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Category: Sean Connery

Oct 20 2008

Ian Fleming Never Wanted Sean Connery as 007

While it has long been known that Sean Connery was not Ian Fleming’s first choice to play James Bond, it has just been revealed that things were far worse than anyone ever knew. During an October 15 interview with the South Bank Show, Connery told interviewer Melvin Bragg that he had “little time” for Fleming and that 007′s creator was initially angered that a “working class Scot” had earned the role.

Sean Connery and Ian Fleming on the set of Dr. No

Sean Connery and Ian Fleming on the set of Dr. No

These recent revelations come on the heels of another 50 year old secret: that Ian Fleming had a list of seven actors for the part including Cary Grant and David Niven, but not Connery. In fact, according to Connery, he and Fleming never met until they were on the set of Dr. No. After running through a list of his preferences, they came to Connery because they “couldn’t afford most of the people they wanted.”

This is all especially interesting, as Fleming certainly warmed up to Connery during his final years of life, to the extent that in his final Bond novels Fleming gave 007 a Scottish background.

According to the Daily Express:
Now Sir Sean has revealed more about tension behind the scenes as cameras started rolling on the first Bond film in 1961. In an interview with Melvin Bragg to be shown on the South Bank Show on Wednesday, Sir Sean says he had little time for the secret agent’s creator.

He says: “I never got introduced to Fleming until I was well into the movie but I know he was not happy with me as the choice.

“What was it he called me, or told somebody? That I was an over-developed stunt man. He never said it to me. When I did eventually meet him he was very interesting, erudite and a snob – a real snob.

“But his company was very good for a limited time for me.”

Fleming’s first choice of actor to play 007 in Dr No, the first Bond book to reach the big screen, was Cary Grant – but he was too expensive. David Niven, James Mason, Patrick McGoohan, Rex Harrison, Richard Burton and Stewart Granger were also on his list. Niven turned down the role because he felt he was too old.

Sir Sean, who confesses he was surprised to get the part, says: “They couldn’t afford most of the people they wanted. That was the start. They were seeing people, they were advertising in the papers. Then they brought me in to see them and they wanted me.”

Sir Sean’s performance won Fleming over and in later books he gave 007 a partly Scots ancestry. Sir Sean tells the South Bank Show he was convinced that the Bond movies were doomed to failure.

“Anybody that says it was going to be a success is lying. I must say that from the beginning. I think about it quite a bit. If I see it on a screen I think, yeah, they could have done this better or that better.”

He says he believes now that the series can continue for years. “The ingredients are all there for a kind of movie that people want to see. It’s very good, entertaining value. It’s a spectrum of actors, from myself to Daniel Craig, who I thought was fantastic in the role.”

To discuss this story and all the latest James Bond news with 007 fans from around the world, please visit the MI6 Debriefing Room

Oct 06 2008

Connery’s Book Bores While Moore’s Soars

Sean Connery's Biography: Being a Scot

Sean Connery's Biography: Being a Scot

Despite being the far more popular James Bond, it seems that the reading public much prefers Roger Moore’s memoir’s over Sean Connery’s. In the weeks since its release, “Being a Scott” has only sold a meager 5,000 copies in the UK.

Scotland on Sunday writes, “It was billed as the Scottish publishing event of the decade, but Sir Sean Connery’s book of musings on the nation has fallen flatter than a badly shaken Martini. Scotland on Sunday can reveal that the Bond star’s book Being A Scot has sold a “dire” 5,000 copies in the UK, despite receiving saturation coverage in the press and taking top billing at the Edinburgh International Book Festival.

Worse still, the most famous living Scot looks set to suffer the indignity of being comprehensively outgunned in sales by Roger Moore, who succeeded him in the role of 007 and released his own autobiography last week.

It has also emerged that Connery’s book was last week being outsold by an astonishing 14-to-one by the decidedly unglamorous memoirs of TV chef Clarissa Dickson Wright.

Literary data experts Nielsen BookScan confirmed that total sales of the tome were 4,620 last Friday and had dwindled to fewer than 500 copies a week.

Connery’s book, which was co-written with film-maker Murray Grigor, features childhood reminiscences and comment about Scottish culture and politics and avoids insights into his private life and film career.

A spokesman for publishers Michael O’Mara, who released Moore’s book, My Word Is My Bond, on Thursday, laughed out loud when he heard Connery’s sales figures and said he was “very confident” Moore’s title would outsell Being A Scot.

Graham Rye, the editor of the James Bond magazine, 007, made a similar prediction.”Roger Moore’s book will ultimately sell more than Sean’s because it is a more accessible read and is full of fun and amusing showbusiness anecdotes.

“Sean’s book is far more highbrow and educational. It was a very honourable idea, but I don’t know if it was a particularly marketable idea.

“The general book-buying public were after an intimate biography about Sean Connery the man.

“If he had produced that sort of book then I’m sure it would have flown off the shelves.”

Rye added that he was disappointed by “unforgivable” picture caption errors in Being A Scot. A picture of Connery in the 1970s sci-fi epic Zardoz is billed as an early James Bond shot and a family outing to see a Nat King Cole film in 1951 is wrongly labelled as an Edinburgh premiere of From Russia With Love.
One publishing industry insider said: “Connery’s sales are absolutely abysmal.”

To read more, please visit the source: Scotland on Sunday.

To discuss this story and all the latest James Bond news with 007 fans from around the world, please visit the MI6 Debriefing Room



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