Back, much darker and more realistic than the first Star Wars film, became one of the highest box-office earners ever, as well as being considered one of the best sequels. The same could not be said of the violent, humourless RoboCop 2 (1990).

    "Kersh", as the tall, bald and goateed Kershner was known to his intimates, appeared in a number of his friends' films: as Zebedee in Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) and in a small role in Steven Seagal's On Deadly Ground (1994). In 1997, he produced an interesting independent film for a first-time British director, Paul Chart, called American Perfekt.
    In his last years, Kershner lectured at universities across the US, and plannned a number of projects, few of which saw the light of day. "My career is a disaster," he remarked. "After The Empire Strikes Back, I got to make big films that I didn't care about, Never Say Never Again and RoboCop 2, and then I got too old. I love my early movies, but naturalism is an artist's early style. Now I want to deal with feelings, dreams, an acceptance of irrationality. I want films to haunt an audience, to give them something to remember and be able to talk about."
    He is survived by his sons, Dana and David.

    Irvin Kershner, film director; born 29 April 1923; died 29 November 2010
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    Irvin Kershner (1923–2010)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0449984/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1
    Director | Cinematographer | Actor

    Filmography
    Director (32 credits)
    2011 Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back: Deleted Scenes (Video short)
    1993 SeaQuest 2032 (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - To Be or Not to Be (1993)
    1990 RoboCop 2

    1989 Traveling Man (TV Movie)
    1986 Amazing Stories (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - Hell Toupee (1986)
    1983 Never Say Never Again
    1980 Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (directed by)

    1978 Eyes of Laura Mars
    1976 Raid on Entebbe (TV Movie)
    1976 The Return of a Man Called Horse
    1974 S*P*Y*S
    1972 Up the Sandbox
    1970 Loving
    1967 The Flim-Flam Man
    1966 A Fine Madness
    1964 The Luck of Ginger Coffey
    1963 Face in the Rain
    1963 Kraft Suspense Theatre (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - The End of the World, Baby (1963)
    1962-1963 Naked City (TV Series) (2 episodes)
    1961 Ben Casey (TV Series) (1 episode)
    1961 Cain's Hundred (TV Series) (1 episode)

    1959-1961 The Rebel (TV Series) (35 episodes)
    1961 The Hoodlum Priest
    1960 The Yank (TV Movie)
    1959 Philip Marlowe (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - The Hunger (1959)
    1959 The Young Captives
    1958 Now Is Tomorrow (TV Movie)
    1958 Stakeout on Dope Street
    1953-1958 Confidential File (TV Series) (12 episodes)
    1950 Childbirth (Documentary short)
    1950 Locust Plague (Documentary short)
    1950 Malaria (Documentary short)

    Cinematographer (5 credits)
    Actor (6 credits)
    Editor (3 credits)
    Producer (3 credits)
    Writer (1 credit)
    Editorial department (1 credit)
    Additional Crew (1 credit)
    Thanks (9 credits)
    Self (38 credits)
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    2015: 007 スペクター (007 Supekutā) limited release in Japan.
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    2015: Spectre released in South Africa.
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    South Africas' Role in the New Bond
    Movie 'Spectre'
    South Africa plays a feature role – and it’s a good one – in the new James Bond movie, ‘Spectre’, even though South Africa will be one of the last countries in the world that actually sees a major launch of the spy extravaganza.

    While the movie itself – which is brilliant – flits from Mexico to Italy to Austria to Morocco, among other places, as Bond tries to track down a mysterious organisation, things aren’t going so well for him back at headquarters in London.

    A new major character in MI6 is trying to launch a spy agency called Nine Eyes that will combine all the major spy networks of the world, but South Africa is the only one to vote against it. Later in the movie, Cape Town features not as a location but in TV footage crucial to the story.
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    Ralph Fiennes as M, Naomi Harris as Moneypenny and a new character behind Nine Eyes, C (played by Andrew Scott).
    But South Africans will have to wait longer than most audiences to see the movie. While ‘Spectre’ is already showing in London and will be launched on Friday in the United States, it will only be released in South Africa on 27 November, the world’s last major launch before Japan.

    Spectre’ (named after the shady evil organisation that has featured in six Bond movies already) is believed to be Daniel Craig’s last movie as Bond, and gossip is rife about who will take over from him.

    2020: Mark Edlitz publishes his own book The Lost Adventures of James Bond.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 28th

    1694: Matsuo Bashō (born Matsuo Kinsaku, later Matsuo Chūemon Munefusa) dies at age 50.
    Known as the master of haiku.
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    You Only Live Twice, Ian Fleming, 1964.
    Chapter 11 - Anatomy Class
    The Murasaki Maru was a very modern 3,ooo-ton ship with all the luxuries of an ocean liner. Crowds waved her goodbye as if the ship was setting off across the Atlantic instead of doing a day trip down the equivalent of a long lake. There was much throwing of paper streamers by groups bearing placards to show whom they represented - business outings, schools, clubs-part of the vast travelling population of Japan, for ever on the move, making an outing, visiting relatives or shrines, or just seeing the sights of the country. The ship throbbed grandly through the endless horned islands. Tiger said that there were fine whirlpools 'like great lavatory pans, specially designed for suicides' between some of these. Meanwhile, Tiger and Bond sat in the first class dining-room and consumed 'Hamlets' - ham omelets - and sake. Tiger was in a lecturing mood. He was determined to correct Bond's boorish ignorance of Japanese culture. 'Bondo-san, I wonder if I will ever get you to appreciate the nuances of the Japanese tanka, or of the haiku, which are the classical forms of Japanese verse. Have you ever heard of Basho, for instance?'

    'No,' said Bond with polite interest. 'Who's he?'

    'Just so,' said Tiger bitterly. 'And yet you would think me grossly uneducated if I had never heard of Shakespeare, Homer, Dante, Cervantes, Goethe. And yet Basho, who lived in the seventeenth century, is the equal of any of them.'

    'What did he write?'

    'He was an itinerant poet. He was particularly at home with the haiku, the verse of seventeen syllables.' Tiger assumed a contemplative expression. He intoned:
    'In the bitter radish
    that bites into me, I feel
    the autumn wind.
    'Does that not say anything to you? Or this:
    'The butterfly is perfuming
    its wings, in the scent
    of the orchid.
    'You do not grasp the beauty of that image?'

    'Rather elusive compared to Shakespeare.'
    'In the fisherman's hut
    mingled with dried shrimps
    crickets are chirping.'

    Tiger looked at him hopefully.

    'Can't get the hang of that one,' said Bond apologetically.

    'You do not catch the still-life quality of these verses? The flash of insight into humanity, into nature? Now, do me a favour, Bondo-san. Write a haiku for me yourself. I am sure you could get the hang of it. After all you must have had some education?'

    Bond laughed. 'Mostly in Latin and Greek. All about Caesar and Balbus and so on. Absolutely no help in ordering a cup of coffee in Rome or Athens after I'd left school. And things like trigonometry, which I've totally forgotten. But give me a pen and a piece of paper and I'll have a bash, if you'll forgive the bad joke.' Tiger handed them over and Bond put his head in his hands. Finally, after much crossing out and rewriting he said, 'Tiger, how's this? It makes just as much sense as old Basho and it's much more pithy.' He read out:
    'You only live twice:
    Once when you are born
    And once when you look death in the face.'
    Tiger clapped his hands softly. He said with real delight, 'But that is excellent, Bondo-san. Most sincere.' He took the pen and paper and jotted some ideograms up the page. He shook his head. 'No, it won't do in Japanese. You have the wrong number of syllables. But it is a most honourable attempt.' He looked keenly at Bond. 'You were perhaps thinking of your mission?'
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    1966: You Only Live Twice films the ninja assault.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 54 of 65 "Killer Asteroid" in Iceland. And Outer Space.
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    James Bond Jr - Killer Asteroid
    Season 1 - Episode 54
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807105/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    Goldfinger hijacks a space shuttle in midair so that he can use it to bring an asteroid made up solid gold on a collision course with Earth. With the tracing software being designed by IQ, James and the gang head to Iceland where the signal of the space shuttle is coming from.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Mary Crawford ... (written by)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Alan Templeton ... (written by)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Oddjob (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Auric Goldfinger (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 54 - Killer Asteroid

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    1999: And the Word Was Bond documentary promoting The World Is Not Enough airs in the UK.
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    And the Word Was Bond (1999)

    25min | Documentary, Short | TV Short 28 November 1999
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0918490/
    Promotional documentary released to promote The World Is Not Enough (1999).

    Director: Rob Done
    Writer: David Castell
    And The Word Was Bond - James Bond Documentary (24:48)


    2002: Die Another Day released in Sweden.
    2002: James Bond 007 - Stirb an einem anderen Tag (James Bond 007 - Die of One Other Day) released in Austria, Germany, and the German-speaking region of Switzerland.
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    2002: Umri drugi dan (Die the Other Day) released in Croatia.
    James-Bond-umri-drugi-dan.jpg
    2002: Lamut B'Yom A'her (To die with more invincible values) released in Israel.

    2005: Marc Lawrence dies at age 95--Palm Springs, California.
    (Born 17 February 1910--New York City, New York.)
    wikipedia_PNG40.png
    Marc Lawrence
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Lawrence

    Marc Lawrence (born Max Goldsmith, February 17, 1910 – November 28, 2005) was an American character actor who specialized in underworld types. He has also been credited as F. A. Foss, Marc Laurence and Marc C. Lawrence.

    Early years
    Lawrence was born in New York City, the son of a Polish Jewish mother, Minerva Norma (née Sugarman), and a Russian Jewish father, Israel Simon Goldsmith. He participated in plays in school, then attended the City College of New York. In 1930, he received a two-year scholarship to the repertory theater operated by Eva Le Gallienne.
    Career

    In 1930, Lawrence befriended another young actor, John Garfield. The two appeared in a number of plays before Lawrence was given a film contract with Columbia Pictures. Lawrence's film debut came in 1933.

    Lawrence's pock-marked complexion, brooding appearance and New York street-guy accent made him a natural for heavies, and he played scores of gangsters and mob bosses over the next six decades. Later, Lawrence found himself under scrutiny for his political leanings. When called before the House Un-American Activities Committee, he admitted he had once been a member of the Communist Party. He named Sterling Hayden, Lionel Stander, Anne Revere, Larry Parks, Karen Morley and Jeff Corey as Communists. He was blacklisted[citation needed] and departed for Europe, where he continued to make films.
    Following the demise of the blacklist, he returned to America and resumed his position as a familiar and talented purveyor of gangland types. He played gangsters in two James Bond movies: 1971's Diamonds Are Forever opposite Sean Connery, and 1974's The Man with the Golden Gun opposite Roger Moore. He also portrayed a henchman opposite Laurence Olivier in Marathon Man (1976) and a stereotypical Miami mob boss alongside Jerry Reed and Dom DeLuise in the comedy Hot Stuff (1979).
    One of his last roles was as Mr. Zeemo in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Badda-Bing Badda-Bang", which aired in February 1999. Previously he played the elderly Gatherer Volnoth in the 1989 Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Vengeance Factor".

    His final film role was in Looney Tunes Back in Action (2003), appearing as an Acme Corporation vice president.

    Lawrence directed Nightmare in the Sun (1965).

    Books
    In 1991 Lawrence's autobiography was published entitled Long Time No See: Confessions of a Hollywood Gangster (ISBN 0-9636700-0-X). Lawrence was also the subject of a novel, The Beautiful and the Profane (ISBN 978-1-4107-0292-0) (published in 2002).

    Personal life
    For much of his adult life Lawrence lived in Palm Springs, California (1971–2006).[7] Lawrence married Odessa-born novelist and screenwriter Fanya Foss; she died on December 12, 1995. They had two children, Michael and Toni.

    Death
    Lawrence died of heart failure on November 28, 2005 at the age of 95. He was buried at Westwood Memorial Park in Westwood, California.
    7879655.png?263
    Marc Lawrence (I) (1910–2005)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0492908/?ref_=fn_al_nm_2

    Filmography
    Actor (221 credits)

    2003 Looney Tunes: Back in Action - Acme VP, Stating the Obvious
    2001 The Shipping News - Cousin Nolan

    1999 End of Days - Old Man
    1999 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (TV Series) - Mr. Zeemo
    - Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang (1999) ... Mr. Zeemo
    1998 ER (TV Series) - Mr. Newton
    - Shades of Gray (1998) ... Mr. Newton
    1996 Gotti (TV Movie) - Carlo Gambino
    1996 From Dusk Till Dawn - Old Timer Motel Owner
    1995 Four Rooms - Sam the Bellhop
    1994 Metaltech: Earthsiege (Video Game) - Pilot #5 (as Marc C. Lawrence)
    1992 Newsies - Kloppman
    1992 Ruby - Santos Alicante
    1990 Donor (TV Movie) - Ben Beloit
    1990 Shannon's Deal (TV Series) - Abe the Just
    - Art (1990) ... Abe the Just

    1989 Star Trek: The Next Generation (TV Series) - Volnath
    - The Vengeance Factor (1989) ... Volnath
    1989 Blood Red - Michael Fazio
    1986 The Big Easy - Vinnie 'The Cannon' DiMotti
    1986 The A-Team (TV Series) - Sam Marlini
    - The Little Town with an Accent (1986) ... Sam Marlini (as Mark Lawrence)
    1985 Night Train to Terror - Mr. Weiss / Dieter (segment "The Case of Claire Hansen")
    1983 Savage Journey (TV Movie) - Chief Walker (uncredited)
    1983 Thieves and Robbers - Don Salvatore Licuti
    1982 Terror at Alcatraz (TV Movie) - Daniel Ginelli
    1981 Border Pals (TV Short) - Joe Cincinnati
    1980 Cataclysm - Abraham Weiss / Dieter
    1980 Super Fuzz - Torpedo

    1979 The Dukes of Hazzard (TV Series) - Rostosky
    - The Meeting (1979) ... Rostosky
    1979 Swap Meet - Mr. Booth
    1979 Hot Stuff - Carmine
    1979 Wonder Woman (TV Series) - Mr. Jones
    - Going, Going, Gone (1979) ... Mr. Jones
    1978 Goin' Coconuts - Webster
    1978 Foul Play - Stiltskin
    1978 CHiPs (TV Series) - Co-Driver
    - Crack-Up (1978) ... Co-Driver
    1977 A Piece of the Action - Louie
    1976 Baretta (TV Series) - Linsky
    - Street Edition (1976) ... Linsky
    1976 Marathon Man - Erhard
    1976 The Rookies (TV Series) - Roger Marsten
    - Journey to Oblivion (1976) ... Roger Marsten
    1975 Switch (TV Series) - Don Vincenzo / Franks
    - Kiss of Death (1975) ... Don Vincenzo
    - Las Vegas Roundabout (1975) ... Franks
    1974 The Man with the Golden Gun - Rodney
    1974 McCloud (TV Series) - Vito Gilardi
    - The Gang That Stole Manhattan (1974) ... Vito Gilardi
    1969-1974 Mannix (TV Series) - Al Stanik / Ty Webber / Angelo Palerma
    - A Fine Day for Dying (1974) ... Al Stanik
    - Overkill (1971) ... Ty Webber
    - The Nowhere Victim (1969) ... Angelo Palerma
    1973 Frasier, the Sensuous Lion - Chiarelli (as Mark Lawrence)
    1973 Pigs - Zambrini
    1973 Honor Thy Father (TV Movie) - Stefano Magaddino
    1972 In Pursuit of Treasure
    1972 Nichols (TV Series) - Prouty
    - Zachariah (1972) ... Prouty
    1971 The Doris Day Show (TV Series) - Frankie Fury
    - The Wings of an Angel (1971) ... Frankie Fury
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever - Slumber Inc. Attendant
    1970-1971 Here's Lucy (TV Series) - Ruby / Joe Grapefruit
    - Lucy and Mannix Are Held Hostage (1971) ... Ruby
    - Lucy and Ma Parker (1970) ... Joe Grapefruit
    1971 The Partners (TV Series) - Kelso
    - The Prisoner of Fender (1971) ... Kelso
    1970 Dream No Evil - Undertaker
    1970 Bonanza (TV Series) - Red Gaskell
    - Caution, Easter Bunny Crossing (1970) ... Red Gaskell
    1970 The Kremlin Letter - The Priest

    1969 Il killer (TV Mini-Series)
    1968 Krakatoa: East of Java - Jacobs
    1968 King of Kong Island - Albert Muller
    1967 Custer of the West- Gold Miner
    1967 Du mou dans la gâchette - Magnum
    1966 7 monaci d'oro - Lucky Marciano, Capo da banda
    1966 Savage Pampas - Sgt. Barril
    1966 The Rat Patrol (TV Series) - Abu Hassan
    - The Moment of Truce Raid (1966) ... Abu Hassan
    1966 Johnny Tiger - William Billie
    1966 2 mafiosi contro Al Capone - Joe Minasi
    1965 Mister Ed (TV Series) - Spike the Bank Robber
    - The Bank Robbery (1965) ... Spike the Bank Robber
    1965 Petticoat Junction (TV Series) - Barney Dawson
    - Hooterville Crime Wave (1965) ... Barney Dawson
    1964 Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre (TV Series) - Plato Atutle
    - The Timothy Heist (1964) ... Plato Atutle
    1964 Arrest and Trial (TV Series) - Leo Tucci
    - Tigers Are for Jungles (1964) ... Leo Tucci
    1963 Johnny Cool - Johnny Colini
    1960-1963 The Untouchables (TV Series) - Lou Cagan / Mike Genna / Luigi Renaldo
    - Blues for a Gone Goose (1963) ... Lou Cagan
    - The Genna Brothers (1961) ... Mike Genna
    - Star Witness (1960) ... Luigi Renaldo
    1960-1962 The Detectives (TV Series) - Marcus Maroon / Ed Watkins / Rocco Silvano
    - Three Blind Mice: Part II (1962) ... Marcus Maroon
    - Three Blind Mice: Part 1 (1962) ... Marcus Maroon
    - The Other Side (1960) ... Ed Watkins
    - Life in the Balance (1960) ... Rocco Silvano
    1961 Whispering Smith (TV Series) - Frankie Wisdom
    - Death at Even Money (1961) ... Frankie Wisdom
    1961 Lawman (TV Series) - Frank Walker
    - Homecoming (1961) ... Frank Walker
    1961 The Deputy (TV Series) - Alvy Burke
    - The Hard Decision (1961) ... Alvy Burke
    1960 Thriller (TV Series) - Dr. Emil Berland
    - The Mark of the Hand (1960) ... Dr. Emil Berland (uncredited)
    1958-1960 The Rifleman (TV Series) - Cougar / Gavin
    - Trail of Hate (1960) ... Cougar
    - The Safe Guard (1958) ... Gavin
    1960 Richard Diamond, Private Detective (TV Series) - Vito Doria
    - Running Scared (1960) ... Vito Doria
    1960 Bronco (TV Series) - Joe Russo
    - Tangled Trail (1960) ... Joe Russo
    1960 Zane Grey Theater (TV Series) - Wade Migill
    - Killer Instinct (1960) ... Wade Migill

    1959 Shotgun Slade (TV Series) - Gideon Finch
    - Mesa of Missing Men (1959) ... Gideon Finch
    1959 Johnny Staccato (TV Series) - Vic Raffe
    - The Unwise Men (1959) ... Vic Raffe
    1959 Tightrope (TV Series) - Frankie Farrell
    - Man in the Middle (1959) ... Frankie Farrell
    1959 M Squad (TV Series) - Vince Cronin
    - Jeopardy by Fire (1959) ... Vince Cronin
    1959 Peter Gunn (TV Series) - Max Grayco
    - Vendetta (1959) ... Max Grayco
    1958-1959 Playhouse 90 (TV Series) - El Sordo / The Cajun / Scarface
    - For Whom the Bell Tolls: Part 2 (1959) ... El Sordo
    - For Whom the Bell Tolls: Part 1 (1959) ... El Sordo
    - Child of Our Time (1959)
    - Old Man (1958) ... The Cajun
    - Days of Wine and Roses (1958) ... Scarface
    1958 Wagon Train (TV Series) - First Mate Ferris
    - Around the Horn (1958) ... First Mate Ferris
    1957 Kill Her Gently - Connors
    1956 Helen of Troy - Diomedes
    1955 Ballata tragica - Felipe Alvaro
    1955 La catena dell'odio - Braschi
    1955 Suor Maria - Don Mario, proprietario del night club
    1955 Studio One in Hollywood (TV Series) - Cow Nelson
    - A Terrible Day (1955) ... Cow Nelson
    1955 New Moon - Pierre
    1954 Vacation with a Gangster - Jack Mariotti
    1953 Funniest Show on Earth - Il proprietario del circo
    1953 Trouble for the Legion - Serg. Schwartz
    1953 Noi peccatori - Camillo
    1953 Jolanda, the Daughter of the Black Corsair - Van Gould
    1952 Brothers of Italy - Il capitano March - un ufficiale austriarco
    1952 The Three Pirates - Van Gould
    1952 La tratta delle bianche - Machedi
    1952 Torment of the Past - Andrea Rossi (alias Piero)
    1951 My Favorite Spy - Ben Ali
    1951 Hurricane Island - Angus Macready (uncredited)

    1950 Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion - Frankie--Loan Shark
    1950 The Desert Hawk - Samad
    1950 The Asphalt Jungle - Cobby
    1950 Black Hand - Caesar Xavier Serpi

    1949 Tough Assignment - Vince
    1949 Calamity Jane and Sam Bass - Harry Dean
    1949 Jigsaw - Angelo Agostini
    1948 Out of the Storm - Red Stubbins
    1948 Key Largo - Ziggy
    1947 I Walk Alone - Nick Palestro
    1947 Captain from Castile - Corio
    1947 Unconquered - Sioto - Medicine Man
    1947 Joe Palooka in the Knockout - John Mitchell
    1947 Yankee Fakir - Duke
    1946 Cloak and Dagger - Luigi
    1946 Inside Job - Donovan
    1946 The Virginian - Pete
    1946 Blonde Alibi - Joe DeRita
    1945 Life with Blondie - Pete, Blackie's Henchman
    1945 Club Havana - Joe Reed
    1945 Don't Fence Me In - Clifford Anson
    1945 Flame of Barbary Coast - Joe Disko
    1945 Dillinger - Doc Madison
    1944 The Princess and the Pirate - Pedro
    1944 Rainbow Island - Alcoa
    1944 Tampico - Valdez
    1943 Hit the Ice - Phil
    1943 Submarine Alert - Vincent Bela
    1943 Calaboose - Sluggsy Baker
    1942 The Ox-Bow Incident - Jeff Farnley
    1942 'Neath Brooklyn Bridge - McGaffey
    1942 Eyes of the Underworld - Gordon Finch
    1942 Call of the Canyon - Horace Dunston
    1942 This Gun for Hire - Tommy
    1942 Yokel Boy - Henchman Trigger
    1942 Nazi Agent - Joe Aiello
    1941 Public Enemies - Mike
    1941 Sundown - Abdi Hammud
    1941 A Dangerous Game - Joe
    1941 Hold That Ghost - Charlie Smith
    1941 Lady Scarface - Lefty Landers
    1941 The Shepherd of the Hills - Pete Matthews
    1941 Blossoms in the Dust - La Verne
    1941 The Man Who Lost Himself - Frank DeSoto
    1941 The Monster and the Girl - Sleeper
    1941 Tall, Dark and Handsome - Louie
    1940 Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum - Steve McBirney
    1940 The Great Profile - Tony
    1940 Brigham Young - Prosecutor
    1940 The Golden Fleecing - 'Happy' Dugan
    1940 The Man Who Talked Too Much - Lefty Kyler
    1940 Love, Honor and Oh-Baby! - Tony Luffo
    1940 Johnny Apollo - Bates

    1939 Invisible Stripes - Lefty
    1939 The Housekeeper's Daughter - Floyd
    1939 Beware Spooks! - Slick Eastman
    1939 Dust Be My Destiny - Venetti
    1939 Think First (Short) - Joe
    1939 S.O.S. Tidal Wave - Melvin Sutter
    1939 Ex-Champ - Bill Crosle - Olsen's Manager
    1939 Blind Alley - Buck
    1939 Code of the Streets - Henchman Halstead, aka Denver Collins
    1939 Romance of the Redwoods - Joe
    1939 Sergeant Madden - 'Piggy' Ceders
    1939 The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt - Henchman in Trenchcoat (uncredited)
    1939 Homicide Bureau - Chuck Brown
    1938 Charlie Chan in Honolulu - Johnny McCoy
    1938 There's That Woman Again - Stevens (uncredited)
    1938 While New York Sleeps - Happy Nelson
    1938 Adventure in Sahara - Poule
    1938 The Spider's Web - Steve Harmon
    1938 I Am the Law - Eddie Girard
    1938 Convicted - Milton Militis
    1938 Squadron of Honor - Lawlor
    1938 Who Killed Gail Preston? - Frank Daniels
    1938 Penitentiary - Jack Hawkins (uncredited)
    1937 The Shadow - Kid Crow
    1937 Murder in Greenwich Village - Rusty Morgan
    1937 Counsel for Crime - Edwin Mitchell
    1937 Life Begins with Love - Pearson (uncredited)
    1937 Charlie Chan on Broadway - Thomas Mitchell
    1937 A Dangerous Adventure - Calkins
    1937 It Can't Last Forever - Hoodlum (uncredited)
    1937 What Price Vengeance - Pete Brower
    1937 San Quentin - Venetti
    1937 Criminals of the Air - 'Blast' Reardon
    1937 I Promise to Pay - Henchman Whitehat
    1937 Motor Madness - Gus Slater
    1937 Racketeers in Exile - 'Blackie' White
    1936 Night Waitress - Dorn (as Marc Laurence)
    1936 Charlie Chan at the Opera - Undetermined Minor Role (unconfirmed, uncredited)
    1936 The Cowboy Star - Johnny Sampson
    1936 Blackmailer - Pinky (uncredited)
    1936 The Final Hour - Mike Magellon
    1936 Trapped by Television - Frank Griffin (uncredited)
    1936 Counterfeit - Dint Coleman
    1936 Under Two Flags - Grivon (uncredited)
    1936 Robin Hood of El Dorado - Manuel (uncredited)
    1936 Love on a Bet - County Fair Barker (uncredited)
    1936 Desire - Charles - the Valet (uncredited)
    1936 Don't Gamble with Love - Gambler (uncredited)
    1936 Road Gang - Pete
    1935 3 Kids and a Queen - Gangster (uncredited)
    1935 Dr. Socrates - Lefty Croger - a Gangster (uncredited)
    1935 Little Big Shot - Doré's Henchman
    1935 After the Dance - Tom - a Prisoner (uncredited)
    1935 Don't Bet on Blondes - Gangster #6 (uncredited)
    1935 The Arizonian - Henchman Who Pistol-Whipped Clay (uncredited)
    1935 Men of the Hour - Joe
    1935 Strangers All - Communist Meeting Chairman (uncredited)
    1935 Go Into Your Dance - Eddie Logan (uncredited)
    1935 'G' Men - Gangster Killed at Lodge (uncredited)
    1934 Million Dollar Baby - Gangster
    1934 Death on the Diamond - Bookies' Doorman (uncredited)
    1934 Straight Is the Way - Monk's Henchmen (uncredited)
    1933 White Woman - Connors
    1933 Lady for a Day - Nick - Mug at Reception (uncredited)
    1933 Her First Mate - Orderly with Message (uncredited)
    1933 Gambling Ship - Hood (uncredited)
    1932 If I Had a Million - Henchman of Mike the Gangster (uncredited)

    Director (8 credits)

    1973 Pigs
    1965 Nightmare in the Sun
    1961-1962 Maverick (TV Series) (2 episodes)
    - Mr. Muldoon's Partner (1962)
    - A Technical Error (1961)
    1962 77 Sunset Strip (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - Jennifer (1962)
    1960-1962 The Roaring 20's (TV Series) (2 episodes)
    - Footlights (1962)
    - Vendetta on Bleecker Street (1960)
    1961 Bronco (TV Series) (2 episodes)
    - The Equalizer (1961)
    - Prince of Darkness (1961)
    1960-1961 Lawman (TV Series) (16 episodes)
    - The Juror (1961)
    - Conditional Surrender (1961)
    - Blind Hate (1961)
    - The Trial (1961)
    - Whiphand (1961)
    - Fugitive (1961)
    - Mark of Cain (1961)
    - The Inheritance (1961)
    - Detweiler's Kid (1961)
    - Hassayampa (1961)
    - The Squatters (1961)
    - The Marked Man (1961)
    - The Frame-Up (1961)
    - Cornered (1960)
    - The Catcher (1960)
    - The Post (1960)
    1960 M Squad (TV Series) (2 episodes)
    - Man with the Ice (1960)
    - The Twisted Way (1960)

    Writer (2 credits)

    1973 Pigs (as F.A. Foss)
    1965 Nightmare in the Sun

    Producer (2 credits)

    1973 Pigs (producer)
    1965 Nightmare in the Sun (producer)
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    2022: An international auction offers artwork by Pierre Auguste-Renoir, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Fernand Léger. And not least Salvador Dali's tarot card deck created for a Bond film. All at New Delhi, India, and online.
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    Iconic works by Renoir, Picasso to go
    under hammer at AstaGuru's online
    auction
    NewsDrum Desk | 24 Nov 2022

    New Delhi, Nov 24 (PTI) Artworks by iconic global artists, including Pierre Auguste-Renoir, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Fernand Léger and Salvador Dali, will go under the hammer at India's "first exclusive international auction", starting November 28.

