• [NEWS] Female James Bond suggested in 1950s

    From Your Name@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 9 11:08:33 2024
    Although the idea wasn't for "Politically Correct" reasons, but more "anti-Politically Correct" reasons (the producer thought James Bond was
    "kind of stupid". Also lots of American actors were audtioned, before
    Sean Conery got the role, much to Ian Flemming's initial disagreement
    ...


    Making James Bond a Woman Was Pitched Before 1962's 'Dr. No' Got Made;
    Ian Fleming Met Sean Connery and Said: 'I Want an Elegant Man, Not
    This Roughneck'
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    Lashana Lynch became the first woman to own the 007 title in the 2021
    James Bond tentpole "No Time to Die," but it turns out a plan to make
    James Bond a woman was actually pitched over 60 years prior. In
    Nicholas Shakespeare's upcoming biography of Bond author Ian Fleming,
    titled "Ian Fleming: The Complete Man," it's confirmed that producer
    Gregory Ratoff floated the idea of casting Susan Hayward in a film
    adaptation of Fleming's first Bond novel "Casino Royale."

    Shakespeare writes in the biography (via IndieWire): "Since the
    mid-1950s, many well-known actors had been approached [to play Bond].
    Gregory Ratoff had the arresting idea of having Bond played by a
    woman, Susan Hayward. Ian had entertained several possibilities, from
    Richard Burton ('I think that Richard Burton would be by far the best
    James Bond'), to James Stewart ('I wouldn't at all mind him as Bond if
    he can slightly anglicise his accent'), to James Mason ('We might have
    to settle for him')."

    Hayward was a five-time Oscar nominee for best actress and won the
    prize for 1958's "I Want to Live!" She earned nominations for 1947's
    "Smash-Up, the Story of a Woman," 1949's "My Foolish Heart," 1952's
    "With a Song in My Heart," and 1955's "I'll Cry Tomorrow," the latter
    of which won her best actress honors at the Cannes Film Festival. She
    also starred in the infamous "Valley of the Dolls."

    Legendary screenwriter Lorenzo Semple Jr. spoke to Variety back in 2012
    and claimed at the time that Ratoff was interested in Hayward because
    "frankly, we thought [Bond] was kind of unbelievable and as I recall,
    even kind of stupid. So Gregory thought the solution was to make Bond a
    woman, 'Jane Bond' if you will."

    The idea was apparently never a serious consideration for Fleming, who
    ultimately wanted to make Richard Burton the first on-screen James
    Bond. Burton declined. Shakespeare's book reveals Peter Finch, Cary
    Grant, Dirk Bogarde, Trevor Howard, Rex Harrison, Richard Todd, Michael
    Redgrave, Patrick McGoohan, Roger Moore (who did end up playing Bond
    later) and Richard Johnson were all considered for 007 as well.

    "We tried twenty or thirty. No major actor would play the part for more
    than one picture, and we couldn't set up a deal with a distributor
    without commitment from a main actor," Fleming's film agent Robert Fenn
    told the author for the book.

    The first James Bond movie to actually get off the ground was 1962's
    "Dr. No," which included the iconic casting of Sean Connery as James
    Bond. However, Fleming was "shocked" when he met Connery in real life
    for the first time "because [Connery] couldn't speak the Queen's
    English."

    "Fleming said, 'He's not my idea of Bond at all, I just want an elegant
    man, not this roughneck,'" Fenn remembered.

    Connery's casting would make him a film icon. He'd reprise the role of
    Bond in five more 007 movies: "From Russia With Love," "Goldfinger,"
    "Thunderball," "You Only Live Twice" and "Diamonds Are Forever."

    "Sean Connery was the right guy in the movie for the right time,"
    longtime Bond producer Michael G. Wilson says in the book. "If it
    hadn't been Sean, who knows? Would it have captured the attention of
    the whole world?"

    "It was the sheer self-confidence he exuded," adds producer Barbara
    Broccoli about Connery. "He walked like the most arrogant son-of-a-gun,
    you've ever seen - as if he owned every bit of Jermyn Street from
    Regent Street to St James. 'That's our Bond,' I said."

    There's currently no James Bond on the big screen following Daniel
    Craig's exit after "No Time to Die." Reports have surfaced in recent
    weeks claiming that Aaron Taylor-Johnson is being cast as the next 007
    on the big screen, although Eon Productions have not yet confirmed.
    Pierce Brosnan, who played Bond in four movies, recently gave
    Taylor-Johnson his blessing.

    "I think the man has the chops and the talent and the charisma to play
    Bond, very much so," Brosnan said of Taylor-Johnson during an interview
    on "The Ray D'Arcy Show," adding: "I read the news about his
    possibilities of being a Bond, so I would definitely tip my hat to the
    fellow."

    Shakespeare's biography "Ian Fleming: The Complete Man" publishes
    April 9.



    <https://variety.com/2024/film/news/james-bond-casting-woman-ian-fleming-sean-connery-roughneck-1235964303/>

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