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James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
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1917: Major Valentine Fleming is killed during World War I shelling on the Western Front at Gillemont Farm area,
Picardy, France. Eulogized by close friend Winston Churchill. A fellow officer calls him "absolutely our best officer".
1936: Anthony Zerbe is born--Long Beach, California.
1941: Lieutenant Commander Ian Fleming discusses Operation Goldeneye with other Allied intelligence
organizations at Lisbon, Portugal.
(Born 7 November 1924--Bethnal Green, London, England.)
(Born 3 January 1921--New York City, New York.)
Bill Gold, designer. Brian Bysouth, artist.
Concept art by Boris Vallejo, as commissioned by Bill Gold.
1960: Comic strip From Russia with Love begins its run in The Daily Express.
(Finishes 1 February 1960. 488-583) John McLusky, artist. Henry Gammidge, writer.
Swedish 1980 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1980.php3?s=comics&id=02192
Danish 1966 http://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/tag/john-mclusky/page/2/
1967: Roger Moore as The Saint debuts on NBC-TV.
the Baltic coast of East Germany a nuclear
submarine of the Royal Navy surfaces under
the cloak of darkness. James Bond and two
marines slip quietly from the forward hatch
into their powered inflatable and set off for a
lonely beach where they are to collect two
young women who have to get out in their
socks. Planted to seduce the communist agents to
run for cover in the West, they have been
rumbled by the other side. Bond little knows
that this routine exercise is but the prelude to a
nerve-racking game of bluff and double bluff,
played with consummate skill by his own chief
M against the East German HVA and the elit
branch of the KGB, formed out of Bond's old
adversary SMERSH.
Over a plain lunch in a sober dining room
in Blades, Bond learns of M's predicament. he
cannot tell the police what he knows about the
series of grisly murders of young women,
found with their tongues removed, which
occupy the day's headlines. Two of his
undercover 'plants' have gone; Bond must find
three others and conduct them to safety before
they meet a similar fate. the first he spirits
away from her Mayfair salon just as the next
strike is made, taking her with him to the Irish
Republic in pursuit of the second. But the
urbane HVA boss, Maxim Smolin, is ahead of
him this time, despite the astute ministrations
of the Irish police. The KGB is soon on the
scene, but nothing is at all what it seems, and
Bond finds he needs all his wits to negotiate the
labyrinth of double-crossing that is to lead him
to a bewildering showdown in a remote corner
of the Kowloon province of Hong Kong.
There, with only the trusted belt of secret
weapons specially devised by Q branch, he has
to fight a terrifying duel in the dark, with all
the cards in the hands of his opponents. No
Deals, Mister Bond is the sixth and by far the
best of John Gardner's OO7 adventures. [/quote]
[img][/img]
2009: Daniel Craig offers the opinion he'd like Moneypenny and Q to return.
2012: Activision releases a trailer for their 007 Legends.
1970: On Her Majesty's Secret Service released in the Republic of Korea.
1977: Bond comic strip When the Wizard Awakes ends its run in The Daily Express.
(Started 30 January 1977. 1-54) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
Swedish 1978 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1978.php3?s=comics&id=02165
San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein.
B.J. Worth skydives to City Hall.
Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco. More recent photographs.
1960: Comic strip Dr. No begins its run in The Daily Express. (Finishes 1 October 1960. 584-697)
John McLusky, artist. Peter O'Donnell, writer.
https://www.comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?Piece=1507554&GSub=191645
Swedish 1973 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1973.php3?s=comics&id=01777
(Döden På Jamaica (Death At Jamaica- Dr No))
Danish 1964 http://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007dk-no-4-1964/
Swedish https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1982.php3?s=comics&id=02218
2017: Roger Moore dies at age 89--Crans-Montana, Valais, Switzerland.
(Born 14 October 1927--Stockwell, London, England.)
Roger Moore dies at 89; debonair British actor played James Bond in 7 movies
By Steve Chawkins - May 23, 2017 | 7:20 AM
Sir Roger Moore started acting in the 1940s and continued the craft up to his death.
http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-roger-moore-snap-story.html From 1973 to 1985, Moore was Agent 007 in "Live and Let Die," "The Man with the Golden Gun," "The Spy Who Loved Me," "Moonraker," "For Your Eyes Only," "Octopussy" and "A View to a Kill."
He was often compared with Sean Connery, the Scottish actor who originated the film role and in many ways was the prototypical Bond.
"I'm often asked, 'Who is the best Bond?'" Moore wrote in his 2012 book, Bond on Bond.