    Organised by online auction house AstaGuru, the two-day auction, showcasing a medley of works by revered artists, will present experimentative artworks by leading contemporary artists as well, including the likes of Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Yayoi Kusama, Robert Indiana and Marc Sijan.

    Leading the auction line-up is a beautiful work by French impressionist master Pierre Auguste–Renoir, who created an extraordinary artistic legacy with his fascinating canvases bearing sublime female nudes.

    Titled "Baigneuse Assise" or the "Seated Bather", the 1915 work was once in the collection of seminal novelist Somerset Maugham. It was also featured on the cover of his book "Purely For My Pleasure" (1962). It will be offered at an estimate of Rs 4.34 – 5.53 crore.

    "We are extremely happy to curate a collection which brings together works of several historic and big names from the history of modern and contemporary art and does complete justice to the auction titled 'International Iconic'...We are certain that the auction is highly anticipated and will definitely witness enthusiastic bidding," said Siddanth Shetty, vice- president, business strategy and operations, AstaGuru.
    Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali's limited series of 78 custom decks of tarot cards known as Dali's 'Universal Tarot' will also be showcased at the auction. The work, first commissioned to him by a Hollywood producer Albert Broccoli, was meant to be used as a prop in the James Bond film Live and Let Die.

    Each of the cards are estimated at Rs 19.75-27.65 Lakh.
    Other highlights of the auction are works by Pablo Picasso, widely celebrated as one of the foremost figures of modern art. His 1969 work, executed with coloured wax crayon on paper, will be offered at an estimate of Rs 2.37-3.95 crore.

    French master visual artist Henri Matisse's 1940 work 'Femme et Bouquets' (estimated at 1.97-2.76 crore) and Russian-French artist Marc Chagall 'Violoniste Au Village Enneigé' (estimated at Rs 3–3.79 crore) are also up for grabs in the auction.

    Featuring flowers, fruits, objects, musical instruments, and scenes of everyday moments, the still life works by Colombian artist Fernando Botero paying homage to the Dutch masters of the 16th and 17th centuries are part of the auction as well.

    A still work by the artist will be offered at an estimate of Rs 1.18-1.58 crore.

    English artist Damien Hirst's 'Beautiful Hours Spin Painting IX' (estimated at Rs 2.37-3.95 crore), first unveiled as the cover for the album 'See the Light' by British rock band 'The Hours', and famous 'Love Sculptures' by American artist Robert Indiana are also among the highlights in the auction.

    "First executed as a painting in 1965 and being displayed at a solo exhibition at the Stable Gallery, it became a career-defining piece for Indiana. It will be offered with an estimate of Rs 3.16-4.74 crore," said the online auction house in a statement.

    Making it to the auction is also a unique work by iconic artist Andy Warhol. The presented work, marking a departure from the artist's popular body of work focusing on the culture of consumerism, was created in 1983 and gifted to his friend Christopher Mako.

    It is offered at an estimate of Rs 1.10-1.89 crore. PTI MG MAH MAH
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    See Surreal Tarot Cards Designed by Salvador Dalí
    for a James Bond Movie

    The spooky deck features images of classic art and Christian symbolism with a signature Dalí twist
    Nina Kravinsky, Freelance Writer | November 7, 2019
    salvador_dali.jpg
    Salvador Dali tarot card magician
    The 78-card deck didn't actually make it into the James Bond film Live and Let Die. Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium/Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala- Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019
    In 1973, producer Albert R. Broccoli commissioned Salvador Dalí to create a set of tarot cards for the upcoming James Bond film Live and Let Die. The Catalan artist indulged his mystical side when designing the very surreal deck of cards, but his prop deck failed to make the movie’s final cut: As Hakim Bishara explains for Hyperallergic, Dalí reportedly asked for an enormous fee beyond even the Bond film’s $7 million budget.

    The famed surrealist continued working on the spooky set after Broccoli rescinded his offer, and in 1984, he released a limited edition of the deck. Now, for the first time in more than 30 years, the 78-card set is back on the market. (The deck and a companion book are available from Taschen Books for $60.)
    028a_dali_tarot_new_edition_va_44640_1908271456_id_1268374.jpg
    Salvador Dali tarot card empress
    Gala Dali as the "Empress" Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium/Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala- Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019
    Dalí’s deck blends elements of his bombastic personality with typical surrealist motifs—think ants and disembodied heads—and traditional tarot symbolism. In one card, the artist himself poses as the Magician, and in another, his wife, Gala Dalí, assumes the role of the Empress. The deck’s “Lovers” card, according to Architectural Digest’s Stephanie Strasnick, mirrors Jan Gossaert’s 16th-century painting Neptune and Amphitrite but replaces the mythical scene’s classical setting with a giant butterfly and flower.
    The surrealist pioneer’s interest in mysticism extended beyond his encounter with Hollywood. Gala, Dalí’s muse, business partner and agent, had a penchant for the esoteric. She used to read tarot cards in an attempt to predict her husband’s career path and may have even encouraged him to accept the Bond producer’s commission.
    “This mysterious, cultured woman, a gifted creator, colleague and peer of poets and painters, lived her art and her life in an intensely literary manner,” said Dalí Museums director Montse Aguer in a statement on the 2018 exhibition “Gala Salvador Dalí: A Room of One’s Own in Púbol.”
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    Salvador Dali tarot card lovers
    The "Lovers" card is inspired by Jan Gossaert's Neptune and Amphitrite. Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium/Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala- Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019
    Just as Gala’s mystical leanings likely influenced the deck, Dalí’s surrealist background is evident in full force. The “Magician” card features the artist standing above one of his iconic melting clocks, while the “Death” card shows a cypress tree emblazoned with a skull beside a single blooming rose.

    As Lindsay Rainwater writes for GALO magazine, “Dalí’s deck is a pastiche of old-world art, surrealism, kitsch, Christian iconography and Greek and Roman sculpture.”

    Many of the tarot cards feature classic works of art juxtaposed with collage elements. Per Strasnick, Dalí reimagines Vincenzo Camuccini’s 19th-century painting The Death of Julius Caesar as the “Ten of Swords,” topping a cut-out of the brutal attack with 10 painted blades. In the “Empress” card, meanwhile, the artist superimposes Gala’s face on the statue of a goddess seen in Eugène Delacroix’s 1826 painting Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi.
    Dalí even pokes fun at Roger Moore, the then-new actor portraying James Bond, by including original 007 Sean Connery’s face on the “Emperor” card.
    And while Dalí’s deck doesn’t appear in Live or Let Die, Bond girl Solitaire, played by Jane Seymour, does flip through a custom-made tarot deck in the film. Artist Fergus Hall designed the set of cards—likely for much less money—following the better-known surrealist’s split from the project.

    Art Art History Magic Surrealism
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    The Emperor
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 29th

    1901: Varley Thomas is born--Wandsworth, Surrey, England.
    (She dies 29 January 1983 at age 81--Ewell, Surrey, England.)
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    Varley Thomas
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0859620/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm

    Biography
    Born November 29, 1901 in Wandsworth, Surrey, England, UK
    Died January 29, 1983 in Ewell, Surrey, England, UK
    Birth Name Margaret Ada Thomas
    Height 5' (1.52 m)
    Varley Thomas was born on November 29, 1901 in Wandsworth, Surrey, England as Margaret Ada Thomas. She was an actress, known for Goldfinger (1964), Jack the Ripper (1973) and Home Tonight (1961). She died on January 29, 1983 in Ewell, Surrey.
    Filmography
    Actress (10 credits)

    1973 Jack the Ripper (TV Mini-Series) - Emily Holland
    - The First Two (1973) ... Emily Holland

    1969 Public Eye (TV Series) - Janet
    - The Comedian's Graveyard (1969) ... Janet
    1967 Emergency-Ward 10 (TV Series) - Mrs. Neehan
    - A Family Likeness (1967) ... Mrs. Neehan
    1966 Love Story (TV Series) - Minnie Fry
    - Two's Company (1966) ... Minnie Fry
    1965 Television Club (TV Series) - Mrs. Bostock
    - The Brent Family: Its None of Your Business (1965) ... Mrs. Bostock
    1965 ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) - Neighbour
    - The Rules of the Game (1965) ... Neighbour
    1964 Crossroads (TV Series) - Madame Durand
    1964 Goldfinger - Swiss Gatekeeper
    1962 No Hiding Place (TV Series) - Mrs. Coggins
    - Accessories After the Fact (1962) ... Mrs. Coggins
    1961 Home Tonight (TV Series) - Mrs. Jackson
    - Episode #1.40 (1961) ... Mrs. Jackson
    - Episode #1.39 (1961) ... Mrs. Jackson
    - Episode #1.38 (1961) ... Mrs. Jackson
    - Episode #1.37 (1961) ... Mrs. Jackson
    - Episode #1.36 (1961) ... Mrs. Jackson

    Archive footage (2 credits)

    1995 Behind the Scenes with 'Goldfinger' (Video documentary short) - Old Lady with Gun
    1964 Goldfinger: The World Premiere (Documentary short)
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    1961: Variety reports their estimation Eon bought rights to Fleming's novels for $500,000.
    1963: Kevin McClory receives Thunderball film rights and £50,000 damages. Any additional Bond films would necessarily be remakes.

    1964: The San Francisco Examiner publishes the Donald Stanley short story "Holmes Meets 007". Later published by Beaune Press in 1967 in a very limited run.
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    "Holmes Meets 007"
    http://www.wikiwand.com/en/James_Bond_uncollected_and_other_miscellaneous_short_stories

    Then I noticed the crestfallen figure standing near the window. "What should we do with Bond?" I asked. "Bond? Oh, send him back to his little bureaucratic niche, I expect. Really, I couldn't be less concerned."

    Donald Stanley wrote this short story - under two-thousand words - first published in The San Francisco Examiner on 29 November 1964. The Beaune Press (San Francisco) subsequently published 247 copies of this seven page story in December 1967. There is no copy 222: this is instead numbered 221B. Copies 223 through to 247 are numbered I to XXV and were printed especially for the author's friends.

    Dr. John Watson, Sherlock Holmes's amanuensis, narrates the story. M and Bond visit Holmes and Watson at Holmes's Baker Street address. Holmes's deductive abilities impress M who wishes Bond had the same ability. Bond questions if such intuitive talents could hold up against a Smersh assassin. Bond confronts Holmes about the latter's drug addiction and accuses Watson of being the source of Holmes's narcotics supplier. Once Holmes admits it, Bond aims his Walther PPF [sic] at Watson and announces that Watson is an imposter and none other than Bond's arch-enemy Ernst Stavro Blofeld - the man who killed Bond's bride. Holmes throughout the meeting has been fiddling his Stradivarius - much to everyone's annoyance - and brings it crashing down, knocking Bond's gun away. Holmes plunges a needle containing morphine into M's arm, quickly rendering him unconscious. Holmes reveals that M is none other than Professor Moriarty; Bond is nothing more than a "fairly ignorant tool" who had been unaware of his boss's treachery all this time.
    1969: Bond comic strip River of Death ends its run in The Daily Express.
    (Started 24 June 1969. 1038–1174) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    http://legacy.aintitcool.com/node/54698
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    http://spyguysandgals.com/sgLookupComicStrip.aspx?id=1000
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    Spanish publishing house Buru Lan Ediciones, James Bond (vol. 1, #13)
    https://www.comicsroyale.com/foreign-reprints#/buru-lan-reprints/
    Reprints The River of Death, written by Jim Lawrence and illustrated by Yaroslav Horak.
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    Swedish Semic https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1970_1971.php3
    Dödens Flod
    (The Dead River - River Of Death)
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    Swedish Semic https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1979.php3
    Dödens Flod
    (The Dead River - River Of Death)
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    Danish https://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no-21-1971/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 21:
    “River of Death” (1971)
    "Dødens flod"
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    1972: The Live and Let Die production moves to Jamaica, doubling for San Monique.
    1973: 007: Vivir y dejar morir released in Argentina.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 55 of 65 - "Danger Train" in San Francisco, California.
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    James Bond Jr - Danger Train
    Season 1 - Episode 55
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807284/?ref_=ttep_ep55
    James Bond Jr. and IQ get caught in a S.C.U.M. feud between Ms. Fortune and Walker D. Plank over stealing a super powerful engine from the 'Cold Fusion' Train.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Steve Hayes
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Scumlord (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Ed Gilbert ... Captain Walker D.Plank (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Snuffer (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut / Miss Fortune / Pirate Parrot (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 55 - Danger Train

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    2002: Die Another Day released in Iceland.
    2002: 007: Surra veel üks päev released in Estonia.
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    2002: 007 - Döden får vänta (007: Death Has to Wait; also 007 - Kuolema saa odottaa, 007: Death Must Wait) released in Finland.
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    2002: Mirsti Citu Dienu (To Die Another Day) released in Latvia.
    2002: Pasveikink mirti kitą dieną (Happy to Die the Next Day) released in Lithuania.

    2003: Norman Burton dies at age 79--California.
    (Born 5 December 1923--New York City, New York.)
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    Norman Burton
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Burton
    Norman Burton
    Born December 5, 1923
    New York City, New York, U.S.
    Died November 29, 2003 (aged 79)
    Imperial, California, U.S.
    Occupation Film, television actor
    Years active 1957–1993
    Norman Burton (December 5, 1923 – November 29, 2003), occasionally credited as Normann Burton, was an American stage film and television actor.

    Early life
    Born in New York City, Burton was a student of The Actor's Studio. After early work on stage, he broke into films with a minor role in Fright (1956).

    Career
    His career in film and television was long and relatively successful, but he never achieved major recognition. He played the Hunt Leader, a gorilla, in the science fiction film Planet of the Apes, notable as being the first ape to be seen by both Taylor and the audience, and also appeared as a (human) army officer in the second sequel Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971). In film, he is perhaps best known for his unconventional (and frequently disparaged) performance as Felix Leiter in the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever (1971). He played Will Giddings, an ill fated engineer, in the action film The Towering Inferno (1974), and his later films included The Gumball Rally (1976), Crimes of Passion (1984) and Deep Space (1988). He played Dennis Christopher's mean and ill fated boss in the slasher Fade To Black (1980).
    On television, he is best known for his performance as Inter-Agency Defense Command's supervisor Joe Atkinson during the second season of the DC Comics-based fantasy adventure drama series The New Adventures of Wonder Woman starring Lynda Carter. He also played Burt Dennis in the situation comedy The Ted Knight Show in the spring of 1978, and appeared as General George Marshall in the 1988 television miniseries War and Remembrance. Throughout his life, Burton was a devotee of the method school of acting, and taught method acting in Lakeside, California.

    Death
    Burton was just six days short of his 80th birthday when he died as a result of an auto accident while returning from Ajijic, Mexico near the California-Arizona state line.
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    Norman Burton (1923–2003) Actor
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0123680/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (89 credits)

    1993 American Ninja 5 - Ambassador Halden
    1992 Live Wire - Senator Victor
    1991 The New Adam-12 (TV Series) - Eric Monroe
    - 211 Pizza (1991) ... Eric Monroe
    1990 Dragnet (TV Series) - Safe Job (1990)
    1990 Thirtysomething (TV Series) - Charley Sayers
    - Arizona (1990) ... Charley Sayers

    1988-1989 War and Remembrance (TV Mini-Series) - Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part XII (1989) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part III (1988) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part I (1988) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    1988 Shakedown on the Sunset Strip (TV Movie) - Ward Sullivan
    1988 Deep Space - General Randolph
    1988 Bloodsport - Helmer
    1988 Highway to Heaven (TV Series) - Captain Friend
    - Back to Oakland (1988) ... Captain Friend
    1986 Bad Guys - Captain Watkins
    1986 St. Elsewhere (TV Series) - Monsignor Senti
    - Time Heals: Part 1 (1986) ... Monsignor Senti
    1983-1986 Knight Rider (TV Series) - Damon Leland / Barnswell
    - Redemption of a Champion (1986) ... Damon Leland
    - A Nice, Indecent Little Town (1983) ... Barnswell
    1986 Murder, She Wrote (TV Series) - Drew Narramore
    - Trial by Error (1986) ... Drew Narramore
    1985 Pray for Death - Lt. Anderson
    1984 Crimes of Passion - Lou Bateman
    1983 Mausoleum - Dr. Simon Andrews
    1982 Simon & Simon (TV Series) - Carl Emory
    - Fowl Play (1982) ... Carl Emory
    1982 The Facts of Life (TV Series) - Dr. Green
    - The Affair (1982) ... Dr. Green
    1982 CHiPs (TV Series) - Kessler
    - Tiger in the Streets (1982) ... Kessler
    1981 Amy - Caruthers
    1980 Fade to Black - Marty Berger (as Normann Burton)
    1980 To Race the Wind (TV Movie) - Mr. Krents (as Normann Burton)
    1980 Bogie (TV Movie) - Hopkins
    1977-1980 Quincy M.E. (TV Series) - Dr. George Danner / Max
    - Cover-Up (1980) ... Dr. George Danner (as Normann Burton)
    - No Deadly Secret (1977) ... Max (as Normann Burton)

    1979 The Ultimate Impostor (TV Movie) - Papich
    1978 Lou Grant (TV Series) - Franklin Nash
    - Conflict (1978) ... Franklin Nash (as Normann Burton)
    1978 Project U.F.O. (TV Series) - Dr. Phil Greiner
    - Sighting 4022: The Camouflage Incident (1978) ... Dr. Phil Greiner (as Normann Burton)
    1978 The Eddie Capra Mysteries (TV Series)
    - Murder, Murder (1978) ... (as Normann Burton)
    1978 Insight (TV Series) - Sam
    - The Flawed Magi (1978) ... Sam (as Normann Burton)
    1978 The Ted Knight Show (TV Mini-Series) - Burt Dennis
    - The Honeymoon Game (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Sweet Sixteen (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - The Wedding (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Hop to It (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - My Hero (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Strike (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    1977 Wonder Woman (TV Series) - Joe Atkinson
    - The Man Who Made Volcanoes (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - I Do, I Do (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Queen and the Thief (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Pied Piper (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - Knockout (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Bermuda Triangle Crisis (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Man Who Could Move the World (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - Anschluss '77 (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Return of Wonder Woman (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    1977 Murder in Peyton Place (TV Movie) - Jay Kamens (as Normann Burton)
    1977 Dog and Cat (TV Series) - Tedesco
    - Dead Skunk (1977) ... Tedesco
    1974-1976 The Rockford Files (TV Series) - Markell / Melvyn Moss
    - Return to the 38th Parallel (1976) ... Markell (as Normann Burton)
    - The Big Ripoff (1974) ... Melvyn Moss (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Rhoda (TV Series) - Ben Levy
    - Meet the Levys (1976) ... Ben Levy (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Black Sheep Squadron (TV Series) - General Carl Gant
    - Presumed Dead (1976) ... General Carl Gant (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Scorchy - Chief Frank O'Brien (as Normann Burton)
    1976 The Gumball Rally - Lieutenant Roscoe (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Harry O (TV Series) - Dr. Lusk
    - Death Certificate (1976) ... Dr. Lusk (as Normann Burton)
    1975-1976 Lincoln (TV Mini-Series) - General Ulysses S. Grant
    - The Last Days (1976) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    - The Unwilling Warrior (1975) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    - Sad Figure, Laughing (1975) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Conspiracy of Terror (TV Movie) - Lt. Rossos (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Baretta (TV Series) - Councilman
    - The Goodbye Orphan Annie Blues (1975) ... Councilman (as Normann Burton)
    1975 The Reincarnation of Peter Proud - Dr. Frederick Spear (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Force Five (TV Movie) - Arthur Haberman
    1974 Let's Call It Quits (Short) - Bill
    1974 The Towering Inferno - Giddings (as Normann Burton)
    1974 Kojak (TV Series) - 'Fish' Fisher
    - The Best War in Town (1974) ... 'Fish' Fisher (as Normann Burton)
    1974 Planet of the Apes (TV Series) - Yalu
    - The Interrogation (1974) ... Yalu (as Normann Burton)
    1974 The Terminal Man - Det. Capt. Anders
    1974 The Magician (TV Series) - Malloy
    - The Illusion of Black Gold (1974) ... Malloy (as Normann Burton)
    1974 The F.B.I. (TV Series) - Bren
    - Selkirk's War (1974) ... Bren
    1973 Hit! - The Director
    1973 Save the Tiger - Fred Mirrell
    1972 A Great American Tragedy (TV Movie)
    1972 The Partners (TV Series) - Romero
    - The 217 in 402 (1972) ... Romero
    1972 Fuzz - Police Commissioner Nelson
    1971 They Call It Murder (TV Movie) - Movie Director
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever - Leiter
    1971 Escape from the Planet of the Apes - Army Officer
    1971 Simon, King of the Witches - Willard Rackum
    1971 Jud - Uncle Hornkel
    1970 R.P.M. - Coach McCurdy

    1969 Land of the Giants (TV Series) - Sergeant
    - The Chase (1969) ... Sergeant
    1968 The Felony Squad (TV Series) - Solly Hirt
    - Matched for Murder (1968) ... Solly Hirt
    1968 Judd for the Defense (TV Series) - Roger Helmsman
    - Transplant (1968) ... Roger Helmsman
    1968 Planet of the Apes - Hunt Leader
    1968 I Spy (TV Series) - Brandon
    - Tag, You're It (1968) ... Brandon
    1967 Valley of the Dolls - Neely O'Hara's Director (uncredited)
    1967 Days of Our Lives (TV Series) - Cab Driver
    - Episode #1.391 (1967) ... Cab Driver
    1966 The Hero (TV Series)
    - The Day They Shot Sam Garrett (1966)
    1966 Get Smart (TV Series) - Control Agent
    - The Decoy (1966) ... Control Agent (uncredited)
    1966 I Dream of Jeannie (TV Series) - Mr. Asher
    - What's New, Poodle Dog? (1966) ... Mr. Asher
    1966 Love on a Rooftop (TV Series)
    - 117 Ways to Cook Hamburger (1966)
    1965 Gunsmoke (TV Series) - Ed
    - The Reward (1965) ... Ed
    1965 Wild Seed - Policeman
    1965 The Farmer's Daughter (TV Series) - Mr. Hilmer
    - Never Listen to Rumors (1965) ... Mr. Hilmer
    1965 Bewitched (TV Series) - Moving Man
    - Pleasure O'Riley (1965) ... Moving Man
    1963 The Fugitive (TV Series) - Car Salesman
    - See Hollywood and Die (1963) ... Car Salesman (uncredited)
    1963 The Twilight Zone (TV Series) - Office Worker
    - Miniature (1963) ... Office Worker (uncredited)
    1963 Sam Benedict (TV Series) - Lt. Warren Jones
    - Some Fires Die Slowly (1963) ... Lt. Warren Jones
    1961-1962 The Untouchables (TV Series) - Solly / Wally Dagan
    - The Floyd Gibbons Story (1962) ... Solly
    - 90-Proof Dame (1961) ... Wally Dagan
    1962 Hand of Death - Chief Homicide Investigator
    1962 Shannon (TV Series) - John Herman
    - Dolphin and the Mermaid (1962) ... John Herman
    1962 Womanhunt
    1961 Checkmate (TV Series) - Lou Lewis
    - Kill the Sound (1961) ... Lou Lewis
    1961 The New Breed (TV Series) - Poulos
    - Death of a Ghost (1961) ... Poulos
    1960 Pretty Boy Floyd - Bill Courtney

    1956 Fright - Thompkins - Reporter

    Archive footage (2 credits)

    2000 Inside 'Diamonds Are Forever' (Video documentary short) - Felix Leiter
    1980 Life, Liberty and Pursuit on the Planet of the Apes (TV Movie) - Yalu
    Planet of the Apes
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    Escape from the Planet of the Apes
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    Diamonds Are Forever
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    2005: Joseph Fürst dies at age 89--Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
    (Born 13 February 1916--Vienna, Austria.)
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    Joseph Fürst
    Joseph Fürst (13 February 1916 – 29 November 2005) was an Austrian-born international film and television actor known for his English language roles in Britain and Australia, after first appearing on the Canadian stage.

    Career
    Fürst was regularly featured in UK television drama series of the 1960s and early 1970s with appearances in The Saint, The Champions, Doomwatch, The Persuaders!, and as the mad (and well remembered) Professor Zaroff in the Doctor Who story The Underwater Menace. Many people believe his accent in this role to have been put on; this is incorrect, it is in fact his real accent. He also played the role of Schneider in the Armchair Theatre play "A Magnum for Schneider", which launched Edward Woodward as the character of Callan. (The play led to the highly regarded Callan TV series.)
    Fürst's notable film appearances included 55 Days at Peking (1963), The Brides of Fu Manchu (1966), the James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever (1971) as Dr Metz, and Inn of the Damned (1975).
    He emigrated to Australia and starting in the mid-1970s acted in several guest roles on Australian television drama series. His roles included several appearances in the top-rated police drama Division 4 produced by Crawford Productions in the 1970s. He played an ongoing role in soap opera Number 96 in 1976 as deli owner Carlo Lenzi, who was introduced to the series as a new Italian family alongside Arianthe Galani and Harry Michaels, his character romanced wine bar proprietor Norma Whittaker (Sheila Kennelly). He also played Heinrik Smeaton in The Young Doctors in 1979, and was a guest on situation comedy Kingswood Country, again opposite Kennelly. He guest starred in four episodes of A Country Practice in the early 1980s. In 1984, he starred in the ABC TV film The Schippan Mystery.

