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Comments
With Dalton it would have been awful.
But to answer your question, OHMSS wouldn't have been as popular and successful as it was back in 69 with the wolffish-looking Dalton in the role. Dalton looked much better with another decade on his face and shoulders. Young actors were also not a box office attraction back then as they are now, mostly consigned to smaller supporting roles or appearing in Disney movies.
He was and turned it down, just as it was offered to Roger Moore who also turned it down.
I think you're just cynical @bondsum like @Mathis1 says he was offered the role. Apparently Cubby wasn't keen intially on Roger and Harry was, but they still went with him.
Are you accusing Timothy Dalton and Cubby Broccoli of lying? You are bold, sir.
Maybe bondsum's really Alistair Campbell, Mathis1? Takes one to know one ...
Well we've only got you countering it.
Hmm....Cubby and Timothy Dalton's word or some nutter on the internet. Tough to decide which is the more credible authority on Timothy Dalton being cast as Bond but I'm veering towards you @bondsum with your years of producing Bond films and being a reputable actor of screen and stage.
Not to mention the denials surrounding Waltz playing Blofeld. :)
I would think the most likely scenario is that they asked Dalton to come in and test for the part and he turned down that offer.
However, looking at the films Tim did during that time period; Wuthering Heights, Lion In Winter, Cromwell, his physical type was very much suited to period costume dramas. He pretty much looked like a college freshman then.
Hypothetically, supposing we were all to be transported back to 1968, laptops and internet included and Tim was one of the candidates to replace Sean, I'd guess many of us might dismiss him as too young or not quite Bondian (the way I feel about Jamie Bell...sorry, wrong thread).
Yes. Years ago on The Arsenio Hall Show he was promoting a play he was in with Whoopi Goldberg and talked about it. He said it wasn't a direct offer, but he was asked about doing it. He felt it would have been foolish to take over from Sean, and the man who did- George Lazenby only ended up doing one film.
For many years I avoided watching OHMSS as I regarded it as the worst Bond film. Just two or three years ago my eyes were opened when I realised it for the masterpiece that it is. I'm just glad that George did played Bond.
He was offered a screentest for OHMSS in 1968 which he turned down. To be fair he wasn't actually offered the role as such but was invited to screentest. He turned that offer down believing that he was too young to play Bond.
It wouldn't be the first time Broccoli got creative with the facts--he also claimed Roger Moore was the original choice of Ian Fleming, who supposedly saw Moore in The Saint...but The Saint didn't air until after Connery was cast!
I bet Charles Helfenstein's The Making of the Living Daylights has the final word on whether Dalton was offered OHMSS.
Back to the topic: I don't think Dalton would had more success than Lazenby. Any lesser known actor who immediately followed Connery would be found wanting by the public, who has imprinted on Sean. Lazenby was something of a sacrificial lamb who paved the way for Moore's acceptance in the role. It also didn't hurt that Moore was an established and well-liked TV star, as Brosnan later was. Craig wasn't, but he had the good fortune to sign on when gritty, beefed-up superheroes were all the rage and he was ably suited to portray such a Bond. Back in 1969, no one had tired of Connery, and whoever replaced him was in for a rough ride.
That said, OHMSS was still one of the top-grossing films of the year, and Lazenby received a fair number of good to grudging reviews. It was his walking away from the role that really harmed his reputation. Neither the the filmmakers and the public wanted to remember a one-off. Dalton was similar trashed for his two-film tenure--during the first years of Brosnan's reign it was common to see Dalton and his films derided as wretched failures.