"Apart from myself?" I modestly enquire. "It has to be Sean."
"Sean was Bond. He created Bond," Moore wrote. "He was a bloody good 007."
From 1962 to 1969, Moore starred on TV's "The Saint" as the rakish Simon Templar, a modern-day Robin Hood who targeted wealthy villains. In his later years, he was a globetrotting goodwill ambassador for UNICEF, a job he embraced after his friend Audrey Hepburn cajoled him into it. In 2003, he was knighted for his charity efforts.
https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-roger-moore-snap-story.html
But he was best known as Bond, James Bond—the dashing British spy who, in Moore's hands, never met a woman or a pun he could resist.
In private, he had distinctly un-Bondlike qualities.
He was a hypochondriac. He feared heights and loathed guns, perhaps because a friend accidentally shot him in the leg with an air rifle when he was 15. And he didn't care for vodka martinis, Bond's trademark cocktail; Moore said that if he had just 24 hours left to live, he would order a dry Tanqueray gin martini, with three olives on the side.
In contrast to Connery's dark, rough-hewn good looks, Moore was fair. Moore was one of seven big-screen Bonds. The others were Connery, followed by George Lazenby, Pierce Brosnan, Timothy Dalton and Daniel Craig. David Niven was Bond in "Casino Royale," a 1967 spoof that was not part of Eon Productions' "official" Bond franchise.
At 58, when Moore announced that he would finally hang up his Walther PPK, he was the oldest of all the Bonds.
Moore recalled that when he took his young son Geoffrey to lunch one afternoon in the early 1970s, he endured an interrogation that would rattle even the suavest superspy.
Asked if he could beat up anybody in the restaurant, Moore said yes, of course he could.
But Geoffrey persisted.
"What about if James Bond came in?"
"I'm going to be James Bond," Moore reminded him.
"No, I mean the real one," Geoffrey said. "Sean Connery."
Decades later, Moore delighted in telling the story of his son's unnerving frankness – while noting that he had gone on to star as Bond in seven movies over 12 years, and had so thoroughly distinguished himself from his most celebrated predecessor that the words "shaken, not stirred" never passed his lips.
Moore later said that Craig had the best build and better acting abilities than the other Bonds.
The subject has been debated as long as maniacs bent on world conquest have sprung open trapdoors and fed their enemies to the ravenous sharks below.
Compared to Connery, Moore conveyed "much more of the flavor of the Etonian dropout that Fleming envisaged," wrote Steven Jay Rubin in "The James Bond Films: A Behind The Scenes History."
He "brought to the role a sophisticated sense of comedy which was not a feature of Connery's style."
When making love to sexy "Bond girls," Moore managed to toss off one bad double-entendre after another without being thrown out of bed. Confronting the world's most demented thugs, like the steel-toothed, flesh-ripping Jaws (played by the towering Richard Kiel), he could seem almost natural when explaining that his new friend had "just dropped in for a quick bite."
Moore claimed there wasn't much of a trick to it; he was going for laughs, he said, not high drama.
"I only had three expressions as Bond," he joked. "Right eyebrow raised, left eyebrow raised, and eyebrows crossed when grabbed by Jaws."
Critics were sometimes unkind.
The New Yorker's Pauline Kael likened Moore in "The Spy Who Loved Me" to "an office manager who is turning into dead wood but hanging on to collect his pension."
Moore himself confessed to feeling too old for the Bond role a couple of years before he gave it up.
"After 'Octopussy,' I resigned myself to thoughts of retirement," he said. "There are only so many stunts an aging actor can tackle, and only so many young girls he can kiss without looking like a perverted grandfather."
Born Oct. 14, 1927, in London, Roger George Moore was the only child of police officer George Alfred Moore and his wife Lily Pope Moore.
As a teenager, he showed some talent for art and landed a part-time job as an animator-trainee at a movie studio that made World War II military training films.
He also worked as an extra on films in London and, for two terms, attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.
"They taught me to talk 'properly' without a South London accent, the art of mime, fencing, ballet (I wasn't too keen on that) and something called 'basic movement,' which consisted of wearing swimming shorts and bending and stretching whilst swinging my arms," he wrote in his 2008 memoir, "My Word is My Bond."
One of his classmates was Lois Maxwell, who became the brisk but playful secretary Miss Moneypenny in 14 Bond films.
Moore struggled like many other actors.
He picked up jobs in London plays, but also modeled for women's magazines and knitwear ads. In 1953, he appeared on Broadway in "A Pin to See the Peepshow," a play that opened and closed on the same day.
