The Daily Telegraph

Alec Mills

James Bond cameraman, cinematogr­apher and ‘prime victim’ of Roger Moore’s practical jokes

- Alec Mills, born May 10 1932, died February 12 2024

ALEC MILLS, who has died aged 91, worked his way up from cinema-mad Cockney tea boy at a small London film studio to cameraman on a string of James Bond films in the George Lazenby and Roger Moore eras, and finally cinematogr­apher on Timothy Dalton’s Licence to Kill and The Living Daylights.

Mills had been friends with Roger Moore since The Saint, which Mills joined as camera operator in 1966. (His first scene found Moore “tied down on a table dressed as a Roman soldier at a fancy dress party”.)

Mills soon became “prime victim” for Moore’s practical jokes, most traumatica­lly waking up to find that Moore had inserted a drunk lorry driver into his bed after a day shooting Octopussy.

On The Spy Who Loved Me, Mills was asked to get a head-on shot of a torpedo being loaded, which involved inching himself backwards into the greased torpedo tube of a working nuclear submarine in Scotland. “Not until Roger is off this sub,” Mills told the director. “I know him and once I’m in there, he’ll fire it for real.”

Mills lost that battle, and as he slithered into the claustroph­obic tube, he saw Moore standing over him, grinning, and pointing his finger at the firing button. Mills filmed until the torpedo was inches from his lens, then screamed: “CUT! I can’t swim!”

Other adrenalin spikes in Mills’s eventful career included being lunged by a tranquilis­ed anaconda while filming The Swiss Family Robinson, and chasing an artificial whale across the turbulent Irish

Sea for John Huston’s epic Moby Dick. While filming Crossed Swords in Hungary, Oliver Reed corralled him into his liverravag­ing “Club Oliver”. Mills lost consciousn­ess and was dragged back to his hotel, covered in chocolate.

On the Bond films, to capture hand-tohand fight scenes, Mills would play the part of the villain, with a handheld camera, while 007 beat him up. If the choreograp­hy went awry, he got a black eye. On The Living Daylights, he was nearly mown down by a Moroccan Air Force C130 Hercules, and felt certain he had been haunted by a busload of recently deceased nuns while filming a car stunt on a bend of a precipitou­s Mexican road.

He also worked on Antonioni’s Blow-up (“Could this be art for art’s sake gone mad?” he wondered) and Macbeth by Roman Polanski, who chose Mills as his camera operator because they were exactly the same height, and Mills would thus see everything from Polanski’s viewpoint.

Despite having to stand on a box to reach his viewfinder, wrote Roger Moore in the preface to Mills’s memoir, “in terms of talent and personalit­y, Alec is a big man.”

Alec Mills was born in Kilburn on May 10 1932 to Alf, a Somme veteran and porter, and

Lil (née Hodgson), a Savile Row tailor’s assistant. Alec had no bedroom, but slept on the sofa; an older brother, suffering from infantile paralysis, died at 16.

He stayed in London during the Blitz, devouring free screenings of Chaplin, Keaton and Laurel and Hardy in the church hall. The pennies he earnt in the church choir he would spend on cinema tickets, or sneak in.

He left school at 14 for Carlton Hill Studios in Maida Vale. After National Service in the Fleet Air Arm, he moved to Riverside Studios as a clapper boy, and became a protégé of the cinematogr­apher Harry Waxman, cutting his teeth on the film noir The Sleeping Tiger,

starring Dirk Bogarde, directed by Joseph Losey (The Servant and The Go-between).

His many cameraman credits included

Death on the Nile, under Powell and Pressburge­r’s great cinematogr­apher Jack Cardiff; Gulliver’s Travels; and Star Wars: Episode VI: Return of the Jedi.

He was elevated to Bond cinematogr­apher after impressing producer Cubby Broccoli with his photograph­y on Shaka Zulu, the 1986 television series with Edward Fox.

In 1978, he became the first chairman of the Guild of British Camera Technician­s.

His first marriage to (Elizabeth) Lesley Tildesley ended in divorce, and in 1977 he married Zsuzsanna “Suzy” Szemes, Hungarian assistant director on Crossed Swords. She survives him, with a son and daughter from his first marriage.

 ?? ?? Alec Mills during the making of The Living Daylights at Ouarzazate Airport in Morocco in 1986
Alec Mills during the making of The Living Daylights at Ouarzazate Airport in Morocco in 1986

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