    Fürst was interviewed by Dwayne Bunney and Dallas Jones for "Loose Cannon" and spoke about his career in an interview to be an extra feature for the reconstruction of the missing Doctor Who story "The Underwater Menace". This interview took place shortly before his death.
    032 The Underwater Menace Interview with Joseph Furst
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUv2arY95lc
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    Joseph Fürst (1916–2005) Actor
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0299822/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (80 credits)

    1986 Tusitala (TV Mini-Series) - Von Pilsarch
    - Teller of Tales: Part Three (1986) ... Von Pilsarch
    - Teller of Tales: Part Two (1986) ... Von Pilsarch
    - The Teller of Tales: Part One (1986) ... Von Pilsarch
    1985 The Dunera Boys (TV Mini-Series) - The Baron
    - Episode #1.2 (1985) ... The Baron (as Joseph Furst)
    - Episode #1.1 (1985) ... The Baron (as Joseph Furst)
    1984 Special Squad (TV Series) - Raddich
    - The Würzburg Link (1984) ... Raddich
    1984 The Schippan Mystery (TV Movie) - Mathias Schippan
    1982 Jonah (TV Mini-Series) - Hans Paach
    - Episode #1.4 (1982) ... Hans Paach
    - Episode #1.3 (1982) ... Hans Paach
    - Episode #1.2 (1982) ... Hans Paach
    - Episode #1.1 (1982) ... Hans Paach
    1982 A Country Practice (TV Series) - Alex Popovich
    - Mates: Part 2 (1982) ... Alex Popovich
    - Mates: Part 1 (1982) ... Alex Popovich
    - Suffer Little Children: Part 2 (1982) ... Alex Popovich
    - Suffer Little Children: Part 1 (1982) ... Alex Popovich
    1980 Kingswood Country (TV Series) - Enzo Bertoluci
    - There's No Place Like Rome (1980) ... Enzo Bertoluci
    1980 Spy! (TV Series) - Colonel Malini
    - The Venlo Incident (1980) ... Colonel Malini
    1979-1980 Skyways (TV Series) - Poppa Fanelli / Pappa Fanelli
    - Pili (1980) ... Poppa Fanelli
    - Homecoming (1979) ... Pappa Fanelli

    1976 The Young Doctors (TV Series) - Heinrik Smeaton (1978)
    1976 Number 96 (TV Series) - Carlo Lenzi - 5 episodes
    1976 Luke's Kingdom (TV Series) - Storekeeper,
    - The Prisoner (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - An Enemy Too Many (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - Devil's Man (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Dam and the Damned (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Hypocrites (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The King's Gentleman (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Surveyor (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - A Woman Waiting (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - A Man Worse Than Cormac (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Man From Home (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Bait (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - The Land Lovers (1976) ... Storekeeper
    - A Sort of Gentleman (1976) ... Storekeeper
    1975 Plugg - Judge, Fraudenheist
    1975 Inn of the Damned - Lazar Straulle
    1973-1975 Division 4 (TV Series) - Ernst Kaufmann / Emmanuel Czoski / Stefan Gronowski
    - Check, Check, Check (1975) ... Ernst Kaufmann
    - The Fanatic (1975) ... Emmanuel Czoski
    - Today Is Eagle Day (1973) ... Stefan Gronowski
    1974-1975 Behind the Legend (TV Series) - Ferdinand von Mueller
    - Tom Roberts (1975)
    - Ferdinand von Mueller (1974) ... Ferdinand von Mueller
    1974 Mother's Day (TV Movie)
    1974 The Evil Touch (TV Series) - Dr. Gornak
    - Gornak's Prism (1974) ... Dr. Gornak
    1973 ...And Millions Die! (TV Movie) - Franz Kessler
    1973 Ryan (TV Series) - Eric Stahl
    - Liz (1973) ... Eric Stahl
    1972 The Money Game (TV Movie)
    The Foreigner (voice)
    1972 The Far Country (TV Series) - 5 episodes
    - Episode #1.6 (1972)
    - Episode #1.5 (1972)
    - Episode #1.4 (1972)
    - Episode #1.3 (1972)
    - Episode #1.2 (1972)
    1971 The Persuaders! (TV Series) - Yelker
    - The Ozerov Inheritance (1971) ... Yelker (as Joseph Furst)
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever - Dr Metz (as Joseph Furst)
    1971 Take Three Girls (TV Series) - Leon Mailer
    - The Company of Madmen (1971) ... Leon Mailer
    1971 Paul Temple (TV Series) - Josef Walczak
    - Cue Murder! (1971) ... Josef Walczak
    1970 Goodbye Gemini - Georgiu
    1970 Sudden Terror - Local Police Sgt (as Joseph Furst)
    1970 Callan (TV Series) - Sabovski
    - A Village Called 'G' (1970) ... Sabovski (as Joseph Furst)
    1970 Doomwatch (TV Series) - Dr. Charles Goldsworthy
    - Re-Entry Forbidden (1970) ... Dr. Charles Goldsworthy

    1968-1969 The Champions (TV Series) - Dr. Rudolf Mueller / Chislenkan
    - The Search (1969) ... Dr. Rudolf Mueller
    - The Beginning (1968) ... Chislenkan
    1968 Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) - President Obotnik
    - The Flag (1968) ... President Obotnik
    1968 Vendetta (TV Series) - Paul Bonner
    - The Anniversary Man (1968) ... Paul Bonner
    1968 Hammerhead - Count Ortega
    1968 Mogul (TV Series) - Zaluchin
    - Stop It, You're Breaking My Heart (1968) ... Zaluchin
    1967 Boy Meets Girl (TV Series) - Mr. Swyvoski
    - Lucinda (1967) ... Mr. Swyvoski
    1967 Theatre of Death - Karl Schiller (as Joseph Furst)
    1960-1967 Armchair Theatre (TV Series) - Schneider / Ekhart / Ex-King Gustavus III
    - A Magnum for Schneider (1967) ... Schneider
    - Till the Day I Die (1961) ... Ekhart
    - A Heart and a Diamond (1960) ... Ex-King Gustavus III
    1967 Doctor Who (TV Series) - Professor Zaroff
    - The Underwater Menace: Episode 4 (1967) ... Professor Zaroff
    - The Underwater Menace: Episode 3 (1967) ... Professor Zaroff (as Joseph Furst)
    - The Underwater Menace: Episode 2 (1967) ... Professor Zaroff
    - The Underwater Menace: Episode 1 (1967) ... Professor Zaroff
    1966 Harry Worth (TV Series) - Carl Mildenhoff
    - An Epic in the Sand (1966) ... Carl Mildenhoff
    1966 Arrivederci, Baby! - German Brasshat
    1966 BBC Play of the Month (TV Series) - Professor Brodzinski
    - Corridors of Power (1966) ... Professor Brodzinski
    1966 Out of Town Theatre (TV Mini-Series) - Koplaski
    - The Great Kopalski (1966) ... Koplaski
    1963-1966 The Saint (TV Series)
    Karel Jorovitch / Kane Luker / Dr. Ernst Zellerman
    - The Russian Prisoner (1966) ... Karel Jorovitch (as Joseph Furst)
    - The Saint Plays with Fire (1963) ... Kane Luker
    - The Saint Sees It Through (1963) ... Dr. Ernst Zellerman (as Joseph Furst)
    1966 The Brides of Fu Manchu - Otto Lentz (as Joseph Furst)
    1966 The Baron (TV Series) - Colonel Bucholz
    - Enemy of the State (1966) ... Colonel Bucholz
    1961-1965 ITV Play of the Week (TV Series)
    Bertheimer / Dr. Heller / Lecherenko / ...
    - Finesse in Diamonds (1965) ... Bertheimer
    - The Finambulists (1963) ... Dr. Heller
    - Freedom in September (1962) ... Lecherenko
    - I Remember Mama (1961) ... Lars Papa Hanson
    - The Poisoned Earth (1961) ... Dr. Brockmeyer
    1965 McGuire, Go Home! - Dr. Andros
    1964 The Wednesday Play (TV Series) -General Fitz Fromm
    - The July Plot (1964) ... General Fitz Fromm
    1964 The Midnight Men (TV Series) - King Alexander
    - Promise to Kill (1964) ... King Alexander
    - The King's Business (1964) ... King Alexander
    - Time of Danger (1964) ... King Alexander
    - The King Shall Die (1964) ... King Alexander
    - The Man from Miditz (1964) ... King Alexander
    1964 Espionage (TV Series) - Von Elm
    - Medal for a Turned Coat (1964) ... Von Elm
    1963 Sergeant Cork (TV Series) - Ernst Lukas
    - The Case of the Girl Upstairs (1963) ... Ernst Lukas
    1963 55 Days at Peking - Capt. Hanselman (as Joseph Furst)
    1963 Anna Christie (TV Movie) - Chris Christopherson
    1962 Freud - Herr Jacob Koertner (as Joseph Furst)
    1962 Zero One (TV Series) - Glidepath (1962) ... (as Joseph Furst)
    1962 Studio 4 (TV Series) - Doctor Korczak
    - Doctor Korczak and the Children (1962) ... Doctor Korczak
    1962 Man of the World (TV Series) - Wilhelm
    - Shadow of the Wall (1962) ... Wilhelm
    1961 Maigret (TV Series) - Gastin
    - The Liars (1961) ... Gastin
    1960-1961 BBC Sunday-Night Play (TV Series) - Hauptmann Denker / Colonel von Kohl / Dr. Görtler
    - Cross of Iron (1961) ... Hauptmann Denker
    - Twentieth Century Theatre: The Assassin (1960) ... Colonel von Kohl
    - Twentieth Century Theatre: I Have Been Here Before (1960) ... Dr. Görtler
    1961 Ghost Squad (TV Series) - Koster
    - Assassin (1961) ... Koster
    1961 The Devil Inside - Paul Varna (as Joseph Furst)
    1961 One Step Beyond (TV Series) - Judge
    - The Sorcerer (1961) ... Judge (as Joseph Furst)
    1961 A Coming-Out Party - Luftwaffe Interrogator (as Joseph Furst)
    1960 Exodus - Avidan (as Joseph Furst)
    1960 Saturday Playhouse (TV Series) - Descius Heiss
    - The Shop at Sly Corner (1960) ... Descius Heiss
    1960 R.C.M.P. (TV Series) - Vasyl
    - Violence at the Wedding (1960) ... Vasyl
    1960 Inside Story (TV Series) - Jacob Leibmann
    - The Protege (1960) ... Jacob Leibmann
    1960 Skyport (TV Series) - Dr. Haltrecht
    - Episode #1.44 (1960) ... Dr. Haltrecht
    1960 Counter-Attack! (TV Series) - Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Last Chance (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Guard Duty (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Traitor's Mark (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Secret Agent (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Sealed Orders (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - Escape (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf
    - White Flag (1960) ... Major Heinrich Wolf

    1959 BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV Series) - Doctor
    - Echo from Afar (1959) ... Doctor
    1953-1959 Encounter (TV Series) - Voller / ex-King Gustavus / Emil Thibodeau / ...
    - A Leap in the Dark (1959)
    - The Delicate Deal (1958) ... Voller
    - A Heart and a Diamond (1958) ... ex-King Gustavus
    - Chain Reaction (1958) ... Emil Thibodeau
    - A Question of Discipline (1958) ... Joe Greenwood
    - The Acrobats (1957)
    - It's Murder in Algiers (1955) ... Kadis
    - The Duke in Darkness (1954)
    - Deadlier Than the Male (1954)
    - A Look in the Mirror (1954)
    - Flight Into Egypt (1954)
    - Captain Carvallo (1953)
    - Operation North Star (1953)
    - Fortune My Foe (1953)
    - Guilt (1953) ... Inspector
    - The Vigil (1953) ... Prosecutor
    - Othello (1953) ... Iago
    1958-1959 The Unforeseen (TV Series)
    - Mademoiselle Fifi (1959)
    - The Ikon of Elijah (1958)
    1957-1958 Folio (TV Series)
    Doc Schwartz
    - The Strong Are Lonely (1958)
    - The Ottawa Man (1958) ... Doc Schwartz
    - The Secret Agent (1957)
    1958 The Telltale Heart (TV Movie) - Policeman
    1954-1958 On Camera (TV Series) - Henry Barron / Mr. Klotsy
    - The Absentee Murderer (1958) ... Henry Barron
    - They Shot an Arrow (1956) ... Mr. Klotsy
    - A Handful of Salt (1955)
    - The Waltz (1955)
    - Miracle at the Windsor (1954)
    - The Bottle Imp (1954)
    1955 First Performance (TV Series)
    - The Colonel and the Lady (1955)
    1955 CBC Summer Theatre (TV Series) - Baron
    - Captain Carvallo (1955) ... Baron
    1955 Scope (TV Series)
    - The Colonel and the Lady (1955)
    1953-1955 Playbill (TV Series) - Vanluven
    - The Mayerling Riddle (1955)
    - Death Pulls No Strings (1955)
    - Tobacco Farm (1954) ... Vanluven
    - Greek Street (1953)
    - Confession (1953)

    Self (1 credit)

    Citizen Varek (Short documentary) 1953
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    Actor_Joseph_Furst.jpg
    2008: "Another Way to Die" charts at #81 on the US Billboard Hot 100 (spends one week on the chart).
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    2012: Skyfall released in Bangladesh.
    2013: The Guardian reports on a tribute to Lewis Collins and his greatest disappointment.
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    Unthinkable? 007, working-class hero
    Editorial
    Lewis Collins's greatest disappointment was his failure to get
    the James Bond role after Roger Moore
    Fri 29 Nov 2013 18.03 EST

    A tribute to Lewis Collins, the Mojo musician who became famous in the late 1970s as hit man Bodie in The Professionals, reveals that his greatest disappointment was not his decision to be a hairdresser rather than join the Beatles as a drummer but his failure to get the James Bond role after Roger Moore. Too aggressive, it was said, but really – since they chose cleft-chinned toff Timothy Dalton instead – they probably meant he wasn't smooth enough. Yet, as Ian Fleming said when he wrote to the Guardian in 1958 to defend his creation against encouraging a cult of luxury (eg choosing a brand of cigarette for its exclusivity rather than its taste), his James Bond was meant to be a blank sheet, an unobtrusive figure to whom exotic things happened. The personal style – the martini cocktail and the Walther PPK – were added as mere dabs of colour, at least as understood by an old Etonian living in Jamaica. It was Hollywood, not Fleming, that fleshed out the empire's last superhero, building up his suave style and the one-liners and making him a maverick rather than Fleming's classic Englishman. But Fleming enjoyed suggesting that Bond's sadistic violence was actually a rejection of the post-war world of teeth and specs on the state, while what one critic called his satyriasis was, according to Fleming, merely blatant heterosexuality in a world of gender confusion. It's harder to know the face of the enemy now, and Daniel Craig's Bond has become less upper-crust and more complex. But not yet a man of the people.
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    2021: Tommy Lane dies at age 83--Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
    (Born Tommy Lee Jones 1936--Tipton, Atoka, Tennessee.)
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    Tommy Lane, Actor and Stuntman in ‘Live
    and Let Die,’ ‘Shaft,’ Dies at 83
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    Tommy Lane
    Courtesy of Kamala Lane
    Stuntman and actor Tommy Lane, who appeared in films including “Live and Let Die” and “Shaft,” died Monday in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. He was 83.

    His daughter Kamala reported that he died after a long bout of COPD.

    In Richard Roundtree’s “Shaft,” his character Leroy could be seen crashing through Richard Roundtree’s Times Square office window. “That’s some cold shit, throwing my man Leroy out the window. Just picked my man up and threw him out the goddamn window,” says Willy in the 1971 blaxploitation classic.
    Tommy-Lane-Roger-Moore.jpg
    Roger Moore with Tommy Lane during the shooting of “Live and Let Die”
    Courtesy of Kamala Lane
    In the 1973 James Bond film “Live and Let Die,” he played Adam, one of Kananga’s henchmen who chases Roger Moore in a speedboat off the coast of the fictional island of San Monique. His character threatens, “You made one mistake back on that island, Bond. You took something that didn’t belong to you. And you took it from a friend of Mr. Big’s. That kind of mistake is tough to bounce back from.”

    Before the speedboat scene, he can be heard to say “Bond ripped off one of our boats. He’s headed for the Irish Bayou. The man that gets him stays alive! Now, move you mothers!”

    He also appeared in “Cotton Comes to Harlem,” “Ganja & Hess,” Burt Reynolds-starrer “Shamus” and TV shows including “Simon & Simon” and “Flipper.”

    Born Tommy Lee Jones in Miami, Lane was also a jazz musician, and played trumpet and flugelhorn at New York City’s Blue Note throughout the 1980s.

    He is survived by wife Raquel Bastias-Lane, seven children; a stepson and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
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    2020: La-La Land Records a 2-CD set with an expanded and remastered original score for Tomorrow Never Dies.
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    ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’ 25th Anniversary
    Expanded Edition Soundtrack Album
    Announced
    Posted: November 24, 2022 by filmmusicreporter in Film Music Albums

    La-La Land Records has announced a new soundtrack album for the 1997 James Bond movie Tomorrow Never Dies directed by Roger Spottiswoode and starring Pierce Brosnan, Jonathan Pryce, Michelle Yeoh, Teri Hatcher and Judi Dench. The 2-CD set features the expanded and remastered original score from the MGM production composed by David Arnold (Independence Day, Casino Royale, Die Another Day, Stargate, Sherlock, Quantum of Solace), including previously unreleased music, as well as the opening and closing titles songs, Tomorrow Never Dies performed by Sheryl Crow and Surrender performed by k.d. lang, and alternate score and source cues. The 25th Anniversary Edition soundtrack is limited to 5,000 copies and will be available to order on La-La Land’s official website at 12:00pm PST on November 29.
    https://lalalandrecords.com/

    Here’s the track list of the album:
    Score Presentation:
    Disc 1:
    1. White Knight (8:28)
    2. Backseat Pilot*† (1:41)
    3. Tomorrow Never Dies – Sheryl Crow (4:50)
    4. The Sinking Of The Devonshire (Extended Version) (7:22)
    5. MI6 / Launch The Fleet (1:34)
    6. Company Car (Extended Version) (3:35)
    7. You Have A Phone Call, Mr. Bond (1:02)
    8. Station Break (3:29)
    9. Carver And Paris (1:06)
    10. Paris And Bond (Film Version) (1:56)
    11. The Last Goodbye (1:34)
    12. Hamburg Break In (2:52)
    13. Hamburg Break Out (1:24)
    14. Printing Press Fight (1:22)
    15. Escape To Hotel (2:28)
    16. Doctor Kaufman (2:27)
    17. *-3-Send (1:15)
    18. Backseat Driver (Film Version) (4:35)
    19. Okinawa / HALO Jump (2:25)
    20. Underwater Discovery (3:37)
    21. Vietnam (1:36)
    22. Banner Escape (1:10)
    23. Bike Chase (6:43)
    24. Bike Shop Fight (Film Version) (2:32)
    Disc 2:
    1. Ha Long Bay (2:32)
    2. Boarding The Stealth (4:57)
    3. Grenade (1:39)
    4. A Tricky Spot For 007 (3:49)
    5. Stealth Shoot Out (3:33)
    6. Carver Gets It (2:53)
    7. All In A Day’s Work (5:08)
    8. Surrender – k.d. lang (3:56)
    Additional Music:
    9. White Knight (Original Version) (8:37)
    10. Backseat Pilot (Original Version) (2:20)
    11. The Sinking Of The Devonshire (Original Version) (5:37)
    12. Company Car† (3:06)
    13. Shaken But Not Stirred – Simon Greenaway / Sacha Collisson (3:27)
    14. It Had To Be You – Simon Greenaway (2:03)
    15. Adrift – Simon Greenaway / Sacha Collisson (3:58)
    16. Paris And Bond (1:56)
    17. The Last Goodbye (Alternate Version) (1:30)
    18. Printing Press Fight (Film Opening) (1:10)
    19. Backseat Driver† (4:35)
    20. Banner Escape (Film Mix) (1:10)
    21. Bike Shop Fight (2:42)
    22. Surrender (Alternate Version) – k.d. lang (3:53)
    va-82-scaled.jpeg


  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    November 30

    1917: Ilse Steppat is born--Barmen, Germany.
    (She dies 21 December 1969 at age 52--West Berlin, Germany.)
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    Ilse Paula Steppat
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilse_Steppat
    Born Ilse Paula Steppat
    30 November 1917
    Wuppertal, Germany
    Died 21 December 1969 (aged 52)
    West Berlin, Germany
    Nationality German
    Occupation Actress
    Years active 1932–1969
    Ilse Paula Steppat (30 November 1917 in Barmen – 21 December 1969 in West Berlin) was a German actress. Her husband was noted actor and director Max Nosseck.

    Biography
    She began her cinematic career at the age of 15 playing Joan of Arc. Steppat appeared regularly on the German stage, and starred in more than forty movies. In the 1960s, she appeared frequently in crime movies based on the work of author Edgar Wallace, such as Die Gruft mit dem Rätselschloss, Der unheimliche Mönch and Die blaue Hand, which brought her great fame in Germany.
    In her only English language role, Steppat played Blofeld's assistant and henchwoman Irma Bunt in the James Bond movie On Her Majesty's Secret Service.

    In the first English language conversation between Steppat and the movie's producer, Albert R. Broccoli, she confused the word verlobt (engaged) with engagiert (dedicated).[citation needed]

    Despite this, however, she was awarded the role of Irma Bunt. Steppat was unable to capitalise on her new fame outside Germany, as she died of a heart attack only four days after the movie's international release. She was buried in the Waldfriedhof Dahlem in Berlin. Steppat was supposed to reprise her role as Irma Bunt in Diamonds Are Forever. However her character was withdrawn after the actress's death.
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    Ilse Steppat (1917–1969)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0827375/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actress (60 credits)

    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service - Irma Bunt
    1969 Alle Hunde lieben Theobald (TV Series) - Lily Landraf
    - Diana und die Landgräfin (1969) ... Lily Landraf
    1968 Berliner Antigone (TV Movie) - Wärterin
    1968 Altaich (TV Movie) - Charlotte Schnaase
    1968 Liliomfi (TV Movie) - Camilla
    1968 Death in a Red Jaguar - Mrs. Cunnings
    1968 Hauptstraße Glück (TV Series) - Grete Lehkamp
    - Heirate sich, wer kann (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Der liebe Nachbar (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Dachschaden ausgeschlossen (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Auf, auf ins Grüne (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Romanze in Mull (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Die Verlobung findet nicht statt (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Mütter denken - Töchter lenken (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    - Rote Georginen (1968) ... Grete Lehkamp
    1968 Eine etwas sonderbare Dame (TV Movie) - Mrs. Paddy
    1967 Creature with the Blue Hand - Lady Emerson
    1966 Hinter diesen Mauern (TV Movie) - Miss Burgess
    1966 Living it Up - Carol Stevens
    1965 The Sinister Monk - Lady Patricia
    1965 Niemandsland (TV Movie) - Rachel Verney
    1965 Der Krake (TV Movie) - Sophie Krebs
    1964 Hafenpolizei (TV Series) - Frau Lammers
    - Reisebegleiterin gesucht (1964) ... Frau Lammers
    1964 Die Gruft mit dem Rätselschloß - Margaret
    1964 Rauf und runter (TV Movie)
    1964 Das Haus der Schlangen (TV Series) - Edith Edwards
    - Sechster Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    - Fünfter Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    - Vierter Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    - Dritter Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    - Zweiter Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    - Erster Teil (1964) ... Edith Edwards
    1963 The Invisible Terror - Dr. Louise Richards
    1963 Apartment-Zauber - Sittenkommissarin (as Jlse Steppat)
    1963 Curd Jürgens erzählt... (TV Series) - Wife
    - Das Rendezvous (1963) ... Wife
    1963 Das Glück der Ehe (TV Movie) - Katja
    1962 Die Post geht ab - Elfriede Stolze
    1961 Schau heimwärts, Engel (TV Movie) - Madame Elizabeth
    1961 Der jüngste Tag (TV Movie) - Frau Hudetz
    1960 Auf Engel schießt man nicht - Bellini
    1960 A Mother's Revenge - Frau Barlowsky
    1960 Pension Schöller - Amalie Schöller

    1959 Ausflug mit Damen (TV Movie) - Juno
    1958 Romarei, das Mädchen mit den grünen Augen - Widow Prang
    1958 Sehnsucht hat mich verführt - Brandner-Bäuerin
    1958 The Eighth Day of the Week - Walicka
    1958 Naked in the Night - Madam Clavius
    1958 Nachtschwester Ingeborg - Frau Burger
    1958 Sie schreiben mit (TV Series)
    1957 Der versteinerte Wald (TV Movie) - Mrs. Chisholm
    1957 Das Geheimnis (TV Movie) - Sara Callifer
    1957 Confessions of Felix Krull - Maria Pia Kuckuck
    1957 Der entscheidende Augenblick (TV Short) - Kate
    1957 Der Adler vom Velsatal - Coletta Nicolini
    1956 Weil du arm bist, mußt du früher sterben - Ada Schenk
    1956 Waldwinter - Frieda Stengel
    1955 The Captain and His Hero - Yvonne
    1955 Die Ratten - Frau Knobbe
    1955 Der dunkle Stern - Frl. Rieger, die Lehrerin
    1955 Oberarzt Dr. Solm - Claudia Möllenhauer, Tochter
    1954 Das Phantom des großen Zeltes - Dolores, Frau mit dem Löwen
    1954 Cavalry Captain Wronski - Leonore Cronberg
    1953 Der Kaplan von San Lorenzo - Isabella Catani
    1952 Lockende Sterne - Karena Rodde
    1952 Wenn abends die Heide träumt - Brigitte
    1951 Hanna Amon - Vera Colombani
    1951 Die Schuld des Dr. Homma - Dr. Ilse Kersten
    1951 Veronika, die Magd - Alice
    1951 Die Tat des Anderen
    1950 Der Fall Rabanser - Baronin Felten
    1950 The Man Who Wanted to Live Twice - Oberschwester Hilde

    1949 The Blue Swords - Frau von Tschirnhausen
    1949 The Bridge - Therese Sander
    1947 Marriage in the Shadows - Elisabeth Maurer

    Soundtrack (2 credits)

    1955 The Captain and His Hero (performer: "Ich sehne mich nach einem Wunder" - uncredited)
    1952 Lockende Sterne (performer: "Tausend kleine Lügen")
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    1933: Tsai Chin is born--Shanghai, China.

    1949: Wendy Leech is born--Buckinghamshire, England.
    1949: Nicholas Woodeson is born--Sudan.

    1956: Claude-Oliver Rudolph is born--Frankfurt, Germany.
    1959: On the ninth day of the trial over rights to Thunderball, proceedings pause that Friday for a weekend of small conferences.

    1969: Marc Forster is born--Illertissen, Bavaria, Germany.

    1994: Famke Janssen signs on to the GoldenEye production in the Xenia Onatopp role.

    2010: Clement Graham Crowden is born--Edinburgh, Scotland.
    (He dies 19 October 1922 at age 87--Edinburgh, Scotland.)
    scotsman-dark-logo-0bf3864e0ceec9f8cd13a75f94e22c2ba8616fcc1e89d7c121199ae365bb15fd.svg
    Obituary: Graham Crowden,
    actor
    SCOTS actor Graham Crowden, best remembered for the medical drama
    A Very Peculiar Practice and sitcom Waiting for God, has died at the age
    of 87.

    By The Newsroom | Thursday, 21st October 2010, 12:59 pm

    Though known for comedy-drama roles, Crowden began as a Shakespearean actor, appearing on the big screen, television, stage and radio, in a career that stretched over seven decades.

    Born and brought up in Edinburgh, he lived in London for much of his life but had returned to his birthplace with his wife, actress Phyllida Hewat, several years ago.

