Sunday Express

NEVER AGAIN...

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hero in both, the late Sir Roger Moore, always said Adams was his favourite Bond girl.

The producers have made attempts to bring back some Bond women. In 1977, Bond joined forces with Soviet agent Triple X, Major Anya Amasova, in The Spy Who Loved Me.

Barbara Bach shot to fame in the role. “I don’t mind at all being identified with the Anya character,” she said. “Probably the best female character that’s ever been in a Bond film. A counterpoi­nt to Bond.” Reflecting both East/ West detente and the evolving role of women, Amasova hit a chord with the public.

As Roger Moore hung up his holster in 1985’s A View To A Kill, Triple X was to have shared a steamy hot tub with 007. It was not to be, however, although Bach’s life wasn’t totally bereft as she was married to Beatle Ringo Starr.

Michelle Yeoh became Bond’s first Asian leading lady, appearing opposite Pierce Brosnan in 1997’s Tomorrow Never Dies with the producers keen to update Bond’s somewhat stuffy, almost comedy image.

Catsuit-clad Colonel Wai Lin made an indelible impression when she took on Vietnamese thugs in a kick-ass display of martial artistry.

Said Yeoh: “They did want to highlight the fact that we have a Bond girl who’s going to be on par with James Bond. She is herself a spy from China and they are not easy to be reckoned with. She will be as physical as him and be able to do whatever he does – or even better.”

There were plans to give her a cameo in a future film and even her own spin-off. She met Lee Tamahori, director of 1994 adventure Once Were Warriors, who recalled, “due to contractua­l reasons things didn’t work out.”

For Brosnan’s final 007 outing, Die Another Day, in 2002, the producers cast their first African-american leading lady, Halle Berry.

Giacinta Johnson, known as Jinx, worked for the American National Security Agency. She was modelled on 1960s spy heroine Modesty Blaise, the first female “Bond”.

Brosnan remembered his co-star with admiration: “Oh boy, her coming out of the water in Cadiz – half of Spain was on the shoreline observing this beautiful lady in her fluorescen­t orange bikini.”

During production Berry won an Oscar (as best actress for dark drama Monster’s Ball) powering Die Another Day to huge success. As a result, Bond bosses were keen to work with her again making a Bond Universe close to reality.

A script for a Jinx film was commission­ed. In it, Jinx worked for a think-tank, rode a motorbike and had a lover called Javier to be played by future Bond nemesis Javier Bardem (the evil Raoul Silva in 2012’s Skyfall).

Set for 2004 release it was penned by Bond scribes Neal Purvis and Robert Wade (who have been involved in all Daniel Craig’s Bond movies). Wade felt the film was a “down and dirtier version of a Bond – a very atmospheri­c, Euro thriller, a Bourne-type movie.”

And yet financiers got cold feet due to the budget (£70million) and the fact that recent female-led action films had flopped.

Berry held out hope but to no avail. “Maybe some day I will do a cameo in a Bond movie as Jinx,” she said. “We’ll see.”

James Bond, though, will return. Beyond Daniel Craig. But with only weeks until No Time To Die, Seydoux is revealing little about her own future.

However, of the new film she says: “It was very interestin­g to play Madeline but through a new perspectiv­e,” she said. “I think this time we will see something different from what we have seen in Spectre. It’s going to be more intimate.”

‘Financiers got cold feet due to the budget’

● Matthew Field and Ajay Chowdhury are authors of Some Kind Of Hero: The Remarkable Story Of The James Bond Films

 ??  ?? CLOSE BOND: Lea Seydoux, heroine of Spectre returns to comfort 007 in No Time To Die
CLOSE BOND: Lea Seydoux, heroine of Spectre returns to comfort 007 in No Time To Die

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