Still, his performances in early TV dramas brought him recognition from Hollywood, where he signed on with MGM and appeared with Van Johnson and Elizabeth Taylor in "The Last Time I Saw Paris" (1954). Other films followed, including "The King's Thief" (1955) with David Niven, a close friend who cavorted with Moore for decades at their Swiss chalets and in Monaco, where Moore settled to avoid what he felt were excessive British taxes.
Before Moore's breakthrough role in "The Saint," there were other TV series, including "Ivanhoe" and "The Alaskans." Moore also played James Garner's refined British cousin Beauregarde on the TV western "Maverick."
After "The Saint," Moore starred with Tony Curtis as playboy-investigators in "The Persuaders!" a 1971 series more popular in Europe than in the U.S.
"There was no sudden moment when I was famous," he told the York Press, a British newspaper, in 2014. "It was all sort of gradual. It went from one begging letter a month to 400."
Asked how he dealt with that, he said: "I keep writing them."
He did many other movies but remained most closely identified with Bond. In 1981, he played a Bond wannabe – in actuality a girdle magnate – in the zany "Cannonball Run" with Burt Reynolds, Farrah Fawcett, Sammy Davis Jr. and other big names.
Moore took home a best-acting Oscar in 1973—but kept it for less than 24 hours.
He and Liv Ullman were presenters when Native American activist Sacheen Littlefeather declined the award on behalf of Marlon Brando for his title role in "The Godfather." Moore took the statuette to his overnight digs at the home of Albert "Cubby" Broccoli, the Bond producer, where armed guards picked it up the next morning.
Moore was married to ice dancer Doorn van Steyn; British actress Dorothy Squires; and Luisa Mattioli, an Italian actress he met in Rome while filming "Romulus and The Sabines" (1961). Those marriages ended in divorce.
In 2002, he married Kristina "Kiki" Throlstrup, a former neighbor on the French Riviera who connected with Moore over their individual struggles with cancer.
In addition to Throlstrup, his survivors include the children he had with Mattioli: Geoffrey, Deborah and Christian.
With typical self-effacement and Bondian charm, Moore described all his wives as "lovely ladies with bad taste in men."
1931: Michael Lonsdale is born--Paris, France.
1939: Ian Fleming is introduced to Admiral John Godfrey.
1949: Roger Deakins is born--Torquay, Devon, England.
1985: A View to a Kill gets general release in the United States.
2016: Burt Kwouk OBE dies at age 85--Hampstead, London.
(Born 18 July 1930--Warrington, Cheshire, England.)
May 25th
1917: The Times publishes the obituary Winston Churchill penned for his close friend--"Valentine Fleming. An Appreciation".
1921: Harold Lane (Hal) David is born--Brooklyn, New York City, New York. (He dies 1 September 2012 at age 91--West Hollywood, California.)
2018: Bond at Bletchley Park, once the central site for British codebreakers during World War II, hosts Illustrations and Inspirations which highlights a Fleming connection. Runs through October.
1909: Richard Maibaum is born--New York City, New York.
(He dies 4 January 1991 at age 81--Santa Monica, California.)
2011: Hodder & Stoughton publish Jeffery Deaver's Bond novel Carte Blanche .
1922: Christopher Lee is born--Belgravia, London. (He dies 7 June 2015 at age 93--Chelsea, London.)
1967: Comic strip Octopussy ends its run in The Daily Express. (Started 14 November 1966. 264-428)
Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
Italian 1977 http://www.007collector.com/comic-jb007-no-16/
Spanish 1989 https://en.todocoleccion.net/comics/james-bond-numero-04-octopussy~x116600976
Swedish 1986 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1986.php3?s=comics&id=02296
Swedish 1968
2008: A press party on the HMS Exeter anticipates the release of the Sebastian Faulks Bond novel Devil May Care. Includes delivery of copies by speedboat on the Thames and two Lynx helicopters.
1908: Ian Lancaster Fleming is born--Mayfair, London, England.
(He dies 12 August 1964 at age 56--Canterbury, Kent, England.)
1908: The birth date of Ernst Stavro Blofeld from the pages of On Her Majesty's Secret Service by Ian Fleming.
1944: Gladys Knight is born--Oglethorpe, Georgia.
2008: James Bond, Bentley Motors and Penguin Books publish a special, limited edition of Devil May Care.
2008: Pengiun OO7 publishes Bond novel Devil May Care by Sebastian Faulks.