    He died on Tuesday following a short illness.

    His daughter, actress Sarah Crowden, said: "His legacy lives on. He did so much work that there's something of his on almost all the time somewhere in the world."

    Born Clement Graham Crowden on 30 November, 1922, he was the third of four children born into a respectable Scottish Presbyterian family laid low by the First World War in which his father, a classics teacher, was seriously injured.

    He had an unremarkable time at Edinburgh Academy, failing all of his exams, before going on to work in a tannery.

    He joined the Royal Scots Youth Battalion in 1940, but his military career ended after a year when he suffered internal injuries from a gunshot fired by his own platoon sergeant.

    His burgeoning theatre career could have ended in a similarly inglorious fashion had he heeded the advice of Shakespeare Without Frills director Robert Atkins, who told him: "You're too tall, too thin, you're not good looking and you have a funny voice."

    Despite this early knock he persuaded Atkins to grant him a student contract, beginning a long stage apprenticeship with a succession of rep companies.

    He married Phyllida Hewat, then a costume designer, in 1952. In the ensuing years the couple had four children, and Mr Crowden's stage career began to take off starting with major role in a Bristol Old Vic production of Major Barbara.

    His introduction to movies started inauspiciously with a series of flops, beginning with 1961's Don't Bother To Knock, but he finally found his form with his appearances in director Lindsay Anderson's iconic satirical trilogy of If..., O Lucky Man! and Britannia Hospital.
    Among some of the many films he appeared in were Terry Gilliam's Jabberwocky, Out of Africa and the Bond movie For Your Eyes Only.
    In 1974, Crowden turned down the chance to succeed Jon Pertwee as Dr Who.

    Unable to commit the amount of time required by the part, he recommended Tom Baker for the role instead.

    Speaking of his decision to refuse the role, he once joked: "Working with a lot of Daleks didn't sound like much fun."

    When asked for his epitaph, Mr Crowden first thought of Lewis Casson's observation that "he looked funny even in serious roles", but he eventually settled on his own verdict: "I've done very good work for very bad money."

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    Graham Crowden (1922–2010)
    Actor | Soundtrack
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0189561/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0
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    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRgVUcNAtCeRghp9i9wHVhOHvlULCaqNx45cw&usqp=CAU
    2012: Skyfall released in Bangladesh and South Africa.


  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    December 1st

    1930: Matt Monro is born--London, England.
    (He dies 7 February 1985 at age 54--Ealing, London, England.)
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    Matt Monro, Britain’s ‘Cockney
    Como,’ Dies at 54
    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1985-02-08-mn-4672-story.html
    By BURT A. FOLKART | Feb. 8, 1985 | Times Staff Writer

    Matt Monro, an East London bus driver who perfected his lyrical baritone techniques while serenading his passengers, died Thursday of liver cancer in London.
    The popularizer of such hits as “Born Free” and “From Russia With Love” died in London’s Cromwell Hospital after a liver transplant operation was deemed useless two weeks ago.
    Likened to Perry Como because of his effortless versions of the ballads of the day, Monro, 54, had the speaking voice of a Cockney but phrased like an English troubadour. Although he once had a succession of such hit recordings as “My Kind of Girl,” “Portrait of My Love,” “Softly, As I Leave You” and “Yesterday,” in recent years he had been out of the international arena and his appearances limited to nightclubs and cameos on British television.

    Munro admitted in the late 1960s that alcohol had once been a problem but that he had overcome it. He also confessed to being an ongoing nicotine addict.

    ‘Smoked Incessantly’
    “I have smoked incessantly since I started at 9 on tea leaves,” he had said. “If they’re announcing, ‘Ladies and Gentlemen--Matt Monro,’ I’ll light a cigarette because I know we’ve got two minutes of overture time and I can have a puff.”

    Monro, who was born Terence Parsons in London’s middle-class East End, got his first paying job as a lorry operator. He later graduated to buses. But even as a boy, he told The Times in a 1968 interview when he was appearing in Las Vegas, he had always wanted to sing.

    He took those frustrated ambitions out on his passengers who encouraged him, and he soon made his debut in small clubs.

    In 1960 he recorded “Portrait of My Love” and followed it with “Walk Away.” Both were popular in England and abroad but it was his agent, lyricist Don Black, who made Monro a true international star.

    Monro recorded Black’s lyrics to “Born Free,” the theme from the film about a lioness domesticated by a British couple in Africa, and the song topped charts in Britain, America and Japan.

    He also had capitalized on a recording industry oversight. One of The Beatles’ most popular tunes, “Yesterday,” had not been released as a single and Monro, by then called the “Cockney Como,” soon filled that gap with his own version.

    It stayed on Britain’s Top 10 for months.

    Favorite Among Fellow Vocalists
    His warm, relaxed interpretations of old and new songs and his gentle phrasing made him a favorite among fellow vocalists.

    Frank Sinatra once said that Monro was the only British singer he ever listened to.

    Monro’s hospitalization and recent illnesses were kept from the public until an exploratory operation Jan. 20 revealed that his cancer had spread too far for a liver transplant to save him.

    He is survived by his wife, Mickie, and three children.
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    Matt Monro (1930–1985)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0598448/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Soundtrack (32 credits)

    2016 Cuéntame (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - La boda de cristal (2016) ... (performer: "No puedo quitar mis ojos de tí (Can't Take My Eyes Off You)")
    2014/II Nightingale (performer: "The Good Life")
    2012 Everything or Nothing (Documentary) (performer: "From Russia With Love")
    2011 Rude Tube (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Extreme Rides (2011) ... (performer: "Born Free" - uncredited)
    2010 Formula 1: BBC Sport (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - The European Grand Prix: Qualifying (2010) ... (performer: "From Russia With Love" - uncredited)
    2010 From Paris with Love (performer: " They Long to Be - Close to You"))

    2009 ...Sings the Beatles (TV Movie documentary) (performer: "Yesterday")
    2001 Thirteen Conversations About One Thing (performer: "Put on a Happy Face")

    1997 Super Speedway (Documentary) (performer: "On Days Like These")
    1992 The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag (performer: "Born Free")
    1990 The Krays (performer: "Walk Away")

    1985 The Humans and The Jinns (performer: "Yesterday")
    1983 Lady Is a Tramp (TV Series) (performer: "The Lady Is a Tramp" (Title theme))
    1980 The Sea Wolves (performer: "The Precious Moments")

    1978 Tomorrow Never Comes (performer: "Alone am I")
    1973 Three Giant Men (performer: "The Southern Star")
    1972 Tony Bennett at the Talk of the Town (TV Mini-Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Episode #1.3 (1972) ... (performer: "The Second Time Around", "Time After Time", "I Want to Be Happy")
    1970 Hoffman (performer: "If there ever Is a next time")
    1970 Satan's Harvest (performer: "Two People")

    1969 Burbujas (TV Mini-Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Sueños y pesadillas (1969) ... (performer: "Alguien cantó", "Qué tiempo tan feliz (Those Were the Days)", "Todo pasará")
    1969 The Italian Job (performer: "On Days Like These")
    1969 The Southern Star (performer: "The Southern Star")
    1967 A Matter of Innocence (performer: "Pretty Polly")
    1966 The Quiller Memorandum (performer: Theme Song - "WEDNESDAY'S CHILD")
    1966 Born Free (performer: "Born Free" - uncredited)
    1965 Go Go Mania (performer: "Pop Gear", "Walk Away" (uncredited), "For Mamma" (uncredited))
    1964 Shindig! (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
    - Episode #1.12 (1964) ... (performer: "My Kind of Girl', "Walk Away")
    1964 The Eurovision Song Contest (TV Special) (performer: "I Love The Little Things")
    1964 A Song for Europe (TV Movie) (performer: "Choose", "Its Funny How You Know", "I've Got the Moon on My Side", "Ten Out of Ten", "Beautiful, Beautiful")
    1963 From Russia with Love (performer: "From Russia with Love")
    1959 The Chaplin Revue (performer: "I'm Bound for Texas")
    1923 The Pilgrim (performer: "I'm Bound for Texas" (1971))

    Actor (2 credits)

    1970 Satan's Harvest - Bates
    1961 The Ed Sullivan Show (TV Series) - Singer
    - Episode #15.16 (1961) ... Singer
    - Episode #15.6 (1961) ... Singer

    Archive footage (8 credits)

    2015 Spectre: My Bond Song - Sam Smith (TV Special documentary short) - Himself
    2012 ... Sings James Bond (TV Movie) - Himself - From Russia with Love

    2010-2011 Breakfast (TV Series) - Himself - Singer
    - Episode dated 9 March 2011 (2011) ... Himself - Singer
    - Episode dated 8 February 2010 (2010) ... Himself - Singer
    2009 ...Sings the Beatles (TV Movie documentary) - Himself
    2007 Legends (TV Series documentary) - Himself
    - Matt Monro: The Man with the Golden Voice (2007) ... Himself
    2007 La tele de tu vida (TV Series) - Himself
    - Episode #1.5 (2007) ... Himself
    2006 James Bond's Greatest Hits (TV Movie documentary) - Himself
    2005 An Evening with Matt Monro (Video) - Himself
    Matt-Monro-812x609.jpg


    1935: Woody Allen is born--New York City, New York.

    1961: This month Argosy magazine for men Volume 353, Number 6, includes an extra bonus book Thunderball.
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    'Thunderball' (A James Bond Spy Thriller) contained within 'Argosy'
    magazine for men. Volume 353, Number 6, December 1961.
    FLEMING, Ian.
    https://www.harringtonbooks.co.uk/pages/books/39259/ian-fleming/thunderball-a-james-bond-spy-thriller-contained-within-argosy-magazine-for-men-volume-353-number-6

    Ohio and New York: Popular Publications, Incorporated. 1961. Magazine format in pictorial paper wraps. Original price: 50 cents. Minor wear to spine and postal label to upper else fine. The novel 'Thunderball' is advertised on the front cover as an 'extra book bonus' and appears on pages 128–44, with a sepia-toned frontispiece illustration by Gil Cohen. An abridged version published shortly after the bookform edition. This is the first American periodical appearance and the first US illustrated edition. Scarce. Item #39259

    Gilbert A9b 'Periodical Appearances', page 319

    'Thunderball' (A James Bond Spy Thriller) contained within 'Argosy' magazine for men. Volume 353, Number 6, December 1961. Ian FLEMING.
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    1962: This month Classics Illustrated releases a Dr. No film comic in the UK. DC version in the US 1963.
    1964: This month Takao Saito's 007 manga begins monthly serialization in Shogakukan's Boy's Life magazine through August 1967. Republished by Shogakukan's Golden Comics. Re-reprinted 1981 by Shogakukan Bunko, again in 2015 by Big Comics Special imprint. 1964: Littlehampton Book Services Ltd publishes Double O Seven, James Bond: A Report by O.F. Snelling.
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    1965: Maclean's proposes conflict with "Agent 007 and the Great Christmas Caper."
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    AGENT 007 AND THE GREAT
    CHRISTMAS CAPER
    Last year’s war toys and brassiere-clad dolls seemed bad enough. But now along comes James Bond to flash a startling array of ingenious weapons and pose a bewildering moral dilemma for parents
    December 1 1965 EILEEN MORRIS
    LAST CHRISTMAS, the militant group calling itself the Voice of Women stirred up a national argument with an Appeal to Parents: “Have you noticed the increase in war toys each Christmas? It is time to call a halt — plastic hand grenades, land mines, booby traps, automatic guns, toy missiles, etc., the whole grisly collection must be repudiated. We, the buyers. make the ultimate decision."
    Parents who thought toys were a grim problem last year will go right around the bend this year. For now that cash registers are beginning to ring Noël again, a violent new figure has come swinging onto the scene to complicate the argument as never before. James Bond, the Ian Fleming hero, has suddenly become Mr. Big with toymakers and retailers. Several manufacturers hold franchises entitling them to stamp the magic 007 insignia on products ranging from guns to sweat shirts. But even in the toy division of the spy business, anything goes, and firms without franchises are shamelessly jumping on the Bond wagon, using the great hero’s name in their promotional pitches and devising legal variations of what’s guarded by franchise. In their wildly creative moments, Reliable Toy has come up with Secret Agent 009, and the Mattel toy company’s man is Secret Agent Zero M. Meanwhile Ideal Toy has signed up TV’s answer to Bond — The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

    The Soviet press has lately been attacking the West for promoting the James Bond cult as part of an international plot. But in the toy business, at least, 007 is getting the big buildup for a purely capitalistic reason: each year, Canadians spend a fantastic $160 million for toys, most of it in the hectic eight weeks before Christmas.

    Since it is adults who buy most of the toys, many new' items have builtin father appeal. The James Bond 007 Road Race, for instance, features an authentic model of Bond's famed customized Aston Martin DB5. fully equipped for action with a varied speed motor sound, bullet shield, tire “cutters" and machine guns.

    The 007 Automatic Pistol shoots plastic bullets and has a James Bond identification card. Secret Sam is an international spy set. Its innocent looking attache case packs a pistol that shoots bullets while concealed within the case. And its secret camera actually takes photos.

    Parents more concerned about the influence of toys will find plenty of cause for anxiety. This year, many weapons wear camouflage for guerilla fighting. For instance, a paratrooper set billed as “a one-man junior army” features a camouflaged burp gun with recoiling barrel, bullet-shooting, capfiring .45 automatic with holster and belt, camouflaged helmet with netting, a grenade and a Sooper-Snooper 4way scope. A kit called Attack supplies two field cannons, howitzers, machine guns and mortar units, cases of shells, sand bags, and one bombedout house.

    What about the girls? Between the time I outgrew my last baby doll and today’s Barbie craze, Santa revolutionized little-girlhood. The most popular dolls — toy dolls, I mean — aren't babies anymore. They're swinging teenagers, and a lot of them are named Barbie. They wear nÿlons and brassieres and mink stoles. For their hair, they need curlers, driers, wig packs and hair-coloring kits.

    A few baby dolls survive, but the most highly touted of these are battery-powered. Baby Wiggles has her own built-in, wind-up music box. Baby First Step walks alone. Baby Boo cries when she wants to sleep — turn out the light and she stops.

    Surprisingly, the commercial adult hand in the kid glove is nowhere more evident than in one kind of item in the plush-toy corner. Esso did a tiger promotion to sell more gas to car drivers—and now there are tigerface purses for tots, tiger TV chairs, tiger pyjama bags, tigers on casters.
    Which underlines my point: it is our own adult fault that guns make up an estimated ten percent of the toy market. Just as our gasoline buying created tiger pyjama bags, our giftbuying created the moppet Mafia. And it’s a bit late in the day to plead ignorance if the gimmicky secret - agent guns, the battlefield rifles, cowboy derringers and teen fashion dolls result in a mass of psychic kinks for our children.

    So what s the answer? Psychologist Dee Appley, of York University, defined for me the three things children need tor play: space, time and suitable material. We have substituted TV for space and time, and we hand children Bond-based toys for materials. Instead, - she suggested, “Before deciding to buy any toy, we should ask. What does 'it tell the child about the world? What does it tell him about himself?"
    According to the Institute of Child Study of the University of Toronto, espionage toys appeal to adults with jaded imaginations. Plainly, if we want our children to have better values, we have to raise our own. Psychologist Fred Hopley gave a quick measure of a good toy: “A toy that gives a child an opportunity to develop his skills and imagination, one requiring he use his hands and brain.” The experts I talked to approve hockey games, child-guidance toys, trains, hobby and sports equipment, models, storybooks and tea things.

    On the other hand, people who deplore the Barbie doll as a sick fad aren’t looking at the way the world is today. Mrs. I. Hoff, president of the Nursery Education Association of Ontario, points out: “Barbie reflects the reality of family life today. Mummy isn’t maternal anymore; she doesn’t cuddle and feed her babies over a number of years. She’s very busy — a good person, but on a different level. The little girl can no longer absorb the mother image. But she does see and admire teenagers, so she longs for teen-type dolls.”

    The experts agree: a toy in itself won’t harm a child, as long as you are combatting the immorality of Bond, the self-appointed executioner. Says Fred Hopley, “Aggressiveness is normal, part of learning to get along with others. The aggression suggested by these toys reflects, in part, our society’s new freedom."
    “War toys won’t make war seem natural—we aren’t giving ourselves enough credit as adults. The important thing is the way parents see things: if you are against violence and war, your child will reflect this. It all comes down to how we relate to one another. In the long run, it will be the good qualities that parents stress that will win out.”
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    1965: Variety reports the Shirley Bassey filed an (unsuccessful) injunction regarding an oral agreement to use "Mr. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang” as the title song to Thunderball. Still, it appears on the official soundtrack if not in the film (which used an instrumental version).
    1969: Bond comic strip Colonel Sun begins its run in The Daily Express. (Ends 28 August 1970. 1175–1393)
    Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    http://mcmolo.blogspot.com/2015/10/colonel-sun-by-kingsley-amis.html
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    https://www.cbr.com/the-james-bond-omnibus-003/
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    https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/articles/comic_cs_review.php3?t=&s=main&id=01086
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    Swedish Semic Comic https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1989.php3
    Dödligt Toppmöte (Colonel Sun - Part 1) | Dödligt Toppmöte (Colonel Sun - Part 2)
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    Danish https://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no-22-1971/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 22: “Colonel Sun” (1971)
    "Møde med døden"
    [Rendezvous with death]
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    1982: Octopussy films Q in the gondola getting attention from Octopussy's Girls.
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    1992: This month Marvel Comics releases James Bond Jr. #12, "Homeward Bound!"
    His last, with: Scumlord, Jaws, Dr. Derange, Odd Job, Dr. No, Walker D Plank and Baron von Skarin.
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    James Bond Jr. #12 - Homeward Bound!
    https://comicvine.gamespot.com/james-bond-jr-12-homeward-bound/4000-36542/
    Creators
    Bambos Georgiou - inker
    Mario Capaldi - penciler
    Sophie Heath - colorist
    Stuart Bartlett - letterer
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    James Bond Jr Issue 12 Homeward Bound!
    http://readallcomics.com/james-bond-jr-012/
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    1997: A&M releases the "Tomorrow Never Dies" single. Some releases also include "Strong Enough", "The Book", "No One Said It Would Be Easy", "Ordinary Morning..
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    1998: Freddie Young dies at age 96--London, England.
    (Born 9 October 1902--London, England.)
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    Gentleman Genius
    All Time Greats / Freddie Young OBE, BSC, ASC
    https://britishcinematographer.co.uk/freddie-young-obe-bsc-asc/

    Frederick Archibald Young was born on 9 October 1902 in London. He entered the film industry in 1917 at Lime Grove Studios, West London.

    At that time it was run by Gaumont and had a glass exterior to allow light for shooting. Later it was re-built. It became Gaumont British in 1922. Young said the glasshouse was good in theory but in practice wasn’t so good. If it was a foggy day the studio became a pea souper. If it was cloudy, lights would be required to provide exposure, but if the sun came out the studio would be filled with sunlight and the shot would be ruined.

    Young started in the laboratory and eventually moved into cameras, remaining with the studio for ten years. In those days he operated the Debrie Parvo camera. He worked with a cameraman called Arthur Brown. Later, Bill Shenton worked there and despite only having one eye he was considered to be a very good cameraman. Eventually the studio became the home to BBC Television. Housing now stands on the site. One of the films he worked on after leaving Gaumont was Hitchcock’s Blackmail (1929) photographed by Jack Cox and made at British International Pictures (BIP). Young was asked to shoot a montage for the silent version.

    For several years he worked at British and Dominions at Elstree for producer and director Herbert Wilcox. Cinematographer Oswald Morris said: “He was a powerful cinematographer. He treated filmmaking rather like being in the army. There was strict discipline. At the height of his career his crew had to call him Mr Young.”

    Sir Sydney Samuelson says: “The first technical marvel for which he was responsible, and which held me in awe of his genius, was as far back as 1938 on Sixty Glorious Years. I remember two technical aspects quite clearly. One sequence was an early example of British Technicolor three-strip. There was a remarkable ballroom scene, which was achieved by means of an early matte shot. Called something like the ‘Shufton process’. There was a glorious wide-angle shot of an elegant ballroom. Freddie once told me that as clever as Shufton was, the most stunning effect was actually brought about by him, pricking holes in the top part of the back of the matte then shining through each chandelier painted on its front. Amazing!”
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    During WW2 Young was in the Army Kinematograph Service with Freddie Francis. Francis said: “He always insisted on being called Mr Young or sir. After the war Freddie was Freddie to everyone.”

    Young was the first President of the BSC 1949-1952. He was President again from 1957-1960. He was also a member of the ASC and Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society (FRPS).

    Following the war Young became head of cameras at MGM Elstree. “I suppose it was the finest studio in the country. It had a beautiful lot and was beautifully equipped,” remarked Young.

    Renowned director Nicolas Roeg, who worked with Young at MGM and later photographed the second unit on Lawrence of Arabia, said Freddie was a terrific guy to work with.

    In 1959, faced with a pay cut due to production cuts Young decided to leave the company. The day after leaving he realised that it was the first time he’d been out of work since 1917. In 1960 he was approached by producer Sam Spiegel to photograph Lawrence Of Arabia for director David Lean. Other notable directors he worked with include George Cukor, John Ford and John Huston.
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    He first met Lean on Major Barbara (1941). Lawrence was released in 1962 and was the start of three 65mm wide screen pictures with Lean, earning Young three Oscars. Sydney Samuelson said: “Young is definitely ‘the master’ in my book of cineastes. Arguably and certainly in his era he was the best cameraman in the world. I had the pleasure of involvements with him and his crew from Lawrence Of Arabia onwards. David Lean was such a brilliant storyteller but nobody when working on one of his movies would accuse him of being easygoing. Freddie carried on for him regardless of personal and technical problems. Apart from three American Oscars Freddie won many awards including only the second Fellowship after Hitchcock from our own Academy BAFTA.”

    The three films he made with Lean were a challenge. “Lawrence Of Arabia took two years and was shot in Spain, Morocco and Jordan. The heat in the desert was a dry heat of 110 degrees. We had a sunshade over the camera and a wet cloth on top of the camera, which acted like refrigerator. We never saw rushes, the results were cabled from London. The famous mirage scene was shot using a 500mm lens. This was obtained from Panavision in Hollywood along with the rest of the camera equipment,” said Young.

    His next outing with Lean was Dr Zhivago (1965). It was filmed in the heat of Spain but was set in Russia, so a lot of faking was required. Some was shot in Finland. “We painted trees white, coloured hedge rows with white plastic and used hundreds of tons of marble dust,” said Young. “We used a blue filter for much of the film and it was my hardest technically.”

    His final film for Lean was Ryan’s Daughter (1971). The whole of the film is set on the west coast of Ireland. He said: “Winter came and the summer scenes hadn’t been completed, so the main unit went to South Africa, a second unit stayed behind headed by Roy Stevens. Denys Coop was in charge of the cinematography. Lean gives you an inspiration so you go out of your depth and try and do something extraordinary.”

    In conversation with cinematographer Robin Vidgeon’s wife Angela, Young said: “Whenever I had a candlelit scene I would go into a dark room, light a candle, sit and watch it for a while, blow it out and then take those images to set and light accordingly.”
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    "Lawrence Of Arabia took two years and was shot in Spain, Morocco and Jordan. The heat in the desert was a dry heat of 110 degrees."
    - Freddie Young OBE, BSC, ASC

    In 1992 Lawrence of Arabia was re-launched and Young went to several screenings. At one screening Steven Spielberg told him it was seeing Lawrence in 1962 that made him decide a film career was for him.

    Later in 1992 he was invited to speak to film students at the royal college of art. In July 1994 the college honoured him by making him a doctor of art.

    Young said that people often asked him about his techniques. He said he had no plan or technique; he lit the scene according to what was in the script.

    Following Ryan’s Daughter he carried on shooting until 1983. The same year he directed Arthur’s Hallowed Ground, his only film as director and the last he worked on. After this he shot commercials until his retirement aged eighty-five. His autobiography was published by Faber and Faber in 1999 called Seventy Light Years, which can be obtained through Amazon.

    Finally, he said: “I worked in the industry for seventy years, photographing more than 120 films and being paid for a job I love. At the age of ninety-six I look back and think I’ve been incredibly lucky.”

