Deccan Chronicle

Roger Moore dies at 89

Shy man was world’s heart-throb

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London, May 23: Actor Roger Moore, who earned internatio­nal fame playing British secret agent James Bond in seven movies, died of cancer on Tuesday at the age of 89, his family said.

His 12 years as action man 007, the fictitious spy with a voracious appetite for danger and sex, made Moore a millionair­e and a heart-throb the world over, though in reality he was a shy, private man who found some of Bond’s escapades embarrassi­ng.

“It is with a heavy heart that we must announce our loving father, Sir Roger Moore, has passed away today in Switzerlan­d after a short but brave battle with cancer,” his three children announced on the Twitter account.

Tributes poured in from celebritie­s and from Unicef for which he worked as a “goodwill ambassador”.

The son of a London policeman, Moore once said the upper-crust image he portrayed both on and off the screen was a carefully nurtured cover for his shyness and timidity.

“I couldn’t walk into a restaurant on my own for 20 or 30 years...,” he once said, saying that all changed when he found fame in the role. “(But) that’s not really me. Timid me would rather stay home and have a sandwich.” — Reuters Obituary on Page 15

London, May 23: British actor Roger Moore was never one to boast about his acting ability, but then the facts spoke for themselves — he played James Bond in more films than any other man.

Known for his ironically raised eyebrow and deadpan quips, Moore’s take on the suave superspy was more tongue-in-cheek than that of his manly predecesso­r Sean Connery.

But he outgunned Connery and all the other actors to have played 007 by taking the role he fondly called “Jimmy Bond” in a record number of seven films.

Moore was also one of the last of the old-style movie stars, who counted Frank Sinatra and David Niven among his friends and lived in luxury in Switzerlan­d and the French Riviera.

He went on to become a real-life hero as an ambassador for Unicef, even as he downplayed his own talents. “I'm not that coldbloode­d killer type. Which is why I play it mostly for laughs,” he once said.

Born Roger George Moore, on October 14, 1927 in the London suburb of Stockwell, he was the only son of a police constable and his wife, and had a happy childhood.

Moore began his acting career as an extra in the 1940s before studying at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

He landed an MGM studio contract, but only had supporting roles during the 1950s.

It was not until the following decade that he achieved worldwide fame, starring in British TV show The Saint as smoothtalk­ing adventurer Simon Templar. He also played alongside Tony Curtis in the 1970s crime series The Persuaders.

Moore said in his autobiogra­phy he was approached about playing James Bond, novelist Ian Fleming’s fictional secret agent, as early as 1967.

But it was not until 1973 that he finally won the role — despite, at 45, being twoand-a-half years older than Connery, the man he replaced.

Moore made his debut in Live and Let Die, after the producers made him lose weight, get fit and cut his hair.

He followed it with The Man With the Golden Gun (1974), The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), Moonraker (1979), For Your Eyes Only (1981) and Octopussy (1983) before bowing out after A View to a Kill in 1985, when he was 57.

“Sadly, I had to retire from the Bond films,” Moore said at a ceremony to award him a star on Hollywood’s “Walk of Fame”, just ahead of his 80th birthday. “The girls were getting younger and I was just getting too old.”

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Roger Moore
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 ??  ?? 1927-2017BRITIS­H actor Roger Moore played James Bond in a record seven films, more than any other man to date.HE made the role truly his own by using an ironically raised eyebrow, well-timed to go with deadpan quips.
1927-2017BRITIS­H actor Roger Moore played James Bond in a record seven films, more than any other man to date.HE made the role truly his own by using an ironically raised eyebrow, well-timed to go with deadpan quips.

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