May 28th Addendum
1908: The birth date of Ernst Stavro Blofeld from the pages of On Her Majesty's Secret Service by Ian Fleming.
1920: Clifton James is born--Spokane, Washington. (He dies 15 April 2017 at age 96--Gladstone, Oregon.)
1967: Comic strip The Hildebrand Rarity begins its run in The Daily Express.
(Finishes 16 December 1967. 429-602) Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
Hindi https://www.comicsroyale.com/foreign-reprints#/star-comics/
Swedish 1977 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1977.php3?s=comics&id=01952
Swedish 1986 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1986.php3?s=comics&id=02296
Danish 1969 http://www.bond-o-rama.dk/en/jb007-dk-no17-1969/
1963: Bosley Crowther's review of Dr. No goes to print in The New York Times.
(The Screen: 'Dr. No,' Mystery Spoof; Film Is First Made of Ian Fleming Novels Sean Connery Stars as James Bond.)
2017: Molly Peters dies at age 75. (Born 15 March 1942--Walsham-le-Willows, Suffolk, England.)
https://www.diffordsguide.com/on-this-day/may/30
1907: Robert Peter Fleming is born--Mayfair, London, England.
(He dies 18 August 1971 at age 64--Black Mount, Scotland.)
(He dies 3 July 2017 at age 90--Brighton, East Sussex, England.)
Boothroyd even did duty as Armorer for S.H.I.E.L.D., Marvel universe.
1991: Putnam publishes John Gardner's eleventh Bond novel The Man From Barbarossa in the US.
2018: Jonathan Cape publishes Anthony Horowitz’s second James Bond novel Forever and a Day.
This Month:
1962: Argosy magazine publishes the Fleming short story "Berlin Escape" (aka "The Living Daylights").
https://illustrated007.blogspot.com/2013/01/ian-fleming-bibliography.html
1942: Tom Mankiewicz is born--Los Angeles California. (He dies 31 July 2010 at age 68--Los Angeles, California.)
1963: 医者はいらない (Isha wa iranai, or We Don't Want Doctors!) released in Japan. (Title improved later.)
Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
Swedish 1977 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1977.php3?s=comics&id=01952
Simon Jowett, writer. David Jackson, artist. David Lloyd, cover.
Issue #2
I think these are confirmed.
1944: Marvin Hamlisch is born--New York City, New York.
(He dies 6 August 2012 at age 68--Westwood, Los Angeles, California.)
Yaroslav Horak, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
1942: Frank McRae is born--Memphis, Tennessee.
1967: Record World reviews the United Artists soundtrack LP You Only Live Twice.
April 28th, 2017 by Andrew
https://nancysinatra.com/blog/2017/04/nancy-meets-james-bond-you-only-live-twice-at-50/
(Born 24 December 1941--Blackburn, Lancashire, England.)
1927: Geoffrey Palmer is born--London, England.
1963: Agente 007 contra el Dr. No (Agent 007 against Dr. No) released in Barcelona, Spain.
1981: Bond comic strip The Paradise Plot ends its run in The Daily Express. (Began 20 August 1981. 175-378)
John McLusky, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
https://www.harringtonbooks.co.uk/pictures/medium/48318.JPG[/img]
Swedish 1982 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1982.php3?s=comics&id=02218
1950: Malcolm Sinclair is born--London, England.
2004: Virginia North dies at age 58--West Sussex, England. (Born 24 April 1946--London, England.)
1983: The 13th Bond film Octopussy premieres at the Odeon Leicester Square, London.
Attendees include Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of Wales.
1997: BOND 18 films Elliott Carver's oratio interruptis/
2011: EON Productions confirms Naomie Harris in discussions for a role in BOND 23.
2019: Planned public reading and discussion of Fleming's short story "From a View to a Kill". Also Friday. Tacoma, Washington.
1940: Sir Tom Jones is born--Pontypridd, Wales.
1982: Comic strip Deathmask begins its run in The Daily Express. (Finishes 2 February 1983. 379-552)
John McLusky, artist. Jim Lawrence, writer.
Swedish 1983 https://www.mi6-hq.com/sections/comics/semic_1983.php3?s=comics&id=02239
2017: Dynamite Entertainment releases Bond comic Black Box #4.
Twenty-five years ago to the day, eh? Ah, what a day that was... Bond was genuinely coming back after so many years away and *would* be a fixture in the 1990s. It was quite something back then (Even if Hollywood-handsome PBro clearly needed a good haircut and shave for the role ;) ).
Indeed. The relief was palpable.