    Freddie Young OBE passed away on 1 December 1998 age 96.
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    Freddie Young (I) (1902–1998)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0002875/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Cinematographer (130 credits)

    1985 Invitation to the Wedding
    1984 Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
    1981 Stainless Steel and the Star Spies (TV Movie)
    1980 Ike: The War Years (TV Movie)
    1980 Richard's Things (director of photography)
    1980 Rough Cut

    1979 Bloodline
    1978 Stevie (director of photography)
    1977 The Man in the Iron Mask (TV Movie) (director of photography)
    1976 The Blue Bird (director of photography)
    1975 The Executioner
    1974 Great Expectations (TV Movie) (director of photography)
    1974 The Tamarind Seed (director of photography)
    1974 Love from A to Z (TV Movie)
    1974 Luther
    1972 The Asphyx
    1971 Nicholas and Alexandra (director of photography)
    1970 Ryan's Daughter (photographed by)
    1970 The Maker and the Process (TV Short)

    1969 Battle of Britain (director of photography)
    1969 Sinful Davey (director of photography)
    1967 You Only Live Twice (director of photography)
    1967 The Deadly Affair (director of photography)
    1965 Doctor Zhivago (director of photography)
    1965 Rotten to the Core
    1965 Lord Jim (as Frederick A. Young)
    1964 The 7th Dawn (as Frederick Young, photographed by)
    1962 Lawrence of Arabia (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1961 Loss of Innocence (as Frederick A Young, photographed by)
    1961 Hand in Hand (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1961 Gorgo (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1960/III Macbeth (TV Movie) (as F.A. Young)

    1959 Solomon and Sheba (director of photography - as Fred A. Young)
    1958 The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1958 Indiscreet (director of photography - as Frederick A. Young)
    1958 Gideon of Scotland Yard (director of photography - as Frederick A. Young)
    1958 I Accuse! (director of photography)
    1957 Island in the Sun
    1957 The Little Hut (as F.A. Young)
    1957 The Barretts of Wimpole Street (as F.A. Young)
    1956 Beyond Mombasa (as Frederick A. Young)
    1956 Lust for Life (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1956 Invitation to the Dance (segments "Circus", "Ring Around the Rosy", as F.A. Young)
    1956 Bhowani Junction (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1955 Bedevilled
    1954 Betrayed (as F.A. Young)
    1953 Knights of the Round Table (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1953 Mogambo (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1953 Terror on a Train (as F.A. Young)
    1952 Ivanhoe (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1952 Giselle (Short)
    1951 Calling Bulldog Drummond (as F.A. Young)
    1950 Treasure Island (as F.A. Young)

    1949 Conspirator (as F.A. Young, photographed by)
    1949 Edward, My Son (as F.A. Young)
    1948 The Winslow Boy (director of photography)
    1948 Escape (as Frederick A. Young)
    1947 While I Live (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1947 So Well Remembered (director of photography - as Frederick A. Young)
    1946 Bedelia (as Frederick A. Young)
    1945 Caesar and Cleopatra (as F.A. Young, photography)
    1942 The Young Mr. Pitt (director of photography - as Frederick Young)
    1941 49th Parallel (director of photography - as Frederick Young)
    1940 Haunted Honeymoon (as F.A. Young, photography)
    1940 Blackout (as F.A. Young)

    1939 Nurse Edith Cavell (director of photography - as F.A. Young)
    1939 Goodbye, Mr. Chips (as F.A. Young, photographed by)
    1939 Suicide Legion
    1938 Queen of Destiny (as F.A. Young)
    1938 A Royal Divorce
    1937 Millions (uncredited)
    1937 The Rat (as F.A. Young)
    1937 Victoria the Great (as F.A. Young)
    1937 Backstage
    1937 The Frog (as F.A. Young)
    1937 Girl in the Street (as F.A. Young)
    1936 The Show Goes On (as F.A. Young)
    1936 This'll Make You Whistle
    1936 Two's Company
    1936 Fame
    1936 When Knights Were Bold (as F.A. Young)
    1935 Come Out of the Pantry
    1935 Peg of Old Drury (as F.A. Young, photography)
    1935 Escape Me Never (uncredited)
    1934 The King of Paris
    1934 Nell Gwyn (as F.A. Young)
    1934 Girls Please!
    1934 Runaway Queen
    1933 It's a King (as F.A. Young)
    1933 Just My Luck
    1933 Night of the Garter
    1933 Up for the Derby
    1933 A Cuckoo in the Nest (uncredited)
    1933 Trouble
    1933 That's a Good Girl
    1933 Summer Lightning
    1933 Yes, Mr. Brown
    1933 Bitter Sweet (as F.A. Young)
    1933 The Little Damozel
    1933 The King's Cup
    1932 Leap Year
    1932 The Love Contract
    1932 Thark
    1932 The Mayor's Nest
    1932 Magic Night
    1932 A Night Like This
    1932 The Blue Danube
    1931 Up for the Cup
    1931 Mischief
    1931 Venetian Nights (as F.A. Young)
    1931 The Chance of a Night Time
    1931 Tilly of Bloomsbury
    1931 The Speckled Band (as F.A. Young)
    1931 The Sport of Kings (as Fred Young)
    1930 Tons of Money
    1930 Plunder
    1930 A Warm Corner (as Fred Young)
    1930 Canaries Sometimes Sing
    1930 On Approval
    1930 Die Somme: Das Grab der Millionen (as Frederick Young)
    1930 The Loves of Robert Burns (uncredited)
    1930 The W Plan
    1930 One Embarrassing Night (uncredited)

    1929 White Cargo
    1929 A Peep Behind the Scenes
    1929 The Bondman
    1928 Blue Bottles (Short) (as F.A. Young)
    1928 Day-Dreams (Short)
    1928 The Tonic (Short)
    1928 Victory

    Camera and Electrical Department (8 credits)

    1979 Ike: The War Years (TV Mini-Series) (cinematographer - 2 episodes)
    - Part II (1979) ... (cinematographer: UK)
    - Part I (1979) ... (cinematographer: UK)

    1959 The Wreck of the Mary Deare (additional photographer - as F.A. Young)
    1956 Van Gogh: Darkness Into Light (Documentary short) (cinematographer: scenes from "Lust for Life (1956)
    1954 The Last Time I Saw Paris (location camera - uncredited)

    1927 The Somme (second camera operator)
    1927 The Flag Lieutenant (second camera operator)
    1922 Rob Roy (assistant camera)

    1919 The First Men in the Moon (film development technician)

    Director (1 credit)

    1984 Arthur's Hallowed Ground (TV Movie)
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    1999: Robert Hale Ltd. publishes Sean Connery: A Celebration by Robert Sellers.
    1999: Fox Studios Australia in Sydney opens the final location of the 007: License to Thrill simulator ride.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in Belgium and Switzerland (French speaking region).
    1999: Le monde ne suffit pas released in France.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    2006: Casino Royale released in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa.
    2006: 007 カジノ・ロワイヤル (007: Kajino rowaiyaru) released in Japan.
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    2008: "Another Way to Die" reaches top forty status in Australia, peaking at twenty-nine.

    2012: 007 スカイフォール (007 Sukaifōru) released in Japan.
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    2015: The Guardian reports on a potential Canadian low-budget remake of For Your Eyes Only.
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    James Bond goes to Ottawa in For Your
    Eyes Only remake
    Low-budget film-making duo announce plans to take advantage of
    Canadian copyright laws and adapt the Ian Fleming story. Ideally,
    with Ryan Reynolds
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    Roger Moore as 007, with Lynn-Holly Johnson as Bibi Dahl, in the 1981 film For Your Eyes Only.
    Photograph: Sportsphoto/Allstar/Cinetext Collection
    Andrew Pulver | @Andrew_Pulver | Tue 1 Dec 2015

    A duo of low-budget Canadian film-makers have announced plans to remake the James Bond film For Your Eyes Only, thanks to a loophole in copyright laws.

    Lee Demarbre and Ian Driscoll, whose back catalogue includes the Mexican-wrestler thriller The Dead Sleep Easy and comedy musical Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter, say they are planning to take advantage of Canada’s 50-year copyright limit to start work on a new adaptation of Ian Fleming’s 1960 short story. Unlike most other major film markets, Canada does not enforce the Berne convention that extended authors’ copyright to 70 years after death, meaning that Fleming, who died in 1964, is in the public domain in the country.
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    Ian Fleming with his 1964 short story collection For Your Eyes Only – which is out of copyright in Canada.
    Photograph: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis
    Pitching their film as “James Bond comes to Ottawa”, Demabre and Driscoll told CBC they were interested in For Your Eyes Only because Fleming has 007 visit the Canadian capital. In an interview with CBC’s Shadrach Kabango, the pair said they were not intending to compete with the blockbuster style of Spectre, and would instead be making an “arthouse James Bond”. They suggested Ryan Reynolds as a potential Canadian 007, with Christopher Plummer, Donald Sutherland and Michael Ironside as their favourites for supporting roles. Mad Men’s Jessica Paré was named as a possible female lead, and Montreal rappers Dead Obies as possible theme song performers.

    The film-makers concede that copyright regulations mean they would be unable to release the proposed film in the US, limiting potential investment, but suggest that the restriction would not apply to “China and most of Asia”. As yet, the project lacks a producer.
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    2019: No Time To Die releases a 15-second teaser to the upcoming trailer.

    2020: The Arecibo Observatory radio telescope collapses in Puerto Rico.
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    The Massive Radio Telescope From GoldenEye Just
    Collapsed
    ByMike Fahey | December 1, 2020
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    Photo: Ricardo Arduengo (Getty Images)
    The massive Arecibo Observatory radio telescope, made famous in the James Bond movie GoldenEye and paid homage to in the classic Nintendo 64 game, completely collapsed early Tuesday morning. This breaking news comes just a few weeks after the announcement that the invaluable astronomy tool would be demolished due to fears that it would completely collapse.

    The telescope’s demise began in August of this year, when a socket holding one of the auxiliary cables suspending the 900-ton receiver platform hanging over the dish failed, causing the cable to break. The National Science Foundation began planning the site’s demolition last month following the breaking of the platform’s main cable. As if the massive mechanical construct sensed the end was near, the receiver platform collapsed completely in the early hours of Tuesday, December 1, crashing into the dish near 500 feet below. No one was harmed in the collapse.
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    After the fall.
    Photo: ScienceMag.Org
    Built in the early 1960s in a natural sinkhole in Puerto Rico, the Arecibo Telescope was a 1,000 foot reflector dish primarily used for radio astronomy, radar astronomy, atmospheric science, and programs created to search for proof of extraterrestrial life. Aside from its magnificent dish, the radio telescope’s most distinguishing feature was the cable-mount steerable receiver positioned above the main installation. The receiver’s unique look and perilous structure are what led to it being used as the stage for the climactic battle in 1995 James Bond classic, GoldenEye. The movie scene served as the inspiration for the “Cradle” level in Rare’s GoldenEye 007 for the N64.

    The collapse of the Arecibo telescope is a tragic loss to science, having been used for decades as a tool for research and teaching. Now everyone’s going to have to borrow China’s 500-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope, as seen in Battlefield 4’s Rogue Transmission map.

    2022: Herb Alpert & Lani Hall - A Christmas Wish performance at Stuart, Florida.
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    Herb Alpert & Lani Hall - A Christmas Wish
    Thursday, December 1, 2022 7:00 PM
    The Lyric Theatre Stuart, FL

    Herb Alpert was drawn to the trumpet when he heard it played in a music appreciation class at his elementary school. He was 8. That early love led him to a legendary career that includes five Number One hits, nine Grammy awards, the most recent in 2014, 15 Gold Albums and 14 Platinum ones. At one point Alpert and his band, The Tijuana Brass, outsold the Beatles two to one. They had the unmatched feat of simultaneously having four albums in the Top 10 and five in the Top 20. Songs like “A Taste of Honey,” “This Guy’s in Love with You,” and “What Now, My Love,” propelled Alpert and The Brass to the top of the charts again and again.

    An entrepreneur as well as musician, Alpert and his friend, Jerry Moss, founded A & M Records in a garage in 1962. It became one of the most important independent labels in the industry. Alpert and Moss were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006 and are a part of the Grammy Museum’s “Icons of the Music Industry” series. In 2013, Alpert was awarded the National Medal of the Arts by President Obama for his contributions to music and philanthropy. A talented painter and sculptor, his works are displayed in galleries and museums in this country and abroad. “There is a certain satisfaction and energy that comes from playing the horn-a feeling that I am really in my element,” he has said. “I am passionate about what I am doing, whether painting, sculpting, or playing the trumpet. I am just trying to create whatever comes out in the spontaneity of the moment.”

    In 1966, A & M signed Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66. Alpert met their lead singer, Lani Hall, and the two were married in 1973. Hall has recorded 22 albums in three languages, sang the title song for the James Bond film, Never Say Never Again, and won two Grammy Awards for performing and producing. The two have been touring together since 2006. Hall is also an author. Her first book, Emotional Memoirs & Short Stories, compiles ten short stories with a connecting personal narrative. With the release of her audiobook, she mixed her two forms of creative expression together with a musically-scored soundtrack as a backdrop to the stories. With this work, Hall provides a rare glimpse at the double-edged sword that is the life of an artist.

    Alpert and Lani have assembled a top-flight group to accompany them, including keyboardist and vocalist Bill Cantos, bassist Hussain Jiffry and Michael Shapiro.

    Bill Cantos also tours with Burt Bacharach and he has toured and recorded with artists including Lea Salonga, Ramsey Lewis, Phil Collins, Kirk Whalum, Leon Russell and Elton John. His most recent solo album is New Standards for the New Millennium, a collection of original songs written in the style of classic standards. He was honored with a Distinguished Alumni Award from the New England Conservatory of Music.

    Hussain Jiffry is a musician, writer, arranger, producer, engineer and music educator. He won a Grammy in 2014 for engineering Herb Alpert’s CD, Steppin’ Out. He has recorded or performed with Michael Bolton, the Atlanta Symphony, Michael McDonald, Dionne Warwick, Chaka Khan, Whitney Houston and The Four Tops.

    Michael Shapiro has spent 35 years as a drummer, percussionist, producer and educator. A self-taught musician, he has worked with will.i.am, Justin Timberlake, Macy Grau and Sergio Mendes, with whom he has recorded many albums, including 1993’s Grammy-winning Brasileiro, 2006 Latin-Grammy-winning Timeless and 2010’s Latin- Grammy-winning Bon Tempo. His movie soundtrack credits include Shrek the 3rd, People Like Us, and The Jersey Boys. He teaches at UCLA.

    Come join them to welcome in the holiday season with an evening of holiday cheer.

    Contact & CONNECT
    59 S.W. Flagler Avenue
    Stuart, FL 34994
    Phone: (772) 286-7827
    Fax: (772) 283-2374
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    December 2nd

    1916: Jack London shares his thoughts on life and time with Ernest J. Hopkins in San Francisco's The Bulletin.
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    Where M's Touching Tribute to James Bond
    at the End of 'No Time to Die' Originates
    From
    By Jamie Burton On 10/9/21

    Where does the Jack London quote originate?
    The quote used by M in No Time To Die was a snippet from a larger quote attributed to London.

    According to Bartleby.com, the full quote was said by London to journalist Ernest J. Hopkins, who published them in San Francisco's The Bulletin on December 2, 1916.

    London reportedly told Hopkins this while discussing his life just two months before his death. He was just 40 years old when he passed away on November 22, 1916.

    The full excerpt from both the newspaper report reads:
    I would rather be ashes than dust!
    I would rather that my spark should burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should be stifled by dry-rot.
    I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet.
    The function of man is to live, not to exist.
    I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them.
    I shall use my time.
    The wider quote was eventually unearthed from The Bulletin by Irving Shepard in his 1956 book Jack London's Tales of Adventure.

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    1931: Nadezda Poderegin (Nadja Regin) is born--Niš, Serbia, Yugoslavia.
    (She dies 6 April 2019 at age 87--London, England.)
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    Nadja Regin, Bond Girl in
    ‘From Russia With Love’ and
    ‘Goldfinger,’ Dies at 87
    https://variety.com/2019/film/obituaries-people-news/obituary-nadja-regin-james-bond-movies-1203183106/
    By Dave McNary | April 8, 2019 10:14AM PT

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    Credit: Photo by Danjaq/Eon/Ua/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock (5886267ec)Sean Connery, Nadja Regin
    CREDIT: Danjaq/Eon/Ua/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock

    Serbian actress Nadja Regin, who appeared in two early James Bond movies, has died at the age of 87.
    The news was announced on the official 007 Twitter account, which said: “We are very sorry to learn that Nadja Regin has passed away at the age of 87. Nadja appeared in two Bond films, ‘From Russia with Love’ and ‘Goldfinger.’ Our thoughts are with her family and friends at this sad time.”
    She was born as Nadezda Poderegin on Dec. 2, 1931, and began acting while a student. She graduated from the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade and also the University of Belgrade’s Faculty of Philosophy.

    Regin began appearing in British films in the late 1950s and early 1960s, starting with the horror film “The Man Without a Body,” followed by the comedy “Don’t Panic Chaps!,” “Edgar Wallace Mysteries,” “Solo for Sparrow” and “The Fur Collar.” TV roles included “Danger Man,” “The Saint” and “Dixon of Dock Green.”
    She acted in “From Russia with Love” as the mistress of Kerim Bey, portrayed by Pedro Armendariz as the station chief of MI6 in Istanbul. Regin also appeared as Bonita, a dancer who sets a trap for James Bond in the pre-credit sequence of “Goldfinger.”
    During the 1970s, Regin worked for Rank Film and horror producers Hammer, selecting film scripts for production. In 1980, she co-founded Honeyglen Publishing Ltd. She recently published her own novel, “The Victims and the Fools,” under her full name Nadja Poderegin. The book is set during World War II and is centered on a romance between a poet and a dancer.
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    Nadja Regin (1931–2019)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0716605/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Actress (52 credits)

    1967-1968 Comedy Playhouse (TV Series) - Smyrna (maid) / Frederique Duval
    - Stiff Upper Lip (1968) ... Smyrna (maid)
    - The Old Campaigner (1967) ... Frederique Duval
    1968 The World of Beachcomber (TV Series)
    - Episode #1.6 (1968)
    - Episode #1.4 (1968)
    1968 Dixon of Dock Green (TV Series) - Mrs. Green
    - Ania (1968) ... Mrs. Green
    1967 Death Happens to Other People (TV Movie) - Bettina
    1967 Armchair Theatre (TV Series) - Ylena Davos
    - Reason for Sale (1967) ... Ylena Davos
    1967 The Saint (TV Series) - Lucille Legrand
    - The Art Collectors (1967) ... Lucille Legrand
    1966 The Man in Room 17 (TV Series) - Roxana Polynescu
    - The Catacombs (1966) ... Roxana Polynescu
    1966 Donaug'schichten (TV Series)
    - W. M. und die Diplomatie (1966)
    1966 The Liars (TV Series) - Madame Moraldi
    - Episode #1.1 (1966) ... Madame Moraldi
    1965 The Third Man (TV Series) - Aldrina
    - Members Only: Part 2 (1965) ... Aldrina
    - Members Only: Part 1 (1965) ... Aldrina
    1965 Riviera Police (TV Series) - Lisa
    - The Lucky One Was the Snake (1965) ... Lisa
    1965 The Flying Swan (TV Series) - Tanja Sykes
    - Company Property (1965) ... Tanja Sykes
    1964 Downfall - Suzanne Crossley
    1964 Runaway Killer - Laura Kossovich
    1964 Secret Agent (TV Series) - Ira Frankel
    - The Professionals (1964) ... Ira Frankel (as Nadja Ragin)
    1964 Goldfinger - Bonita
    1962-1964 The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre (TV Series) - Suzanne Crossley / Mrs. Reynolds / Nadia Leiven
    - Downfall (1964) ... Suzanne Crossley
    - Solo for Sparrow (1962) ... Mrs. Reynolds
    - Number Six (1962) ... Nadia Leiven
    1963 From Russia with Love - Kerim's Mistress
    1963 Crane (TV Series) - Maria Cortez
    - The Golden Attraction (1963) ... Maria Cortez
    1963 Man of the World (TV Series) - Maria
    - In the Picture (1963) ... Maria
    1963 Zero One (TV Series) - Didi Druson
    - The Creators (1963) ... Didi Druson
    1963 Stranglehold - Lilli
    1963 Benny Hill (TV Series) - Russian Girl
    - The Vanishing Man (1963) ... Russian Girl
    1962 Solo for Sparrow - Mrs. Reynolds
    1962 The Fur Collar - Marie Lejeune
    1962 Six More Faces of Jim (TV Series)
    - The Face of Wisdom (1962)
    1962 Richard the Lionheart (TV Series) - Shirin
    - The Lord of Kerak (1962) ... Shirin
    1962 Brothers in Law (TV Series) - Nina Zoffany
    - Special Examiner (1962) ... Nina Zoffany
    1962 Parbottle Speaking (TV Series) - Zuhra
    - Railway Lane (1962) ... Zuhra
    - Paley Goes It Alone (1962) ... Zuhra
    - The Chinese Chauffeur (1962) ... Zuhra
    - Manalik Opens Fire (1962) ... Zuhra
    - The Secret of the Cellar (1962) ... Zuhra
    - The Man from Khazakand (1962) ... Zuhra
    1962 Number Six - Nadia Leiven
    1961 Maigret (TV Series) - Maria
    - The Winning Ticket (1961) ... Maria
    1961 Blond muß man sein auf Capri - Helga Wagner
    1961 Danger Man (TV Series) - Melina
    - Find and Destroy (1961) ... Melina
    1961 International Detective (TV Series) - Nora Galloway
    - The Anthony Case (1961) ... Nora Galloway
    1960 Wir wollen niemals auseinandergehen - Livia
    1960 ITV Television Playhouse (TV Series) - Estelle
    - Once a Crook (1960) ... Estelle
    -
    1959 Rendezvous (TV Series) - Mary Darwin
    - Murder in Berkeley Square (1959) ... Mary Darwin
    1959 Don't Panic Chaps - Elsa
    1959 The Invisible Man (TV Series) - Princess Taima
    - Man in Power (1959) ... Princess Taima (as Nadia Regin)
    1958 William Tell (TV Series) - Maddelena
    - The Bride (1958) ... Maddelena (as Nadja Regen)
    1957 Es wird alles wieder gut - Lucilla Coletti, Artistin
    1957 Franziska - Helen Philipps
    1957 Die Unschuld vom Lande - Lollo
    1957 The Man Without a Body - Odette Vernet
    1955 Der Frontgockel - Claudette, Französin
    1955 Du mein stilles Tal - Rita
    1955 Esalon doktora M. - Hatidza (as Nadja Poderegin)
    1954 Roman eines Frauenarztes - Nina Bertens
    1954 Das Haus an der Küste - Marina
    1952 Frosina (as Nadja Poderegin)
    1950 The Magic Sword (as Nadja Poderegin)

    1949 The Factory Story - Tekstilna ranica (as Nadja Poderegin)

    Self (3 credits)

    2018 Hammer Horror: The Warner Bros Years (Documentary) - Herself
    2017 Hammer's Lost Worlds (Short) - Herself
    1964 Goldfinger: The World Premiere (Documentary short) - Herself / Bonita
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    1959: A surprising conclusion to McClory's pursuit of rights to film Thunderball plays out.
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    The Battle for Bond, Robert Sellers, 2007.
    Chapter 21 - The Court Case That Killed Ian Fleming
    All the more strange, then, what was to happen on the trial's ninth day.
    McClory had just taken the stand was giving evidence when, as Peter
    Carter-Ruck later recorded, "The hearing was unexpectedly and somewhat
    dramatically adjourned after Leading Counsel on both sides had seen the
    judge in his private rooms." It was Friday afternoon and the hearing was
    a weekend of conferences with various lawyers and solicitors, leading to a
    meeting on the offices of Fleming's solicitors, Farrer & Co, on the Sunday
    afternoon. Fleming arrived accompanied by his wife Ann; Bryce was with
    [Ernie] Cuneo and McClory with Bobo, his brother Desmond O'Donovan and Jack
    Whittingham. There were also sundry solicitors. Carter-Rock quickly
    detected an atmosphere of, "muted hostility."

    Everyone was shown into a room with chairs set out in a circle but with
    no table in the centre. After the formalities, Carter-Ruck opened the proceedings
    by outlining the terms upon which McClory was prepared to settle his
    action. This would involve the payment of his costs and the vesting in McClory
    of the film rights in Thunderball. The copyright in both the finished picture and
    the film scripts should be his as well, plus a sum by way of damages to
    recompense him for the mental anguish and physical inconvenience he had been
    caused. A figure was mentioned. "So great," Bryce later wrote "as to draw a gasp
    even from that sophisticated group." It was a figure of £50,000. In less than 10
    minutes it was agreed in principle to come to terms.

    Why after nearly three years of expensive legal wrangling did Fleming
    and Bryce so quickly throw in the towel after just nine days in court? ...

    1966: You Only Live Twice films Bond's last scene, with Blofeld.

    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 56 of 65 "Quantum Diamonds" at Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
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    James Bond Jr - Quantum Diamonds
    Season 1 - Episode 56
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807115/?ref_=ttep_ep56
    James and his friend visit Yellowstone National Park where Dr. Derange attempts to extract a crystal from Old Faithful for his latest plot.
    Directed by Bill Hutten , Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Jeffrey Scott ... (story)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Dr.Derange (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Jaws (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 56 - Quantum Diamonds

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    1992: Michael Gothard dies at age 53--London, England.
    (Born 24 June 1939--Hendon, Middlesex, England.)
    Emile-Locque-Double-Breasted-Suit-2.jpg
    as Emile Locque in For Your Eyes Only, 1981
    Born Michael Alan Gothard, 24 June 1939, London, England
    Died 2 December 1992 (aged 53), Hampstead, London, England
    Years active 1961–1992
    Michael Alan Gothard (24 June 1939 – 2 December 1992) was an English actor, who portrayed Kai in the television series Arthur of the Britons and the mysterious villain Emile Leopold Locque in the 1981 James Bond film For Your Eyes Only.
    Early life
    Michael Gothard was born in London in 1939. As a child, he lived in both Wales and London. After leaving Haverstock School, he travelled in France for several months before returning home. He went through various jobs, including being a building labourer and a trainee reporter. He even had a brief spell as a clothes model, but he never felt comfortable doing that job. He said: "I was as stiff as a board and I couldn’t overcome my sense of the ridiculous. I was a clothes hanger, an object, not a person."

    Career
    He joined the New Arts Theatre as a scenery mover, and became part of an amateur film a friend was making. After landing the lead role, he was encouraged to take up the profession. He attended evening classes at an actors' workshop whilst holding down a day job. He was involved working in some of the first "Lunchtime theatre" productions in the 1960s, from pub cellars to top floor spaces off St. Martin's Lane. His first television role was in an episode of Out of the Unknown in 1966 called "The Machine Stops". He was then cast in Don Levy's film Herostratus in 1967 and Up the Junction in 1968. He then acquired a female following after taking a role as the villainous Mordaunt in the BBC's adaptation of Twenty Years After (Further Adventures of the Musketeers).

    His performance as the nightclubbing killer Keith in Scream and Scream Again, directed by Gordon Hessler, was a break-out role for him, giving him exposure and leading to other, more prominent parts. In the film, Keith makes one of the most memorable escapes from the police ever seen. The film also starred Vincent Price, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Executive producer Louis M. Heyward said of Gothard's performance: "I felt that Michael Gothard was going to be the biggest thing that ever happened. He had that insane look and that drive, and he was wonderful. Here is a kid who really threw himself into the picture wholeheartedly. Do you remember the scene where he appears to be walking up the cliff? That's a stunt that, as an actor, I would not have agreed to; I’d say, 'Hey, get a double or get a dummy. I ain't either one.' But the kid agreed to do it, without a double—he was that driven. He had a lot of class and a lot of style. Gordon (Hessler) came up with the idea of using an overhead cable to give that illusion of his walking up the cliff."

    He appeared in Ken Russell's 1971 horror film, The Devils, in which Gothard had a stand-out role as a fanatic witch-hunter and exorcist who defiles Vanessa Redgrave and tortures Oliver Reed. His performance as a young disillusioned hippie in Barbet Schroeder's La Vallée (1972) contrasted with the rest of his career. He also played a fictionalised version of the 17th century assassin John Felton in Richard Lester's 1973 film of The Three Musketeers and its 1974 sequel, The Four Musketeers.
    He had a regular role as Kai opposite Oliver Tobias's King Arthur on the aforementioned Arthur of the Britons during the early 1970s. He became known to a wider cinema audience for his menacing turn as the villainous (and non-speaking) Belgian henchman, Emile Leopold Locque, in the 1981 James Bond film, For Your Eyes Only. Gothard was actually the one who suggested Locque's signature octagonal glasses in an effort to make the character more menacing. His later appearances included supporting roles in Tobe Hooper's 1985 science-fiction horror extravaganza, Lifeforce, and as George Lusk in the 1988 TV movie, Jack the Ripper, with Michael Caine. He appeared with Dean Stockwell and Shirley Knight in a Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense (a.k.a. Fox Mystery Theatre) episode, The Sweet Scent of Death.[4] His last few roles were in Christopher Columbus: The Discovery in 1992, where he briefly acted opposite Marlon Brando. It was directed by his For Your Eyes Only director John Glen, but was a box office failure.
    Glen had actually cast Gothard in the role beneath Brando with the intention of moving Gothard into the role of Tomás de Torquemada, Brando's character, in case Brando did not show up for filming. Brando did indeed miss the first day of filming, and Gothard took over this role for the day's shooting. However, Tom Selleck told the director that without Brando, he would quit the film. Word apparently got out, for Brando was on the set the next day, and assumed the role of Torquemada, with Glen reshooting the scene. Glen described Gothard as "a very good" and "captivating" actor, as well as a friend.

    His final role was in David Wickes's Frankenstein, starring Patrick Bergin and Randy Quaid.

