The Prince George Citizen

No critic, no script and no 007 bad guy could stop Roger Moore

- Adam BERNSTEIN The Washington Post

In a career that seemed impervious to critical drubbing, Roger Moore owed his enduring box office appeal to exceptiona­lly good looks, terrific luck and a self-deprecatin­g charm.

The English actor, who has died at age 89 in Switzerlan­d, became an internatio­nal star in playboy-adventurer roles, first on the hit 1960s TV series The Saint and later for his tongue-in-cheek film portrayal of the dashing spy James Bond.

The Bond franchise, in particular, cemented his fame like no other role. The movie franchise spun off from Ian Fleming’s novels about a British spook who was impudent and resourcefu­l, a wizard with women and weaponry, and impeccably dressed but capable of back-alley brutishnes­s.

James Bond became a cultural phenomenon and one of the best-known screen creations of all time, played variously by Sean Connery, George Lazenby, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel Craig.

Connery helped launch the Bond movies with Dr. No in 1962 and defined the role for many viewers. But Moore was the longestrun­ning Bond – starting with Live and Let Die (1973) and ending six films later with A View to a Kill (1985).

A London policeman’s son, Moore credited his mother with ridding him of a working-class accent that might have impeded his portrayal of the supremely cultured Bond. “She was very particular about behavior and manners and the way you treated people,” he once said. “I got a clip round the ear if I said ‘ain’t.’”

He began performing onscreen in his teens as a spear-carrying extra on the set of a 1945 Shakespear­e production. Despite limited dramatic training, he was propelled to Hollywood stardom by his dazzling blue eyes and enviable blond bouffant. The film critic Rex Reed once wrote that Moore was frequently “prettier than his leading ladies.”

He became a leading man in the 1950s, although in often-prepostero­us roles that haunted him for years. In the Lana Turner costume drama Diane (1956), Moore played a 16th-century French prince with all the elan of what one reviewer described as “a lump of English roast beef.”

Claiming he wanted to beat the critics to the punch, Moore frequently made light of his limitation­s. “My acting range?” he once quipped. “Left eyebrow raised, right eyebrow raised.”

He won a following as Simon Templar on the action-romance series The Saint, which aired for several years on British TV before landing on NBC from 1967 to 1969 and thereafter in perpetual reruns.

The show, loosely based on the Leslie Charteris novels and featuring a rollicking Edwin Astley theme song, starred Moore as a gentleman who uses his wealth and wiles to aid the defenseles­s. As Templar, he ad- dressed the camera in wry asides, luxuriated in fast cars and the company of beautiful women, and was expertly and unfailingl­y tailored.

For Moore, Bond was Simon Templar on a grander scale and more satiric.

“My contention about my ‘light’ portrayal of Bond is this: how can he be a spy, yet walk into any bar in the world and have the bartender recognize him and serve him his favorite drink?” he asked in his 2008 memoir, My Word Is My Bond, written with Gareth Owen.

“Come on,” he continued, “it’s all a big joke.”

Starting with Moore, the series relied increasing­ly on gadgetry and cartoonish excess, such as when Bond jumps across the backs of snapping alligators in Live and Let Die, performs a cork-screw car jump over a broken bridge in The Man With the Golden Gun (1974), skis off a cliff in the opening of The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and evades a guided missile in a pocket-sized jet plane in Octopussy (1983).

Moore, whose other Bond outings included Moonraker (1979) and For Your Eyes Only (1981), continued to underwhelm reviewers, who used words like bland and passionles­s to describe the actor’s way with a line and chemistry with his female co-stars. (He was 57 when he retired from the role.)

Moore’s Bond was cheered in theaters, and it made fortunes for the producers and for the actor. Faced – like so many times before – with the question of who played the better Bond, Moore told an interviewe­r in 2013, “Sean Connery played him as a killer and I’m a lover. I tried to be different – but it involved acting, unfortunat­ely.”

Roger George Moore was born in London on Oct. 14, 1927. After leaving high school at 15, he briefly worked as an apprentice at an animated cartoon studio before being fired for tardiness. He became a movie extra and, while playing a Roman centurion in Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), was spotted by then-assistant director Brian Desmond Hurst.

Hurst paid for Moore’s tuition at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where the actor spent a year before moving on to modeling jobs while earning small parts on stage.

In 1953, he accompanie­d his then-wife, the Welsh-born pop singer Dorothy Squires, on a U.S. tour and found work in live television before winning a contract with MetroGoldw­yn-Mayer Studios. One of his earliest parts was as a tennis player who loses Elizabeth Taylor to Van Johnson in The Last Time I Saw Paris (1954).

Dropped from his MGM contract after the debacle of Diane, Moore was soon picked up by Warner Bros. and received star billing in pictures such as The Miracle (1959), set in the Napoleonic Wars in Spain, and “Gold of the Seven Saints (1961), in which he played an Irish cowboy.

Meanwhile, on television, he played a gold prospector in the adventure series The Alaskans and was a guest star on Maverick, the ABC-TV Western starring James Garner as vagabond gambler Bret Maverick.

The actor had long been a friend of Bond producers Albert “Cubby” Broccoli and Harry Saltzman, and he said they called him one day to offer him the job previously held by Connery and Lazenby. The only requiremen­ts, they said, were that he lose some weight, gain some muscle and trim his hair.

“I started working out like bloody mad and starving and getting my hair cut,” Moore later told Entertainm­ent Weekly. “I finished up saying, ‘Couldn’t you get a thin, bald man to start with?’”

In interviews, Moore described an oftenstorm­y personal life and alluded to his roving eye and propensity to shy away from conflict.

He ended his third marriage, to Italian actress Luisa Mattioli, via a phone call after more than 30 years together. His earlier marriages, to British-born skating star Doorn Van Steyn and pop singer Squires, also ended in divorce.

Survivors include his wife Kristina “Kiki” Tholstrup; and three children from his third marriage, Deborah, Geoffrey and Christian.

The family announced the death, from cancer, but gave no further details of when or where he died.

To escape England’s high tax rate, Moore had homes in Switzerlan­d and Monaco. One of his Swiss neighbors, the actress and humanitari­an Audrey Hepburn, got him involved with UNICEF, the United Nations agency focused on children’s health and safety.

In 1991, Moore became a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, and he helped raise more than $90 million for a worldwide campaign to eliminate iodine deficiency.

For his charitable work, Moore was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2003. Speaking of his UN engagement, he once told the Daily Telegraph, “It’s about the only thing I’ve ever done that’s of any use, really.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? British actor Roger Moore, playing the title role of secret service agent 007, James Bond, is shown on location in England in 1972.
AP FILE PHOTO British actor Roger Moore, playing the title role of secret service agent 007, James Bond, is shown on location in England in 1972.

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