    Death
    Gothard, who struggled with depression for much of his life, committed suicide by hanging on 2 December 1992. He was fifty-three years old.
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    Michael Gothard (1939–1992)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0331788/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (42 credits)

    1992 Frankenstein (TV Movie) - Boatswain
    1992 Christopher Columbus: The Discovery - Inquisitor's Spy
    1990 Out of Time - Xaros

    1989 Massacre Play - Zabo
    1989 Capital City (TV Series) - Stefan
    - Twelve Degrees Capricorn (1989) ... Stefan
    1988 Jack the Ripper (TV Mini-Series) - George Lusk
    - Episode #1.2 (1988) ... George Lusk
    - Episode #1.1 (1988) ... George Lusk
    1987 Destroying Angel - Ennio Volpe
    1985 Lytton's Diary (TV Series) - Jake Cutler
    - Daddy's Girls (1985) ... Jake Cutler
    1985 Minder (TV Series) - Sergei
    - From Fulham with Love (1985) ... Sergei
    1985 Going Undercover - Strett
    1985 Lifeforce - Dr. Bukovsky
    1984 Scarecrow and Mrs. King (TV Series) - Karl Portillo
    - Our Man in Tegernsee (1984) ... Karl Portillo
    1984 Fox Mystery Theater (TV Series) - Terry Marvin
    - The Sweet Scent of Death (1984) ... Terry Marvin
    1982 Ivanhoe (TV Movie) - Athelstane
    1981 For Your Eyes Only - Locque
    1981 ITV Playhouse (TV Series) - Dieter
    - The Perfect House (1981) ... Dieter
    1980 Shoestring (TV Series) - Harry
    - The Mayfly Dance (1980) ... Harry
    1980 A Tale of Two Cities (TV Mini-Series) - Gaspard
    - Part 3 (1980) ... Gaspard
    - Part 1 (1980) ... Gaspard

    1979 The Professionals (TV Series) - Kodai
    - Stopover (1979) ... Kodai
    1978 Warlords of the Deep - Atmir
    1978 Warrior Queen (TV Series) - Volthan
    - Episode #1.6 (1978) ... Volthan
    - Episode #1.5 (1978) ... Volthan
    - Episode #1.4 (1978) ... Volthan
    - Episode #1.3 (1978) ... Volthan
    - Episode #1.2 (1978) ... Volthan
    - Episode #1.1 (1978) ... Volthan
    1975 King Arthur, the Young Warlord - Kai
    1974 The Four Musketeers: Milady's Revenge - Felton
    1973 The Three Musketeers - Felton
    1972-1973 Arthur of the Britons (TV Series) - Kai
    - The Girl from Rome (1973) ... Kai
    - The Treaty (1973) ... Kai
    - The Games (1973) ... Kai
    - Daughter of the King (1973) ... Kai
    - Six Measures of Silver (1973) ... Kai
    - In Common Cause (1973) ... Kai
    - The Marriage Feast (1973) ... Kai
    - Go Warily (1973) ... Kai
    - Some Saxon Women (1973) ... Kai
    - The Prisoner (1973) ... Kai
    - Rowena (1973) ... Kai
    - The Swordsman (1973) ... Kai
    - The Prize (1973) ... Kai
    - The Wood People (1973) ... Kai
    - The Slaves (1973) ... Kai
    - Enemies and Lovers (1973) ... Kai
    - Rolf the Preacher (1973) ... Kai
    - The Pupil (1973) ... Kai
    - The Duel (1973) ... Kai
    - People of the Plough (1973) ... Kai
    - The Penitent Invader (1972) ... Kai
    - The Challenge (1972) ... Kai
    - The Gift of Life (1972) ... Kai
    - Arthur Is Dead (1972) ... Kai
    1972 The Valley (Obscured by Clouds) - Olivier
    1971 The Devils - Father Barre
    1971 Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? - Albie
    1971 The Last Valley - Hansen
    1970 Menace (TV Series) - Pip
    - Nine Bean Rows (1970) ... Pip
    1970 Paul Temple (TV Series) - Ivan
    - Games People Play (1970) ... Ivan
    1970 Scream and Scream Again - Keith
    1970 My Partner the Ghost (TV Series) - Perrin
    - When the Spirit Moves You (1970) ... Perrin

    1969 Department S (TV Series) - Weber
    - Les Fleurs du Mal (1969) ... Weber
    1969 Fraud Squad (TV Series) - Jacky Joyce
    - Run for Your Money (1969) ... Jacky Joyce
    1969 Michael Kohlhaas - Der Rebell - John
    1969 Armchair Theatre (TV Series) - Brian
    - The Story-teller (1969) ... Brian
    1968 Up the Junction - Terry
    1967 The Further Adventures of the Musketeers (TV Series) - Mordaunt
    - Hunted (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Treachery (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - The Scaffold (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - The Trial (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - The Oath (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Escape (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - The Boy King (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Abduction (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Peril (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Conflict (1967) ... Mordaunt
    - Conspiracy (1967) ... Mordaunt
    1967 Herostratus - Max
    1966 Thirty-Minute Theatre (TV Series) - Grady
    - The Excavation (1966) ... Grady
    1966 Out of the Unknown (TV Series) - Kuno
    - The Machine Stops (1966) ... Kuno

    Self (1 credit)

    1971 Director of Devils (Documentary short) - Himself

    Archive footage (6 credits)

    2013 Carlsen's Curse with Steve Railsback (Video short) - Bukovsky
    2013 Dangerous Beauty with Mathilda May (Video short) - Bukovsky

    2006 For Your Eyes Only: Expanded Angles (Video documentary short) - Locque
    2006 The Exotic Locations of 'For Your Eyes Only' (Video documentary short) - Locque

    1981 Clapper Board (TV Series) - Locque
    - For Your Eyes Only Special (1981) ... Locque (uncredited)
    1981 For Your Eyes Only: The Royal Premiere (TV Special short)

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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Lebanon.

    2011: Skyfall films Bond swimming at the top of the Four Seasons, Canary Wharf, London (as Shanghai).
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    2015: Gabriele Ferzetti dies at age 90--Rome, Lazio, Italy.
    (Born 17 March 1925--Rome, Lazio, Italy.)
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    Gabriele Ferzetti obituary
    https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/dec/22/gabriele-ferzetti
    Charismatic Italian actor who starred in Antonioni’s L’Avventura
    and played opposite George Lazenby in On Her Majesty’s Secret
    Service
    Ronald Bergan | Tue 22 Dec 2015 10.41 EST | Last modified on Sun 4 Mar 2018 07.48 EST
    1888.jpg?width=620&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=84edd68573e3025925e832d211f027e5
    Gabriele Ferzetti (right) with Lea Massari in Antonioni’s classic L’Avventura (1960), in which he played Sandro, a wealthy playboy searching for his missing lover. Photograph: Snap Stills/Rex Shutterstock
    The Italian actor Gabriele Ferzetti, who has died aged 90, was never in danger of being typecast. He played a multitude of different film roles in every known genre, over seven decades, and just about the only constant in his long career was that he was perennially handsome and charismatic without being showy.
    To cinephiles, he was most memorable for his intense performance of quiet desperation as the unfulfilled wealthy playboy seeking his missing lover in Michelangelo Antonioni’s L’Avventura (1960). However, his most widely known roles, dubbed into English, were as the unscrupulous railroad baron on crutches in Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) and as James Bond’s father-in-law, a powerful crime boss, in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), the one with George Lazenby as 007.
    Ferzetti was born in Rome, where he attended the Silvio d’Amico drama school before winning a scholarship to the Rome Academy of Dramatic Art. However, he was eventually expelled for appearing with a professional theatrical troupe. After his role on stage as the young shepherd Sylvius in Luchino Visconti’s 1948 production of As You Like It, designed by Salvador Dalí, Ferzetti had small roles in several films, soon becoming a leading man.

    He was first noticed internationally in Mario Soldati’s The Wayward Wife (La Provinciale,1953), although the spotlight was on the ascending star Gina Lollobrigida in the title role. Ferzetti made the most of the thankless part of her husband, a bespectacled science professor who realises his wife does not love him but who wins her round in the end.

    In the same year he landed the title role in the sumptuous biopic Puccini, in which he portrayed the philandering Italian opera composer from his student days to a man in his 80s, with a little help from the makeup department. He reprised the role in House of Ricordi (1954), about the music-publishing house.

    Ferzetti was then cast by Antonioni in Le Amiche (The Girl Friends, 1955), which won the director the Silver Lion at the Venice film festival. Adapted from a Cesare Pavese story, the film manages to hold the 10 bourgeois characters in balance, giving almost equal weight to their individuality and the shifting pattern of relationships. Among them is Ferzetti, giving a nuanced performance as a morose, frustrated artist, envious of his more successful wife, and the cause of a woman’s suicide attempt.

    It would take five years and several mediocre melodramas and epics, including the elephantine Hannibal (1959), in which Ferzetti was impressive as a Roman senator, before he was reunited with Antonioni.

    L’Avventura, the film in which the director’s style reached maturity, allowed Ferzetti to play a weak and disillusioned man, a failed architect who complains, while looking around his Sicilian town: “Who needs beautiful things nowadays? How long will they last? All of this was built to last centuries. Today, 10, 20 years at the most, and then?” He later peevishly spills ink over a young man’s sketch of a church. At the film’s bitter end, not a resolution of the conventional type, he weeps pathetically out of guilt and emptiness. Nothing Ferzetti did in films subsequently equalled this.

    L’Avventura led him to a number of English-language movies, including the paper-thin romance Jessica (1962) – set in Sicily, and in which he played a reclusive aristocrat who falls for a young midwife (Angie Dickinson) – and a conventional war film, Torpedo Bay (1963), in which he is a noble Italian submarine captain being stalked by a British ship commanded by James Mason. Ferzetti was suitably grim as Lot, fleeing Sodom with his daughters and wife in The Bible (1966), a bad film from the Good Book, directed by the self-proclaimed atheist John Huston.

    Though dubbed, Ferzetti was convincing in Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) as the rail tycoon Morton, a smooth, cowardly baddie who employs a villainous hired gun, Frank (Henry Fonda), to frighten an owner into selling one of the rare pieces of land with water on it. Being disabled, Morton is vulnerable in his encounters with various unscrupulous bandits, at one stage having his crutches kicked away from him. He is last seen crawling towards a puddle of muddy water in the desert. It was Ferzetti’s favourite role.
    He was Draco, a gentlemanly mafia boss in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), enticing Bond to marry his daughter (Diana Rigg), and offering to help 007 track down Blofeld. And he was chilling in Costa-Gavras’s The Confession (1970) as the head Stalinist interrogator who manages to extract a false confession from the Czech dissident Artur London (Yves Montand).
    His Italian accent notwithstanding, Ferzetti was equally nasty as an ex-SS officer, now psychiatrist, intent on covering up his tracks in Liliana Cavani’s meretricious The Night Porter (1974), a study of a sadomasochistic relationship between a former Nazi (Dirk Bogarde) and the woman he raped in a concentration camp (Charlotte Rampling).

    Ferzetti was kept busy throughout the 70s and 80s in supporting roles in mostly unremarkable Italian/French co-productions, as well as the occasional English-language film, such as the dreadful Inchon (1981), in which he played a Turkish officer in the Korean war with a miscast Laurence Olivier as General MacArthur.

    In the 90s Ferzetti appeared more frequently on television, but played the Duke of Venice in Oliver Parker’s Othello on the big screen and won the Ubu prize for his performance in August Strindberg’s The Dance of Death on stage (both 1992). In 2009, aged 84, he gained much praise for playing the head of a wealthy Milanese industrial family in I Am Love (Io Sono l’Amore).

    He is survived by his daughter, Anna, also an actor, from his marriage to the actor Maria Grazia Eminente, which ended in divorce, and by two granddaughters.

    • Gabriele Ferzetti, actor, born 17 March 1925; died 2 December 2015
    7879655.png?263
    Gabriele Ferzetti (1925–2015)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0275213/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (168 credits)

    2010 18 Years Later - Enrico
    2009 I Am Love - Edoardo Recchi Senior
    1992-2007 A Wonderful Family (TV Series) - Nono
    - Les adieux de Nono (2007) ... Nono
    - Un Beaumont peut en cacher un autre (2002) ... Nono
    - Panique à bord (2000) ... Nono
    - L'amour en vacances (1996) ... Nono
    - Nicolas s'en va-t-en guerre (1996) ... Nono (credit only)
    - Des vacances mouvementées (1993) ... Nono
    - Bonnes et mauvaises surprises (1993) ... Nono (credit only)
    - Des jours ça rit, des jours ça pleure (1992) ... Nono
    - Des vacances orageuses (1992) ... Nono
    - Les parents disjonctent (1992) ... Nono
    2006 Pope John Paul I: The Smile of God (TV Movie) - Cardinal Siri
    2005 Callas e Onassis (TV Movie) - Livanos
    2004 Concorso di colpa - Vito Santamaria
    2003 Lost Love - Tommaso Pasini
    2003 Counselor de Gregorio - Alfonso
    2002 Le ragazze di Miss Italia (TV Movie) - The Professor

    1998 The Sands of Time (TV Movie) - Father Jacob
    1997 Un prete tra noi (TV Series) - Ettore (1997)
    1997 Porzûs - Storno vecchio
    1997 Con rabbia e con amore - Leone
    1995 Natale con papà (TV Movie) - Vittorio
    1995 Othello - The Duke of Venice
    1994 First Action Hero - Ben Costa
    1994 Black as the Heart (TV Movie) - Signor Noé Alga Croce
    1993 Private Crimes (TV Mini-Series) - Dottor Guido Braschi
    - Episode #1.4 (1993) ... Dottor Guido Braschi
    - Episode #1.3 (1993) ... Dottor Guido Braschi
    - Episode #1.2 (1993) ... Dottor Guido Braschi
    - Episode #1.1 (1993) ... Dottor Guido Braschi
    1992 Alta società (TV Mini-Series) - - Episode #1.3 (1992)
    - Episode #1.1 (1992)
    1992 Die Ringe des Saturn (TV Movie)
    1992 Il coraggio di Anna (TV Movie)
    1991 Suffocating Heat - Gaetano Castelli
    1990 Pronto soccorso (TV Series)
    1990 Una fredda mattina di maggio - Signor Mantoni
    1990 Voyage of Terror: The Achille Lauro Affair (TV Movie)

    1989 Around the World in 80 Days (TV Mini-Series) - Italian Chief of Police
    - Episode #1.3 (1989) ... Italian Chief of Police
    - Episode #1.2 (1989) ... Italian Chief of Police
    - Episode #1.1 (1989) ... Italian Chief of Police
    1988 Computron 22 - Il nonno
    1988 Due fratelli (TV Mini-Series) - Procuratore
    - Episode #1.3 (1988) ... Procuratore
    - Episode #1.2 (1988) ... Procuratore
    - Episode #1.1 (1988) ... Procuratore
    1988 Gli angeli del potere (TV Movie) - Dr. Donhal
    1987 Julia and Julia - Padre di Paolo
    1987 La voglia di vincere (TV Mini-Series) - Professor Besson
    - Episode #1.3 (1987) ... Professor Besson
    - Episode #1.2 (1987) ... Professor Besson
    - Episode #1.1 (1987) ... Professor Besson
    1986 Follia amore mio (TV Movie)
    1985 Quo Vadis? (TV Mini-Series) - Piso
    - Episode #1.6 (1985) ... Piso
    - Episode #1.5 (1985) ... Piso
    - Episode #1.4 (1985) ... Piso
    - Episode #1.3 (1985) ... Piso
    - Episode #1.2 (1985) ... Piso
    - Episode #1.1 (1985) ... Piso
    1983 Die goldenen Schuhe (TV Mini-Series) - Marquesade Buenaventa
    - Episode #1.5 (1983) ... Marquesade Buenaventa
    - Episode #1.4 (1983) ... Marquesade Buenaventa
    - Episode #1.2 (1983) ... Marquesade Buenaventa
    - Episode #1.3 (1983) ... Marquesade Buenaventa
    - Episode #1.1 (1983) ... Marquesade Buenaventa
    1983 Le ambizioni sbagliate (TV Movie) - Prof. Malacrida
    1983 Delitto e castigo (TV Mini-Series) - Svidrigàjlov
    - Episode #1.5 (1983) ... Svidrigàjlov
    - Episode #1.4 (1983) ... Svidrigàjlov
    - Episode #1.3 (1983) ... Svidrigàjlov
    - Episode #1.2 (1983) ... Svidrigàjlov
    - Episode #1.1 (1983) ... Svidrigàjlov
    1983 The Scarlet and the Black (TV Movie) - Prince Mataeo (uncredited)
    1983 Il quartetto Basileus - Mario Cantone
    1982 Quasi quasi mi sposo (TV Movie) - The Engineer
    1982 Vatican Conspiracy - Cardinale Ixaguirre
    1982 Grog - Alberto
    1981 I giochi del diavolo (TV Mini-Series) - Mastro Gomin
    - La mano indemoniata (1981) ... Mastro Gomin
    1981 Inchon - Turkish Brigadier

    1979 Anni struggenti - Prof. Bivona
    1979 Bloodline - Maresciallo Campagna (uncredited)
    1978-1979 I vecchi e i giovani (TV Mini-Series) - Flaminio Salvo
    - Episode #1.5 (1979) ... Flaminio Salvo
    - Episode #1.4 (1979) ... Flaminio Salvo
    - Episode #1.3 (1979) ... Flaminio Salvo
    - Episode #1.2 (1979) ... Flaminio Salvo
    - Episode #1.1 (1978) ... Flaminio Salvo
    1979 Encounters in the Deep - Miles
    1978 A torto e a ragione (TV Series)
    1978 Porci con la P.38 - Max Astarita
    1978 Last In, First Out - Herzog
    1978 Mon premier amour - Georges
    1978 Suggestionata - Gregorio Lori
    1977 Man of Corleone
    1977 The Psychic - Emilio Rospini
    1977 Oedipus orca - Valerio
    1976 La orca - Valerio
    1976 A Matter of Time - Antonio Vicari
    1976 Nick the Sting - Maurice
    1976 The Hornet's Nest - Gaspard
    1976 Lezioni di violoncello con toccata e fuga - Father of Stella
    1975 Jackpot
    1975 End of the Game - Dr. Lutz
    1975 Calling All Police Cars - Professore Andrea Icardi
    1975 Un uomo curioso (TV Movie) - Moriondo
    1975 Smiling Maniacs - Prandó
    1974 La prova d'amore - Angela Father
    1974 Processo per direttissima - L'avvocato Finaldi
    1974 Kidnap - Don Francesco Salvatore
    1974 Appassionata - Dr. Emilio Rutelli
    1974 The Night Porter - Hans
    1973 Secrets of a Nurse - Prof. Daniele Vallotti
    1973 Hitler: The Last Ten Days - Fieldmarshall Keitel
    1973 Divorce His - Divorce Hers (TV Movie) - Turi Livicci
    1972 3000 Million Without an Elevator - M. Raphaël
    1972 Mendiants et Orgueilleux
    1972 Alta tensión - Pablo Moncada
    1972 Ripped-Off - Tony La Monica
    1971 Million Dollar Eel - Vasco
    1970 Cold Sweat (uncredited)
    1970 French Intrigue - Inspector Bardeche
    1970 Die Welt des Pirandello - Liebe! - Liebe? (TV Movie) - Memmo Viola (segment "Wenn man das Spiel kennt")
    1970 The Confession - Kohoutek

    1969 L'amica - Paolo Marchesi
    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service - Draco
    1969 That Splendid November - Biagio
    1969 Machine Gun McCain - Don Francesco DeMarco
    1968 Il mondo di Pirandello (TV Series) - Memmo Viola
    - Amori senza amore (1968) ... Memmo Viola
    1968 Once Upon a Time in the West - Morton - Railroad Baron
    1968 Bandits in Rome - Commissioner
    1968 L'età del malessere - Guido
    1968 Better a Widow - Don Calogero Minniti
    1968 The Protagonists - Il Commissario
    1968 Come Play with Me - Stefano / Lea's lover
    1968/I Escalation - Augusto Lambertinghi
    1968 Un diablo bajo la almohada - Anselmo
    1967 Dossier Mata Hari (TV Mini-Series) - Bouchardon
    - Episode #1.4 (1967) ... Bouchardon
    - Episode #1.3 (1967) ... Bouchardon
    - Episode #1.2 (1967) ... Bouchardon
    - Episode #1.1 (1967) ... Bouchardon
    1967 We Still Kill the Old Way - Avvocato Rosello
    1966 The Devil in Love - Lorenzo de' Medici
    1966 I Spy (TV Series) - Aldo
    - To Florence with Love: Part 2 (1966) ... Aldo
    - To Florence with Love: Part 1 (1966) ... Aldo
    1966 The Bible: In the Beginning... - Lot
    1966 Luce a gas (TV Movie) - Rough
    1965 Lo scippo - Gambetti
    1965 Three Rooms in Manhattan - Comte Larsi
    1965 Crime on a Summer Morning - Victor Dermott
    1964 Crucero de verano - Carlos Brul y Betancourt
    1964 Desideri d'estate
    1964 The Warm Life - Guido
    1964 Death Where Is Your Victory? - Max Gurgine
    1963 Un tentativo sentimentale - Giulio, Carla's Husband
    1963 Torpedo Bay - Leonardi
    1963 The Shortest Day - Tenente in trincea
    1962 Beach Casanova - Avvocato Leblanc
    1962 Imperial Venus - Freron
    1962 Cross of the Living - L'abbé Delcourt / Abbe
    1962 Crime Does Not Pay - Angelo Giraldi (segment "Le masque")
    1962 La monaca di Monza - Gian Paolo Osio
    1962 Congo vivo - Roberto Santi
    1962 Meetings - Ralph Scaffari
    1962 Jessica - Edmondo Raumo
    1960 Love, the Italian Way - Alberto Bressan
    1960 Il carro armato dell'8 settembre - Tommaso
    1960 Red Lips - Avvocato Paolo Martini
    1960 It Happened in '43 - Franco Villani
    1960 L'Avventura - Sandro

    1959 Hannibal - Fabius Maximus
    1959 Le secret du Chevalier d'Éon
    Bernard Turquet de Mayenne (as Gabriel Ferzetti)
    1959 Everyone's in Love - Arturo
    1958 Love on the Riviera - Giulio Ferrari
    1958 Tant d'amour perdu - Frédéric Solingen
    1958 Angel in a Taxi - Andrea
    1958 March's Child - Sandro
    1957 It Happened in Rome - Lawyer Alberto Cortini
    1957 Honor Among Thieves - Desiderio / Plebari
    1956 Il prezzo della gloria - comandante Alberto Bruni
    1956 Defend My Love - Pietro Leonardi
    1956 Donatella - Maurizio
    1955 Un po' di cielo - Frank Lo Giudice
    1955 Le Amiche - Lorenzo
    1955 Adriana Lecouvreur - Maurizio di Sassonia
    1955 Sins of Casanova - Giacomo Casanova
    1954 House of Ricordi - Giacomo Puccini
    1954 Camilla - Dott. Mario Rossetti
    1954 Modern Virgin - Gabriele Demico
    1954 100 Years of Love
    Carlo, the Political Prisoner (segment "Gli ultimi dieci Minuti")
    1954 Vestire gli ignudi - Ludovico Nota
    1953 Empty Eyes - Fernando Maestrelli
    1953 The Counterfeiters - Dario
    1953 Puccini - Giacomo Puccini
    1953 The Wayward Wife - Il professore Franco Vagnuzzi
    1952 Three Forbidden Stories - Comm. Borsani (First segment)
    1952 Inganno - Andrea Vannini
    1951 Gli amanti di Ravello - Sandro Deodata
    1951 The Naked and the Wicked - Giorgio Suprina
    1951 The Forbidden Christ - 1950 Lo zappatore
    1950 Sigillo rosso
    1950 Mountain Smugglers - Lieutenant Berti
    1950 Welcome Reverend

    1949 Flying Squadron - Ufficiale D'aviazione
    1949 Sicilian Uprising
    1949 William Tell - Corrado Hant
    1949 Fabiola - Claudius
    1949 Vertigine d'amore (as Gaetano Ferzetti)
    1948 Les Misérables - Tholomyes, un cliente di Fantina (uncredited)
    1946 Lost Happiness
    1942 The Countess of Castiglione (as Pasquale Ferzetti)
    1942 Bengasi (uncredited)
    1942 Via delle cinque lune

    Self (6 credits)

    2006 Press Day in Portugal (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2003 An Opera of Violence (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2003 Something to Do with Death (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2003 The Wages of Sin (Video documentary short) - Himself

    1969 On Her Majesty's Secret Service: Swiss Movement (Documentary short) - Himself
    1968 On Her Majesty's Secret Service: Filming of James Bond Epic in Progress in the Swiss Alps (Documentary short) - Himself

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    2015: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond #2 (Vargr).
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    JAMES BOND #2
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513024181802011
    Cover A: Dom Reardon
    Writer: Warren Ellis
    Art: Jason Masters
    Genre: Action/Adventure, Media Tie-In
    Publication Date: December 2015
    Format: Comic Book
    Page Count: 32 pages
    UPC: 725130241818 02011
    ON SALE DATE: December 2
    James Bond is in Berlin, alone, unarmed and with no idea of the forces ranged in secret against him. If he can make it to the Embassy, he might survive for a few hours more. But he's getting into that car with that woman, which means he has only minutes to live...
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    2015: Big Comics Special Edition publishes reprints of Takao Saito's manga for 007死ぬのは奴らだ (007 They are the ones who die; a.k.a. Live and Let Die) and サンダーボール作戦 (Sandābōru sakusen; Thunderball Strategy).
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    2019: Screen Idle reports new James Bond film cancelled.
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    New James Bond film cancelled after
    cameraman forgot to press record
    See the complete article here:
    2 December 2019 Neil Tollfree News 18
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    The latest James Bond film has been cancelled after the discovery that a cameraman forgot to press record during key scenes.

    No Time to Die has been beset by problems throughout its production including injury to star Daniel Craig, a change of director, the villain’s lair under a volcano flooding with lava, a biblical plague of toads, minor earthquake, alien abduction, and someone losing their keys.

    “We were just sorting through the footage in preparation for editing and there was stuff missing,” explained director Cary Fukunaga as a small meteor landed on his car.

    “Bond doing stunts, a bit with Bond getting off with a sexy lady, another bit with Bond getting off with a sexy lady, Bond doing stunts whilst getting off with a sexy lady – they just weren’t there.

    “So, we went back to the cameraman and he confessed that he’d forgotten to press record on the camera during key scenes.

    “The cameraman was really sorry and everything and even offered to come back and help reshoot the scenes but he was suffering from a really nasty plague of boils so we’d have to wait until after that cleared up.”

    Ultimately, producers decided that it simply wasn’t worth it and the best option now would be to simply cancel the whole thing and move on to the next film instead.

    “I think it’s the right idea, and I’m really looking forward to starting work on the new movie,” agreed Fukunaga.

    “Apparently, we’re shooting in that studio that was built on top of an old Indian burial ground.

    “So, I’m sure that will all be fine.”
    Note: To everyone reading this article unfamiliar with us at Screen Idle. This is just a joke. Unless something crazy has happened in the last 24 hours, The new James Bond film is still coming soon.

    If it made you laugh, then great – stick around, sign up for the newsletter. If it didn’t then try the Onion or Newsthump instead, they’re really funny.



  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    December 3rd

    1963: Copyright lawyer Peter Carter-Ruck announces a settlement awarding Kevin McClory Thunderball film rights plus £50,000 damages. Kevin diverts from Jack Whittingham to partner with Broccoli & Saltzman, receiving the producer credit (Broccoli & Saltzman represented as ‘presented by’).

    1971: Ola Rapace (Pär Ola Norell) is born--Tyresö, Stockholms län, Sweden.
    1973: Bond comic strip The Girl Machine ends its run in The Daily Express.
    (Started 19 June 1973. 2257–2407) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    https://spyguysandgals.com/sgLookupComicStrip.aspx?id=1010
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    https://www.popoptiq.com/the-girl-machine/
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    Swedish Semic Comic https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1975.php3
    Jakten På Det Svarta Guldet
    ("Hunt For The Black Gold" - The Girl Machine)
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    Danish http://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no-34-1975/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 34: “The Girl Machine” (1975)
    "Jagten på det sorte guld" (The Hunt for the Black gold)
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    1985: Roger Moore declares he's retiring from the Bond role after 12 years on screen and 7 films.
    1987: Με το δάχτυλο στη σκανδάλη (James Bond, praktor 007: Me to daktylo sti skandali; With the Finger on the Trigger) released in Greece.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 57 of 65 - "Rubies Aren't Forever" in Germany.
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    James Bond Jr - Rubies Aren't Forever
    Season 1 - Episode 57
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807117/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    James saves a girl named Ruby who was captured by a gang who wanted her necklace, but she was set up by her aunt, Tiara Hotstones, who tries to bring them to Baron von Skarin in Germany to use them to steal the F-15 Jets for himself.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Kent Stevenson ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Baron Von Skarin (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws / First biker / Second biker (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Kath Soucie ... Tiara Hotstones (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)

    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon Mari Devon ... (voice)
    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 57 - Rubies Aren't Forever

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    1991: Geffen releases the "Live and Let Die" single from the Guns 'N Roses Use Your Illusion album. (B-side is "Live and Let Die" Live at Wembley Stadium, London recorded 31 August 1991, plus "Shadow of Your Love" (Live).)
    UK Orange Vinyl
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    1999: Amb el món no n'hi ha prou (There Is Not Enough With the World, and Catalan title El mundo nunca es suficiente; The World Is Never Enough) released in Spain.
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    1999: Världen räcker inte till released in Finland.
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    Later DVD cover.
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    1999: The World Is Not Enough released in Norway and Thailand.
    1999: 007 - O Mundo Não Chega (The World Does Not Arrive) released in Portugal.
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    2010: Digital Trends reports Sam Mendes will still direct BOND 23.
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    Sam Mendes still directing next
    James Bond film
    By Ryan Fleming | December 3, 2010
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    It was never a question of if James Bond would return, just when and how. Following the success of Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace, a third film with Daniel Craig as Bond was never doubted, and things were moving along at a good pace when it was first announced that Oscar winning director Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Away We Go) had agreed to direct the 23rd Bond film. Then MGM happened.

    The studio’s financial woes have been painfully well documented, and following the near collapse of the company under $4 billion of debt, things got weird for Bond. With a property of its magnitude, it was never really a question of whether or not Bond would be back, but when, and under what studio’s banner. If MGM had totally imploded—as many people feared it would—the Bond franchise would have likely been stuck in a legal limbo until a new studio could obtain the rights. Bond would return, but if legal delays persisted, as they have a tendency to do, the delay might make it impractical or even impossible to bring back Craig. Keeping Mendes would be almost impossible to the point of being laughable.

    Mendes is very much in demand as a director, and as Bond entered MGM’s gravitational limbo, the Mendes claimed to remain interested but the longer the delays the less likely his schedule would permit. Then MGM joined the ranks of the happily bankrupt, and things began to move again.

    The first glimmer of sunshine from MGM’s otherwise overcast future came when the Hobbit was greenlit, which makes sense. After all, the Lord of the Rings franchise earned around $2 billion. Then came word that Bond was up next, and earlier this month, Bond 23 got the greenlight as well.

    So with Craig both seemingly excited and contractually obligated to appear in the new film (along with Dame Judi Dench), the ball went back to Mendes.

    According to the Daily Mail, Mendes is back on board as the Bond director, and filming is expected to begin later next year. The news comes from Mendes’ estranged wife, Kate Winslet, who offhandedly commented that her husband would be moving to England, partly to spend time with their children, and partly to prepare for Bond. Nothing formal has been announced by MGM, but it seems like Mendes is on board.
    Mendes will first head across the pond to direct Kevin Spacey in Richard III at the Old Vic Theater in London. No word yet on any details about the next Bond film, although once this film is in the bag, MGM has stated that they are going to aim for a new Bond release every two years.
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    2018: BOND 25 originally scheduled production start date at Pinewood with planned director Danny Boyle.
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    2019: No Time To Die releases character posters anticipating the next day's full trailer.
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    December 4th

    1913: John Kitzmiller is born--Battle Creek, Michigan.
    (He dies 23 February 1965 at age 51--Rome, Lazio, Italy.)
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    Keeping a wild eye on European Cinema of the past and present
    John Kitzmiller
    http://www.thewildeye.co.uk/blog/performers-directors/black-actors-in-italy/john-kitzmiller/
    November 25, 2010 Matt Blake Americans in Cinecitta, Black Actors in Italy 7

    John Kitzmiller was one of the most prominent Afro-American actors to work in Italy during the post war period. Born in Michigan in 1913, he first came to Europe as a soldier during the liberation of Italy, winning a Victory Medal for his efforts. He fell in love with the country, deciding to stay there rather than head home once the conflict was over, and soon drifted into acting, starting his career playing a stock selection of GIs and American expats. In 1948 he had a career defining role in Alberto Lattuada’s Senza pietà, as a GI who becomes friendly with an Italian girl (played by Carla Del Poggio). As well as bringing his face to the international arthouse crowd, this was a popular film on the US university circuit, where it gained a considerable following among Afro-American students.
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    John Kitzmiller in Dr. No
    More roles followed, although with the decline of neo-realism and the growing emphasis on using professional actors they shrunk in size. He was a trumpet player in Luci del varietà (directed by Lattuada and a young Federico Fellini), played a valet in Marino Girolami’s Canto per te (a vehicle for the famed tenor Giuseppe Di Stefano), and appeared as a selection of servants, criminals or workmen. With the resurgence of the swashbuckler and peplum in the 1950s his workrate stepped up a notch, and by the early 60s he was appearing in three or four films a year.
    It was at this time that he won a further degree of international success, starring as Quarrel in the hugely succesful Dr No, where his role – most of which was shot in Jamaica – was more prominent than his lowly billing would suggest. This led to one final key role, as the titular character in Géza von Radványi’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which was released in the same year as his death in 1965 from cirrhosis of the liver (caused, reputedly, by his long term alcoholism).
    Kitzmiller’s importance wasn’t so much for the films he appeared in – although he certainly appeared in some important films. It was in the fact that he was a trailblazer for black actors both in Italy and in the US, at a time in which cinema was an almost entirely caucasian occupation. Given that, it’s surprising how little biographical information is available about him.

    About Matt Blake
    The WildEye is a blog dedicated to the wild world of Italian cinema (and, ok, sometimes I digress into discussing films from other countries as well). Peplums, comedies, dramas, spaghetti westerns... they're all covered here.
    Tom B. | July 22, 2009 at 3:35 pm

    Thanks Matt. I agree he was trailblazer in opening up roles for blacks in Italian cinema. Any fan of Italian films has heard of his name, but as you say so little biographical information is available. Thanks for posting on this unique actor in European films.
    mattblake | July 23, 2009 at 1:20 pm

    A little bit more info on Mr. Kitzmiller. In a book on Fellini (Federico Fellini: his life and work by Tullio Kezich, Minna Proctor, Viviana Mazza), he’s described as: “a former chemical engineer who’d slipped accidentally into movie acting”
    mattblake | July 23, 2009 at 1:26 pm

    And a bit more, an obituary from a magazine called Jet, March 11th 1965.
    John Kitzmiller, who became and Italian star, dies at 51.

    A husky American negro who became one of Italy’s most celebrated movie actors but never played in a film produced in his native land, John Kitzmiller, 51, died in Rome after a career that spanned 20 years. Kitzmiller, of Battle Creek, Mich., and a former captain of the Engineers with the famed Negro 92nd Division of World War 2, succumbed to a liver ailment just two months after he was wed to attractive, blond Dusia Bejic, a Yugoslav in Belgrade. Kitzmiller went overseas with the division in the dark days of WW2, but he never forgot his ambition to become an actor. After the war, he decided not to go home but settled in Italy, where he made his first film, To Live in Peace. He received rave notices. There followed a string of ten movies with good roles for Kitzmiller, establishing him, along with cinema-lovely Gina Lollobrigida, as the top motion star in the 1950s in Italy, where realism and authenticity in film making are the sought after ingredients, not the colour of an actor’s skin
    And, from From Sambo to Superspade by Daniel J. Leab

    John Kitzmiller became an actor while on occupation duty in Italy in 1946. He was playing poker in a sidewalk cafe when he was spotted by two Italians who thought him physically perfect for a war movie they were casting
    ...
    mattblake | November 25, 2010 at 4:41 pm

    And here’s another newspaper article mentioning his marriage:
    John Kitzmiller's wedding article from Jet
    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTDTs6Y0IQcLQLBTIsYfYCdyIIQ2wNVk7Q2ePRvc4GgxwRNqTbU
    Luciano Benetti was a little known Italian actor who turned up in a handful of cape and sword films
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    John Kitzmiller (I) (1913–1965)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0457839/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (53 credits)

    1976 Uncle Tom's Cabin - Uncle Tom

    1965 Uncle Tom's Cabin - Uncle Tom
    1965 Le inchieste del commissario Maigret (TV Series) - Un cliente della Citanguette
    - Una vita in gioco (1965) ... Un cliente della Citanguette
    1964 Biblioteca di Studio Uno (TV Mini-Series) - Sam
    - La storia di Rossella O'Hara (1964) ... Sam
    1964 Il ribelle di Castelmonte - Ali
    1964 Indios a Nord-Ovest
    1964 Night of the Vampires - John - Black Servant
    1962 Tiger of the Seven Seas - Serpente - Il pianista
    - Episode #1.2 (1962) ... Il pianista
    1962 Dr. No - Quarrel (as John Kitzmuller: end credits)
    1962 The Son of Captain Blood - Moses
    1962 Blood and Defiance
    1962 Mars, God of War - Afros
    1961 Chiamami bugiardo (TV Movie) - Dr. Bowker
    1961 La corona di fuoco - Akim
    1961 Totòtruffa '62 - Ambasciatore del Katonga
    1961 Revolt of the Mercenaries - Tago
    1960-1961 Giallo club - Invito al poliziesco (TV Series) - Joke / Peter
    - Partita a tre (1961) ... Joke
    - Ultimo avviso (1960) ... Peter
    1960 Il corsaro della tortue (TV Movie)
    1960 Pirates of the Coast - Rock
    1960 Seven in the Sun - Salvador

    1959 Due selvaggi a corte - Kato
    1959 Pensione Edelweiss - Bougron
    1959 Lost Souls - Luca
    1958 Aphrodite, Goddess of Love - Tomoro
    1958 The Naked Earth - David
    1957 A vent'anni è sempre festa - John Miller
    1957 I misteri di Parigi - Lo Squartatore
    1956 Valley of Peace - Sgt. Jim
    1955 Il nostro campione - Raimondo
    1954 Lacrime d'amore
    1954 Acque amare - Mezzanotte
    1954 Il grande addio
    1954 Desiderio 'e sole - Simone
    1954 Quai des blondes - Michel
    1954 Non vogliamo morire - John - il timoniere
    1954 Island Sinner - Abul - il pescatore negro
    1954 Foreign Earth
    1953 Canto per te - Angenore
    1953 Frine, cortigiana d'Oriente - Nabus, lo schiavo muto
    1953 Trouble for the Legion - Djalmar
    1952 Delitto al luna park
    1952 Ultimo perdono
    1952 At Sword's Edge
    1952 Wolves Hunt at Night - Le domestique noir de Miguel
    1952 Massacre en dentelles - Rocky Saddler
    1950 Variety Lights - Trumpet player Johnny
    1950 La forza del destino - Lo scudiero moro

    1949 Monastero di Santa Chiara - Il negro
    1949 Lieutenant Craig: Missing - The MP
    1948 Without Pity - Jerry Jackson
    1947 Tombolo - Jack
    1947 To Live in Peace - Joe (as Jonny Kitzmiller)

    Archive footage (3 credits)

    2006 The Exotic Locations of 'Dr. No' (Video documentary short) - Quarrel
    2000 Inside 'Dr. No' (Video documentary short) - Himself

    1965 The Incredible World of James Bond (TV Movie documentary)
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    1913: Claude Renoir is born--Paris, France.
    (He dies 5 September 1993 at age 79--Troyes, Aube, France.)
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    Claude Renoir
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Renoir
    Born December 4, 1913, Paris, France
    Died September 5, 1993 (aged 79), Troyes, Aube, Champagne, France
    Nationality French
    Claude Renoir (December 4, 1913[1] – September 5, 1993) was a French cinematographer. He was the son of actor Pierre Renoir, the nephew of director Jean Renoir, and the grandson of painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
    He was born in Paris, his mother being actress Véra Sergine. He was apprenticed to Boris Kaufman, a brother of Dziga Vertov, who much later worked in the United States on such films as On the Waterfront (1954). Renoir was the lighting cameraman on numerous pictures such as Monsieur Vincent (1947), Jean Renoir's The River (1951), Cleopatra (1963), Roger Vadim's Barbarella (1968), and the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). At the time of Claude Renoir's death, The Times of London wrote of The River that "its exquisite evocation of the Indian scene, helped to inaugurate a new era in the cinema, one in which color was finally accepted as a medium fit for great film makers to work in."
    He also participated in the making of The Mystery of Picasso (1956), the documentary on painter Pablo Picasso directed by Henri-Georges Clouzot. He was the cinematographer for The Crucible (1957) and lived in East Germany during filming. Renoir's career came to a close in the late 1970s, as he was rapidly losing sight. In his final years he was largely blind.

    He married twice and had two children, a son and a daughter, actress Sophie Renoir. Claude Renoir died at age 79 in Troyes, 55 miles east of Paris, near the village of Essoyes, where he had a home.
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    Claude Renoir
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005841/?ref_=nv_sr_1?ref_=nv_sr_1

    Filmography
    Cinematographer (89 credits)

    1981 Sphinx (uncredited)

    1979 The Medic
    1978 Attention, the Kids Are Watching
    1978 The Discord
    1977 Animal
    1977 The Spy Who Loved Me (director of photography)
    1976 The Wing or The Thigh? (director of photography)
    1976 Une femme fidèle
    1976 Femmes Fatales
    1976 Docteur Françoise Gailland
    1975 French Connection II (director of photography)
    1975 The Track
    1974 Paul and Michelle
    1973 Story of a Love Story (director of photography)
    1973 The Serpent
    1972 Hellé
    1972 Killer
    1971 The Burglars
    1971 The Horsemen
    1971 Swashbuckler
    1970 The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun
    1970 The Adventurers

    1969 The Madwoman of Chaillot
    1969 Soluna
    1968 Barbarella (director of photography)
    1968 Spirits of the Dead (director of photography - segment "Metzengerstein")
    1966 La Grande Vadrouille
    1966 The Game Is Over
    1966 Paris au mois d'août
    1965 Marco the Magnificent
    1965 The Hour of Truth
    1964 The Unvanquished
    1964 Paris When It Sizzles (uncredited)
    1963 The Corrupt
    1962 Il fiore e la violenza (segment "La scampagnata")
    1962 II Marco Polo
    1962 Les amants de Teruel
    1962 Lafayette
    1960 Wasteland
    1960 Blood and Roses
    1960 Sergeant X of the Foreign Legion

    1959 Gorilla's Waltz
    1959 Honeymoon (uncredited)
    1959 Hit and Run
    1958 Youthful Sinners
    1958 End of Desire
    1957 The Crucible
    1956 Crime and Punishment
    1956 Elena and Her Men (director of photography)
    1956 The Mystery of Picasso (Documentary) (director of photography)
    1955 A Missionary
    1954 Madame Butterfly
    1954 Fabulous India (Documentary)
    1954 Maddalena
    1953 Puccini
    1952 The Golden Coach
    1952 The Green Glove
    1951 Images de l'ancienne Égypte (Documentary short)
    1951 Amazing Monsieur Fabre
    1951 The River
    1951 Clara de Montargis
    1951 Dr. Knock
    1950 Gunman in the Streets
    1950 Born of Unknown Father
    1950 Prélude à la gloire

    1949 Rendezvous in July
    1949 Docteur Laennec
    1949 Alice in Wonderland (photography)
    1948 Dilemma of Two Angels
    1948 La grande volière
    1947 Monsieur Vincent
    1947 La maison sous la mer
    1947 The Royalists
    1947 Passionnelle (disposal of the body sequence, uncredited)
    1946 Mr. Orchid
    1946 A Day in the Country (Short)
    1946 Le couple idéal
    1946 Behind These Walls
    1945 The Queer Assignment
    1944 L'aventure est au coin de la rue
    1944 Bonsoir mesdames, bonsoir messieurs
    1943 Aristide Maillol, sculpteur (Documentary short)
    1942 Opéra-musette
    1940 Sérénade

    1938 Les rois de la flotte
    1938 Lumières de Paris
    1937 Le chanteur de minuit
    1936 La vie est à nous
    1935 Toni

    Camera and Electrical Department (11 credits)

    1964 Circus World (second unit cameraman)
    1963 Cleopatra (photographer: second unit)

    1946 Mr. Orchid (camera operator)
    1946 Reunion (Documentary short) (assistant camera - one topic, uncredited)

    1939 Le dernier tournant (camera operator - as Cl. Renoir Junior)
    1938 La Bête Humaine (camera operator - as Claude Renoir Jr.)
    1938 Prison sans barreaux (camera operator)
    1938 Legions of Honor[/i] (camera operator)
    1937 La Grande Illusion (assistant cameraman)
    1933 Chotard and Company (assistant camera)
    1932 Night at the Crossroads (assistant camera)

    Set decorator (1 credit)

    1980 Mont-Oriol (TV Movie)

    Self (4 credits)

    2006 The Spy Who Loved Me: 007 in Egypt (Video documentary short) Himself
    1977 The Making of 'The Spy Who Loved Me' (TV Series documentary) Himself
    - Shooting Scene 341 (1977) ... Himself
    - Also Starring... (1977) ... Himself

    1975 Histoire du cinéma français par ceux qui l'ont fait (TV Series documentary)
    Himself
    - Le désordre et après 1961-1966 (1975) ... Himself
    - Une certaine tradition de qualité 1945-1955 (1975) ... Himself
    -
    1956 The Mystery of Picasso (Documentary) Himself (uncredited)

    Archive footage (2 credits)

    2000 Inside 'Moonraker' (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2000 Inside 'The Spy Who Loved Me' (Video documentary short) - Himself
    The-Spy-Who-Loved-Me-0376.jpg
    claude-renoir-d353bea5-6f48-41b6-93fd-5d0f4af96ee-resize-750.jpeg
    1918: Maurice Binder is born--New York City, New York.
    (He dies 9 April 1991--London, England.)
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    Maurice Binder, 73, 007 Film-Title Artist
    APRIL 15, 1991
    Maurice Binder, a graphic arts designer known chiefly for his dazzling title sequences in the James Bond films, died on Tuesday at the University College Hospital in London. He was 73 years old and lived in London.

    He died of lung cancer, his brother, Mitchell, said.
    Mr. Binder was one of the rare film-title artists to receive rave reviews for his work, which critics said was an essential part of the James Bond success story.

    In a review of the 1981 film, "For Your Eyes Only," Vincent Canby wrote in The New York Times: "And Maurice Binder's opening titles, always one of the fancier features of the Bond movies, are still terrific."
    Mr. Binder's unusual witty designs introduced other films including "Indiscreet" in 1958; "The Mouse That Roared," 1959; "The Grass is Greener," 1960; "Repulsion," 1964, and "The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes," 1971.

    He also produced several musicals, and in association with John Quested and Lester Goldsmith, produced the 1979 film "The Passage," starring Anthony Quinn.

    Born in New York City, Mr. Binder began his career as assistant art director in Macy's art department.

    A resident of London for 27 years, he was honored last year by the National Film Club.

    Besides his brother, who lives in Boca Raton, Fla., he is survived by two nieces.
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    Maurice Binder (1925–1991)
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0082800/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

    Filmography
    Miscellaneous Crew (84 credits)

    1991 The Strauss Dynasty (TV Mini-Series) (title designer - 8 episodes)
    - Adele (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Hetti (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Lili (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Josef (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Revolution of 1848 (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Schani (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Emilie (1991) ... (title designer)
    - Anna (1991) ... (title designer)
    1990 A Captive in the Land (title designer)
    1990 Hamlet (title designer)
    1990 The Sheltering Sky (title designer)
    1990 Mister Johnson (title designer)

    1989 Licence to Kill (title designer)
    1988 The Deceivers (title designer)
    1987 The Last Emperor (title designer: main title)
    1987 The Living Daylights (title designer)
    1986 Shanghai Surprise (title designer)
    1986 Max mon amour (title designer)
    1986 If Tomorrow Comes (TV Mini-Series) (title designer - 3 episodes)
    - Episode #1.2 (1986) ... (title designer)
    - Episode #1.3 (1986) ... (title designer)
    - Episode #1.1 (1986) ... (title designer)
    1985 A View to a Kill (main title designed by)
    1985 Rustlers' Rhapsody (main title design)
    1983 Octopussy (main title designed by)
    1981 For Your Eyes Only (main title designed by)

    1981 Green Ice (main title designer)
    1980 The Awakening (titles)
    1980 The Sea Wolves (titles)

    1979 Moonraker (title designer: main titles)
    1978 The Wild Geese (main title designed by)
    1977 The Spy Who Loved Me (main title designed by)
    1976 Shout at the Devil (title designer: main title)
    1975 e'Lollipop (title designer)
    1974 The Man with the Golden Gun (title designer: main title)
    1974 The Little Prince (main title design)
    1974 Gold (title designer)
    1974 The Tamarind Seed (title designer: main title)
    1973 Live and Let Die (main title designed by)
    1972 Young Winston (main title designed by)
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever (main title designed by)
    1970 Wuthering Heights (title designer)
    1970 The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (title designer: main title)
    1970 Brotherly Love (title designer)

    1969 A Talent for Loving (designer: main title)
    1969On Her Majesty's Secret Service (main title designed by)
    1969 Battle of Britain (title designer: main title)
    1969 Staircase (title designer)
    1968 Barbarella (titles designer - uncredited)
    1968 The Magus (title designer)
    1967 Bedazzled (main title)
    1967 Billion Dollar Brain (title designer)
    1967 The Day the Fish Came Out (title designer)
    1967 A Matter of Innocence (title designer: main titles)
    1967 Fathom (main title sequence)
    1967 You Only Live Twice (main title designed by)
    1967 Two for the Road (title designer)
    1967 Eye of the Devil (title designer: main titles)
    1967 The Taming of the Shrew (main title graphics)
    1966 After the Fox (title designer)
    1966 Kaleidoscope (title designer: main titles)
    1966 Arabesque (title designer: main title)
    1966 Promise Her Anything (title designer)
    1966 The Chase (main title)
    1965 Thunderball (main title designed by)
    1965 The Wild Affair (title designer)
    1965 Repulsion (title designer - uncredited)
    1965 Young Cassidy (title designer)
    1964 The 7th Dawn (title designer: main titles)
    Espionage (TV Series) (titles - 22 episodes, 1963 - 1964) (titles designed by - 2 episodes, 1963 - 1964)
    - A Tiny Drop of Poison (1964) ... (titles designed by)
    - A Free Agent (1964) ... (titles)
    - Some Other Kind of World (1964) ... (titles)
    - The Liberators (1964) ... (titles)
    - Once a Spy... (1964) ... (titles)
    - Snow on Mount Kama (1964) ... (titles)
    - Castles in Spain (1964) ... (titles)
    - The Frantick Rebel (1964) ... (titles)
    - We the Hunted (1964) ... (titles)
    - Do You Remember Leo Winters? (1964) ... (titles)
    - Final Decision (1964) ... (titles)
    - Medal for a Turned Coat (1964) ... (titles)
    - Never Turn Your Back on a Friend (1964) ... (titles)
    - A Camel to Ride (1963) ... (titles)
    - Festival of Pawns (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Light of a Friendly Star (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Whistling Shrimp (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Dragon Slayer (1963) ... (titles)
    - To the Very End (1963) ... (titles)
    - He Rises on Sunday and We on Monday (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Gentle Spies (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Incurable One (1963) ... (titles)
    - The Weakling (1963) ... (titles)
    - Covenant with Death (1963) ... (titles designed by)
    1964 The Long Ships (prologue and main title by)
    1963 Charade (main title designed by)
    1963 Stolen Hours (title designer: main titles)
    1963 The Running Man (main titles by)
    1963 The Mouse on the Moon (title designer)
    1963 Call Me Bwana (main title design)
    1963 I Could Go on Singing (title designer: main titles)
    1962 Dr. No (main title designed by)
    1962 Sodom and Gomorrah (prologue and main title design)
    1962 Reach for Glory (title designer)
    1962 The Road to Hong Kong (title designer)
    1961 Goodbye Again (title designer: main title)
    1960 The Grass Is Greener (title designer: main title)
    1960 Surprise Package (main title designed by)
    1959-1960 Hotel de Paree (TV Series) (title designer - 11 episodes)
    - Sundance and the Fallen Sparrow (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Sundance and the Long Trek (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Vengeance for Sundance (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Sundance and the Black Widow (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Sundance and the Greenhorn Trader (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Hard Luck for Sundance (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Sundance Goes to Kill (1960) ... (title designer)
    - Sundance and the Blood Money (1960) ... (title designer)
    - The Man Who Believed in Law (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Return of Monique (1959) ... (title designer)
    - The High Cost of Justice (1959) ... (title designer)
    1960 Purple Noon (title designer)
    1960 Once More, with Feeling! (title designer)

    1959 The Mouse That Roared (titles designed by)
    1959 Richard Diamond, Private Detective (TV Series) (title designer - 7 episodes)
    - Design for Murder (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Family Affair (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Rough Cut (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Hideout (1959) ... (title designer)
    - The Limping Man (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Jukebox (1959) ... (title designer)
    - Crown of Silla (1959) ... (title designer)
    1959 The Young Philadelphians (title designer - uncredited)
    1958 Damn Yankees (title designer: main titles - uncredited)
    1958 Indiscreet (title designer - uncredited)
    1957 The James Dean Story (Documentary) (title designer)
    1951 Cry Danger (assistant to producer)

    Art department (9 credits)

    1985 King David (graphic designer)
    1984 Oxford Blues (graphic designer)
    1982 Twilight Time (graphics)
    1982 The Final Option (graphic artist)
    1980 The Sea Wolves (graphic design)

    1978 Brass Target (graphic artist)
    1977 A Little Night Music (graphics)
    1964 Of Human Bondage (graphic designer)
    1963 I Could Go on Singing (graphic designer)
    Hide Hide Visual effects (2 credits)
    1980 The Final Countdown (special visual effects) / (storm sequence)
    1979 Dracula (visual consultant)

    Director (1 credit)

    1960 The Children of Lindos (Short)

    Art director (1 credit)

    1983 Philip Marlowe, Private Eye (TV Series)

    Producer (1 credit)

    1979 The Passage (associate producer)

    Self (2 credits)

    1977 The Making of 'The Spy Who Loved Me' (TV Series documentary) - Himself
    - Producing (1977) ... Himself
    1976 Die Titelmacher (TV Movie) - Himself

    Archive footage (4 credits)

    2012 Everything or Nothing (Documentary) - Himself
    2000 Silhouettes: The James Bond Titles (Video documentary short) - Himself
    2000 Inside 'Dr. No' (Video documentary short) - Himself

    1995 Behind the Scenes with 'Thunderball' (Video documentary) - Himself
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    1968: On Her Majesty's Secret Service films Tracy's rescue.

    1973: Bond comic strip Beware of Butterflies begins its run in The Daily Express.
    (Finishes 11 May 1974. 2408–2541) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
    https://spyguysandgals.com/sgLookupComicStrip.aspx?id=1011
    bond_james_cs31_s1.jpg

    https://www.popoptiq.com/beware-of-butterflies/
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    Danish http://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no36-1976/
    James Bond Agent 007 no. 36: “Beware of Butterflies” (1976)
    "Operation Sommerfugl" [= Operation Butterfly]
    JB007-DK-nr-36-s-3.jpg
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    1989: 鐵金剛勇戰殺人狂魔,殺人執照 (Tiě jīngāng yǒng zhàn shārén kuáng mó, shārén zhízhào; Iron King Kong fights the murderous madness, the license to kill) released in Hong Kong.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 58 of 65 "Garden of Evil" in Hong Kong. I mean, Shanghai, China.
    latest?cb=20150417205350
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    James Bond Jr - Garden of Evil
    Season 1 - Episode 58
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807286/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    In Hong Kong, Trevor picks a purple rose, but it somehow hypnotizes him; now it is up to James, IQ, Tracey, and Jasmine to go to the field of the purple rose to find a cure; however, Doctor No and Oddjob try to stop their plan.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Perry Martin ... (writer)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Oddjob
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Julian Holloway ... Mr.Bradford Milbanks / Dr.Julius No (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 58 - Garden of Evil

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    1997: MGM announces their purchase of the rights to Never Say Never Again from Taliafilm. Earlier in 1997 the Sony Corporation acquired most of McClory's rights, later bought by MGM.

    2006: Casino Royale premieres in Sydney, Australia.
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    2014: Spectre press conference.
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    2015: 007 スペクター (007 Supekutā) general release in Japan. The last country to open the film in theaters.

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    2019: No Time To Die trailer debuts.
    2019: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond Vol. 3 #1.
    Eric Gapstur, artist. Vita Ayala & Danny Lore, writers.
    DynamiteEntertainmentLogo.jpg
    JAMES BOND VOL. 3 #1 - JIM CHEUNG LIMITED VIRGIN COVER
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513028697001061
    Cover A: Jim Cheung
    UPC: 725130286970 01061
    Writer: Vita Ayala & Danny Lore
    Art: Eric Gapstur
    Genre: Action/Adventure
    Publication Date: December 2019
    Format: Comic Book
    Page Count: 32 Pages
    ON SALE DATE: 12/4/2019
    In James Bond #1, Ian Fleming's classic gentleman spy is on a new adventure by writers Vita Ayala and Danny Lore, and it features the first of three connecting covers from one of comics' superstar artists, Jim Cheung! Get this Limited, "Virgin" version of Jim's cover for your Bond collection and brace yourself to collect all three!
    TNJamesBond20190101061CheungVirgin.jpg
    JamesBond20190101061CheungVirgin.jpg

    https://www.previewsworld.com/Catalog/OCT191221
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
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    https://comicbookrealm.com/series/58681/0/dynamite-entertainment-ian-flemings-james-bond
    #1 Jim Cheung Cover
    2a832abc79086e9edcc4b095939ee845_xl.jpg
    #1B Incentive Jim Cheung Black & White Variant Cover
    0c053dcff0b66abb7bb32f05af11edcf_xl.jpg
    #1C Incentive Jim Cheung Pencil Sketch Variant Cover
    0d2f7d88491860d6c16ed3df32c7647c_xl.jpg
    #1D Incentive Jim Cheung Vintage Paperback Variant Cover
    c8bb6d726a24086f610c272960401e04_xl.jpg
    #1E Limited Edition Jim Cheung Virgin Cover
    87cca9c59c0eb8db1dd2a34a808a4d9a_xl.jpg
    #1F Incentive Jim Cheung Tint Dressed Variant Cover
    dfd41ca4690c4e328d852b2bbb511ac1_xl.jpg
    #1G Incentive Jim Cheung Tint Black & White Virgin Variant Cover
    2a832abc79086e9edcc4b095939ee845_xl.jpg

    2022: Bond In Motion continues at the Saratoga Auto Museum, Saratoga Springs, New York.
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    Have cars, will spy: Museum shows off Bond's
    movie vehicles
    An exhibit at the Saratoga Auto Museum features 23 vehicles used in the filming of James Bond movies, including 007's iconic Aston Martin DB5
    Barnes. Steve Barnes | Dec. 3, 2022
    A 1964 Aston Martin DB5 that appeared in several recent James Bond films is featured in a new exhibit ‘BOND IN MOTION’ at Saratoga Automobile Museum on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2022, in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. The show features twenty-five official James Bond vehicles celebrating the 60th anniversary of the film franchise.

    The 1969 Cougar XR-7 convertible from the James Bond film "On Her Majesty’s Secret Service" is part of a new exhibit, "Bond in Motion," on view at the Saratoga Automobile Museum through November 2023. The show, featuring 23 official vehicles used in James Bond movies, celebrates the 60th anniversary of the film franchise.

    The Saratoga Automobile Museum is hosting "Bond in Motion," a show featuring 23 official vehicles used in James Bond movies. It celebrates the 60th anniversary of the film franchise. The exhibit is on view through November 2023.

    The 1997 BMW 750iL from the James Bond film "Tomorrow Never Dies" is part of a new exhibit, "Bond in Motion," on view at the Saratoga Automobile Museum through November 2023. The show, featuring 23 official vehicles used in James Bond movies, celebrates the 60th anniversary of the film franchise.
    SARATOGA SPRINGS — At 11 a.m., the Saratoga Auto Museum smells pleasant. This is unlike what surrounds suave British superspy James Bond in the opening of the novel that introduced the character, Ian Fleming's Casino Royale. Its first paragraph:
    "The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. Then the soul-erosion produced by high gambling — a compost of greed and fear and nervous tension — becomes unbearable and the senses awake and revolt from it."
    To go from the casino to his hotel in the novel, Bond walks. When he does get in a car of his own, Fleming specifies that it is a battleship-gray 1930 Bentley with a supercharger sticking out from the front of its engine. Fleming says of it, "Bond's car was his only personal hobby." The Bentley looks more like a wingless biplane than the sleek motor vehicles with which Bond has been associated since the 1962 release of the first movie from a Fleming novel, "Dr. No," with Sean Connery introducing himself as "Bond. James Bond."

    The most iconic Bond vehicle is a 1964 Aston Martin DB5, which has made appearances in six Bond films, from "Goldfinger" in 1964 to last year's "No Time to Die." The actual DB5 used in "Goldfinger," its silver paint and bodywork and wire-spoked wheels as glistening with perfection as one would expect of a vehicle said to be worth $15 million, bathes beneath bright lights in the Saratoga Automobile Museum. A shin-high wire is all that's between you and a car that, in the movie at least, could deploy a smoke screen and an oil slick, and had a button to eject the occupant of the passenger seat and machine guns mounted behind the headlights.

    If you go
    "Bond in Motion: The Official Collection of Original James Bond Vehicles"
    • Where: Saratoga Automobile Museum, 110 Avenue of the Pines, Saratoga Springs
    • Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, October to December; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday, January to March; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, April to September. Show closes November 2023.
    • Admission: $15 adults (discounts for children, students, seniors and veterans/active military)
    • Info: 518-587-1935 and saratogaautomuseum.org
    The DB5 is among 23 motor vehicles used in some of the Bond film series' 25 movies that are part of “Bond in Motion: The Official Collection of Original James Bond Vehicles,” a recently opened exhibit at the auto museum that will be on view for a year. Previously seen only at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, "Bond in Motion" is a joint effort by the Ian Fleming Foundation and Eon Productions, which owns the rights to nearly everything cinematically Bond.

    The exhibit has the highest profile and was the most expensive to produce in the history of the museum, which opened in 2002 in a former bottling plant. The 27,000-square-foot neoclassical building, completed in 1935, sits in the Saratoga Spa State Park near the Avenue of the Pines entrance to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center.

    Also in the "Bond in Motion" show are other Astons: a 1987 V8, which sported outrigger skis when Bond drove it down a mountain in "The Living Daylights"; two versions of the DBS model, including the badly damaged car that set a world record for flipping seven times in a stunt for 2006's "Casino Royale"; and a DB10, a custom model of which only 10 were built, all for the 2014 movie "Spectre."

    Bond's conveyances weren't always so stylish and speedy and Aston-y. "Bond in Motion" includes a Soviet-made Cagiva motorcycle, a comically small all-terrain Honda three-wheeler that Connery improbably rode while wearing a pewter-colored suit in "Diamonds Are Forever," a big BMW sedan, a three-wheeled Thai taxi called a tuk tuk from a chase scene in "Octopussy," a 1974 AMC Hornet ("The Man with the Golden Gun") and a 1970s personal watercraft called a WetBike that carried a naval-attired Roger Moore across the water in "The Spy Who Loved Me."

    The show also features the submarining Lotus Esprit from "The Spy Who Loved Me," an actual submarine and a tabletop model of a jet that, to save money, has one side painted with official U.S. livery, the other as the villain Goldfinger's private plane.
    "There's a little of everything here," said Carly Connors, executive director of the Saratoga Auto Museum for the past six years. Connors projected that "Bond in Motion" will at least double the museum's 2023 attendance over the pre-pandemic peak of about 18,000 in 2019, though admission income will need to be significant to offset the estimated $200,000 cost of presenting the exhibit. (The fee to Eon Productions alone is $100,000, she said.)
    "Bond in Motion" was about three times more expensive than mounting the next most costly exhibit, Connors said, and the museum's board needed persuasion to approve it. The notoriety and visibility of the Bond cars — Aston Martin likes to say the DB5 is "the most famous car in the world" — attendance projections and the potential to introduce the museum to a much larger audience won over the board, she said.
    "We've already seen significant interest" in the show's first few weeks, Connors said. "Who doesn't love James Bond and his cars?"

    Founded with a mission to "preserve, interpret and exhibit automobiles and automotive artifacts," the museum owns a few vehicles and a small collection of memorabilia; New York-focused permanent exhibits are on the state's automotive industry — once boasting more than 100 manufacturers — and its racing industry. The museum uses its main ground-floor space for rotating exhibitions and has ongoing programs including a Distracted Driving Safety Initiative and automobile-restoration programs for local youth. It also each fall organizes the Saratoga Motorcar Auction, described as a "nationally acclaimed vintage and collector car auction" that is its biggest annual fundraiser. In addition, the museum underwrites exhibits and education with once-a-year sweepstakes of new vehicles; the latest is a Big Bend edition of a 2022 Ford Bronco.

    One of the founding members of the museum's board of directors was the legendary automotive journalist Brock Yates, who was editor of and later columnist for Car and Driver magazine. Yates also organized a coast-to-coast race known as the Cannonball Run and wrote the screenplay for the 1981 movie of the same name, which starred Burt Reynolds, Dom DeLuise, Farrah Fawcett and Roger Moore — who of course drove a silver Aston Martin DB5. (Moore never did in any of his seven Bond movies.)
    In the Casino Royale novel, Bond loses his beloved supercharged Bentley in a rollover wreck orchestrated by his nemesis Le Chiffre. Fleming's two sentences evoking the crash total 107 words, their propulsion driven in part by six uses of the word and; coincidentally, that's the same number of ands that are in the book's opening paragraph, excerpted above. It's a word that by its nature amplifies, continues. Likewise, James Bond keeps going. The most recent film, "No Time To Die," came out in September 2021. There's been no definitive word on who will play Bond, succeeding Daniel Craig's run as 007 in five movies over 15 years, starting in 2006.
    Speculating on the casting, an Esquire magazine headline mentioned candidates and said they "are all in the running for the keys to the DB5."


    Written By Barnes. Steve Barnes
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  • RichardTheBruceRichardTheBruce I'm motivated by my Duty.
    Posts: 13,785
    December 5th

    1923: Norman Burton is born--New York City, New York.
    (He dies 29 November 2003 at age 79--Imperial, California.)
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    Norman Burton
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Burton
    Norman Burton
    Born December 5, 1923
    New York City, New York, U.S.
    Died November 29, 2003 (aged 79)
    Imperial, California, U.S.
    Occupation Film, television actor
    Years active 1957–1993
    Norman Burton (December 5, 1923 – November 29, 2003), occasionally credited as Normann Burton, was an American stage film and television actor.

    Early life
    Born in New York City, Burton was a student of The Actor's Studio. After early work on stage, he broke into films with a minor role in Fright (1956).

    Career
    His career in film and television was long and relatively successful, but he never achieved major recognition. He played the Hunt Leader, a gorilla, in the science fiction film Planet of the Apes, notable as being the first ape to be seen by both Taylor and the audience, and also appeared as a (human) army officer in the second sequel Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971). In film, he is perhaps best known for his unconventional (and frequently disparaged) performance as Felix Leiter in the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever (1971). He played Will Giddings, an ill fated engineer, in the action film The Towering Inferno (1974), and his later films included The Gumball Rally (1976), Crimes of Passion (1984) and Deep Space (1988). He played Dennis Christopher's mean and ill fated boss in the slasher Fade To Black (1980).
    On television, he is best known for his performance as Inter-Agency Defense Command's supervisor Joe Atkinson during the second season of the DC Comics-based fantasy adventure drama series The New Adventures of Wonder Woman starring Lynda Carter. He also played Burt Dennis in the situation comedy The Ted Knight Show in the spring of 1978, and appeared as General George Marshall in the 1988 television miniseries War and Remembrance. Throughout his life, Burton was a devotee of the method school of acting, and taught method acting in Lakeside, California.

    Death
    Burton was just six days short of his 80th birthday when he died as a result of an auto accident while returning from Ajijic, Mexico near the California-Arizona state line.
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    Norman Burton (1923–2003) Actor
    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0123680/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

    Filmography
    Actor (89 credits)

    1993 American Ninja 5 - Ambassador Halden
    1992 Live Wire - Senator Victor
    1991 The New Adam-12 (TV Series) - Eric Monroe
    - 211 Pizza (1991) ... Eric Monroe
    1990 Dragnet (TV Series) - Safe Job (1990)
    1990 Thirtysomething (TV Series) - Charley Sayers
    - Arizona (1990) ... Charley Sayers

    1988-1989 War and Remembrance (TV Mini-Series) - Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part XII (1989) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part III (1988) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    - Part I (1988) ... Gen. George C. Marshall
    1988 Shakedown on the Sunset Strip (TV Movie) - Ward Sullivan
    1988 Deep Space - General Randolph
    1988 Bloodsport - Helmer
    1988 Highway to Heaven (TV Series) - Captain Friend
    - Back to Oakland (1988) ... Captain Friend
    1986 Bad Guys - Captain Watkins
    1986 St. Elsewhere (TV Series) - Monsignor Senti
    - Time Heals: Part 1 (1986) ... Monsignor Senti
    1983-1986 Knight Rider (TV Series) - Damon Leland / Barnswell
    - Redemption of a Champion (1986) ... Damon Leland
    - A Nice, Indecent Little Town (1983) ... Barnswell
    1986 Murder, She Wrote (TV Series) - Drew Narramore
    - Trial by Error (1986) ... Drew Narramore
    1985 Pray for Death - Lt. Anderson
    1984 Crimes of Passion - Lou Bateman
    1983 Mausoleum - Dr. Simon Andrews
    1982 Simon & Simon (TV Series) - Carl Emory
    - Fowl Play (1982) ... Carl Emory
    1982 The Facts of Life (TV Series) - Dr. Green
    - The Affair (1982) ... Dr. Green
    1982 CHiPs (TV Series) - Kessler
    - Tiger in the Streets (1982) ... Kessler
    1981 Amy - Caruthers
    1980 Fade to Black - Marty Berger (as Normann Burton)
    1980 To Race the Wind (TV Movie) - Mr. Krents (as Normann Burton)
    1980 Bogie (TV Movie) - Hopkins
    1977-1980 Quincy M.E. (TV Series) - Dr. George Danner / Max
    - Cover-Up (1980) ... Dr. George Danner (as Normann Burton)
    - No Deadly Secret (1977) ... Max (as Normann Burton)

    1979 The Ultimate Impostor (TV Movie) - Papich
    1978 Lou Grant (TV Series) - Franklin Nash
    - Conflict (1978) ... Franklin Nash (as Normann Burton)
    1978 Project U.F.O. (TV Series) - Dr. Phil Greiner
    - Sighting 4022: The Camouflage Incident (1978) ... Dr. Phil Greiner (as Normann Burton)
    1978 The Eddie Capra Mysteries (TV Series)
    - Murder, Murder (1978) ... (as Normann Burton)
    1978 Insight (TV Series) - Sam
    - The Flawed Magi (1978) ... Sam (as Normann Burton)
    1978 The Ted Knight Show (TV Mini-Series) - Burt Dennis
    - The Honeymoon Game (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Sweet Sixteen (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - The Wedding (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Hop to It (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - My Hero (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    - Strike (1978) ... Burt Dennis
    1977 Wonder Woman (TV Series) - Joe Atkinson
    - The Man Who Made Volcanoes (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - I Do, I Do (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Queen and the Thief (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Pied Piper (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - Knockout (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Bermuda Triangle Crisis (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Man Who Could Move the World (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - Anschluss '77 (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    - The Return of Wonder Woman (1977) ... Joe Atkinson (as Normann Burton)
    1977 Murder in Peyton Place (TV Movie) - Jay Kamens (as Normann Burton)
    1977 Dog and Cat (TV Series) - Tedesco
    - Dead Skunk (1977) ... Tedesco
    1974-1976 The Rockford Files (TV Series) - Markell / Melvyn Moss
    - Return to the 38th Parallel (1976) ... Markell (as Normann Burton)
    - The Big Ripoff (1974) ... Melvyn Moss (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Rhoda (TV Series) - Ben Levy
    - Meet the Levys (1976) ... Ben Levy (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Black Sheep Squadron (TV Series) - General Carl Gant
    - Presumed Dead (1976) ... General Carl Gant (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Scorchy - Chief Frank O'Brien (as Normann Burton)
    1976 The Gumball Rally - Lieutenant Roscoe (as Normann Burton)
    1976 Harry O (TV Series) - Dr. Lusk
    - Death Certificate (1976) ... Dr. Lusk (as Normann Burton)
    1975-1976 Lincoln (TV Mini-Series) - General Ulysses S. Grant
    - The Last Days (1976) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    - The Unwilling Warrior (1975) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    - Sad Figure, Laughing (1975) ... General Ulysses S. Grant (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Conspiracy of Terror (TV Movie) - Lt. Rossos (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Baretta (TV Series) - Councilman
    - The Goodbye Orphan Annie Blues (1975) ... Councilman (as Normann Burton)
    1975 The Reincarnation of Peter Proud - Dr. Frederick Spear (as Normann Burton)
    1975 Force Five (TV Movie) - Arthur Haberman
    1974 Let's Call It Quits (Short) - Bill
    1974 The Towering Inferno - Giddings (as Normann Burton)
    1974 Kojak (TV Series) - 'Fish' Fisher
    - The Best War in Town (1974) ... 'Fish' Fisher (as Normann Burton)
    1974 Planet of the Apes (TV Series) - Yalu
    - The Interrogation (1974) ... Yalu (as Normann Burton)
    1974 The Terminal Man - Det. Capt. Anders
    1974 The Magician (TV Series) - Malloy
    - The Illusion of Black Gold (1974) ... Malloy (as Normann Burton)
    1974 The F.B.I. (TV Series) - Bren
    - Selkirk's War (1974) ... Bren
    1973 Hit! - The Director
    1973 Save the Tiger - Fred Mirrell
    1972 A Great American Tragedy (TV Movie)
    1972 The Partners (TV Series) - Romero
    - The 217 in 402 (1972) ... Romero
    1972 Fuzz - Police Commissioner Nelson
    1971 They Call It Murder (TV Movie) - Movie Director
    1971 Diamonds Are Forever - Leiter
    1971 Escape from the Planet of the Apes - Army Officer
    1971 Simon, King of the Witches - Willard Rackum
    1971 Jud - Uncle Hornkel
    1970 R.P.M. - Coach McCurdy

    1969 Land of the Giants (TV Series) - Sergeant
    - The Chase (1969) ... Sergeant
    1968 The Felony Squad (TV Series) - Solly Hirt
    - Matched for Murder (1968) ... Solly Hirt
    1968 Judd for the Defense (TV Series) - Roger Helmsman
    - Transplant (1968) ... Roger Helmsman
    1968 Planet of the Apes - Hunt Leader
    1968 I Spy (TV Series) - Brandon
    - Tag, You're It (1968) ... Brandon
    1967 Valley of the Dolls - Neely O'Hara's Director (uncredited)
    1967 Days of Our Lives (TV Series) - Cab Driver
    - Episode #1.391 (1967) ... Cab Driver
    1966 The Hero (TV Series)
    - The Day They Shot Sam Garrett (1966)
    1966 Get Smart (TV Series) - Control Agent
    - The Decoy (1966) ... Control Agent (uncredited)
    1966 I Dream of Jeannie (TV Series) - Mr. Asher
    - What's New, Poodle Dog? (1966) ... Mr. Asher
    1966 Love on a Rooftop (TV Series)
    - 117 Ways to Cook Hamburger (1966)
    1965 Gunsmoke (TV Series) - Ed
    - The Reward (1965) ... Ed
    1965 Wild Seed - Policeman
    1965 The Farmer's Daughter (TV Series) - Mr. Hilmer
    - Never Listen to Rumors (1965) ... Mr. Hilmer
    1965 Bewitched (TV Series) - Moving Man
    - Pleasure O'Riley (1965) ... Moving Man
    1963 The Fugitive (TV Series) - Car Salesman
    - See Hollywood and Die (1963) ... Car Salesman (uncredited)
    1963 The Twilight Zone (TV Series) - Office Worker
    - Miniature (1963) ... Office Worker (uncredited)
    1963 Sam Benedict (TV Series) - Lt. Warren Jones
    - Some Fires Die Slowly (1963) ... Lt. Warren Jones
    1961-1962 The Untouchables (TV Series) - Solly / Wally Dagan
    - The Floyd Gibbons Story (1962) ... Solly
    - 90-Proof Dame (1961) ... Wally Dagan
    1962 Hand of Death - Chief Homicide Investigator
    1962 Shannon (TV Series) - John Herman
    - Dolphin and the Mermaid (1962) ... John Herman
    1962 Womanhunt
    1961 Checkmate (TV Series) - Lou Lewis
    - Kill the Sound (1961) ... Lou Lewis
    1961 The New Breed (TV Series) - Poulos
    - Death of a Ghost (1961) ... Poulos
    1960 Pretty Boy Floyd - Bill Courtney

    1956 Fright - Thompkins - Reporter

    Archive footage (2 credits)

    2000 Inside 'Diamonds Are Forever' (Video documentary short) - Felix Leiter
    1980 Life, Liberty and Pursuit on the Planet of the Apes (TV Movie) - Yalu
    Planet of the Apes
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    Escape from the Planet of the Apes
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    Diamonds Are Forever
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    1944: Jeroen Krabbé is born--Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands.

    1974: The Hollywood Reporter reports on a United Artists advertising campaign for The Man With the Golden Gun that put Christopher Lee, Maud Adams, and Hervé Villechaize on a tour of eight cities across two weeks. (At a cost of about $25,000 and recalling Hollywood promotions of old said EON's publicity executive Jerry Juroe.)

    1976: The 007 Stage officially opens at Pinewood Studios, former British Prime Minister Harold Wilson in attendance. Construction began March 1976 supporting the film production of The Spy Who Loved Me. Available for other film-making thereafter.
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    1976: The Los Angeles Times reports on producer Albert R. Broccoli pursuing Catherine Deneuve, Marthe Keller, and Dominique Sanda. Then deferring to Barbara Bach. “…Remember this: the money I’ve saved by not using a well-known actress I spent on that marvelous ski stunt.”
    Catherine Deneuve
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    Marthe Keller
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    Dominique Sanda
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    Rick Sylvester
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    1985: Halálvágta (Death Gallop) released in Hungary.
    Eventual DVD and Blu-ray covers.
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    1991: James Bond Jr. in syndication releases episode 59 of 65 - "The Thing in the Ice" in Antarctica.
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    James Bond Jr - The Thing in the Ice
    Season 1 - Episode 59
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0807126/?ref_=tt_ep_nx
    The gang is in Antarctica, where they see the massive devastation caused by a metallic monster with acid-spitting tentacles.
    Directed by Bill Hutten, Tony Love
    Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)
    Andy Heyward ... (developer)
    Robby London ... (developer) (as Robbie London)
    Michael G. Wilson ... (developer)

    Cast (in credits order)
    Jeff Bennett ... Horace 'IQ' Boothroyd / Nick Nack / Scumlord (voice)
    Corey Burton ... James Bond Jr. (voice)
    Mona Marshall ... Tracy Milbanks (voice)
    Brian Stokes Mitchell ... Coach Mitchell (voice) (as Brian Mitchell)
    Jan Rabson ... Gordon 'Gordo' Leiter / Jaws / Reginald Farragut (voice)
    Susan Silo ... Phoebe Farragut (voice)
    Simon Templeman ... Trevor Noseworthy IV (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Mari Devon Mari Devon ... (voice)

    Produced by
    Bill Hutten ... producer
    Walt Kubiak ... supervising producer
    Tony Love ... producer
    Fred Wolf ... executive producer
    Music by
    Dennis C. Brown
    Larry Brown
    James Bond Jr Episode 59 - The Thing in the Ice

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    2002: Die Another Day released in Malaysia and Singapore.
    2008: 007 released in Venezuela.
    2012: Skyfall becomes the highest grossing film to that time in the UK.

    2018: Playboy highlights Dynamite Comics' James Bond Origin: A Train to Catch.
    Bob Q, artist. Jeff Parker, writer.
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    James Bond Origin: A Train to Catch
    https://www.playboy.com/read/james-bond-origin-a-train-to-catch

    It's the British operative as you've never seen him in this exclusive-to-Playboy pre-007 adventure
    Written by Jeff Parker Illustration by Bob Q Published on December 05, 2018

    Jeff Parker/Bob Q/Jordie Bellaire/Simon Bowland/Nate Cosby
    James Bond has enlivened PLAYBOY's pages for nearly 60 years, beginning with the March 1960 publication of The Hildebrand Rarity, Ian Fleming's short story about the dashing 007's adventures. Before his fiction appeared in the magazine, Fleming dropped by the Playboy Building in Chicago, where he displayed a curiosity about real-life local villains, asking the editors, "I don't suppose you could introduce me to any of the Mafia chaps?" Fleming's famous hero, of course, is a secret agent of the British government. But how did Bond become the daring operative we know and love? For one chapter of his pre-007 backstory, we turn to this exclusive installment of James Bond Origin from the creative team at Dynamite Comics.
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    2018: Dynamite Entertainment releases James Bond 007 #2.
    Greg Pak, writer. Marc Laming, artist.
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    JAMES BOND 007 #2
    https://www.dynamite.com/htmlfiles/viewProduct.html?PRO=C72513027532502011
    SKU: C72513027532502011
    Cover A: Dave Johnson
    UPC: 725130275325 02011
    Cover B: Marguerite Sauvage
    UPC: 725130275325 02021
    Cover C: Clayton Henry
    UPC: 725130275325 02031
    Cover D: Marc Laming
    UPC: 725130275325 02041
    Writer: Greg Pak
    Art: Marc Laming
    Genre: Action/Adventure
    Publication Date: December 2018
    Format: Comic Book
    Page Count: 32 Pages
    ON SALE DATE: 12/5/2018
    The ODD JOB epic continues, by superstars GREG PAK (Planet Hulk, Mech Cadet Yu) and MARC LAMING (Star Wars, Wonder Woman)!
    Somewhere in the world, a smuggler is trying to deliver a mysterious briefcase to the world's most deadly terrorists. 007 must get this case and is licensed to kill anyone that gets in his way.

    This is the story of the man who gets in his way.
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