‘Bond girl’ set a blueprint for future screen heroines
HONOR Blackman’s portrayal of sultry heroine Pussy Galore captivated filmgoers in the 1964 James Bond movie Goldfinger.
The 94yearold British actress died earlier this month at her home in Lewes, England, of natural causes, according to the Associated Press, citing a family statement.
Taking on the role in her late 30s, Blackman was the most senior ‘‘Bond girl’’ and one of only two leading actresses to be older than her Agent 007 costar in the first halfcentury of the franchise. Athletic and eloquent with a husky voice, she portrayed the blonde, pantsuitwearing jet pilot and judo expert to such acclaim that she set the blueprint for other nononsense, headstrong Bond women.
‘‘You can turn off the charm — I’m immune,’’ Galore tells Bond when meeting him aboard Auric Goldfinger’s private plane.
The viewer is led to believe that Galore is not interested in Bond, played by Sean Connery, or any other man for that matter, until the pair exchange judo moves in a barn and she falls for him during a roll in the hay. The final scene of the film leaves the happy couple intertwined beneath their getaway parachute in a routine Bond signoff.
In 2007, Entertainment Weekly ranked Blackman as the secondbest ‘‘Bond girl’’ ever. Ursula Andress, who played Honey Rider in Dr. No (1962), topped the list.
‘‘Blackman rounded off
Pussy’s cardboard edges, introducing fans to the series’ first real woman — a gorgeous dame who can fly a plane and kick butt,’’ the magazine said.
Goldfinger, the third movie based on Ian Fleming’s books, followed the dastardly plans of its namesake villain to raid the gold depositories at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Galore is initially loyal to Goldfinger before switching allegiance to Bond when she finds out about her boss’ intention to use poison gas to gain access to the vaults.
Pussy Galore was among the most suggestive character names taken by any of the women associated with Bond. The double entendre was parodied in the Austin Powers series of comedy spy films, starring Mike Myers, three decades later.
Blackman was previously known for her portrayal of Catherine Gale, a motorcycleriding judo fighter who wore black leather, in the 1960s hit television series The Avengers.
Blackman was born on August 22, 1925, in Plaistow, East London.
Starting her career in West End plays, the budding actress moved to films, with appearances in movies such as 1958’s A Night to Remember, about the Titanic’s sinking.
She also did television work, taking a role in The Saint, opposite Roger Moore, who replaced Connery in the Bond movies in the early 1970s.
Blackman married businessman Bill Sankey in 1946. After they divorced eight years later, she received treatment for a nervous breakdown. In 1961, she married actor Maurice Kaufmann, who helped revive her career with The Avengers.
‘‘A lot of the fan mail I got was from women,’’ Blackman said in a 2012 interview with the
Telegraph newspaper. ‘‘It was enlightening. They liked the idea of a strong woman.’’
In later years, Blackman appeared in TV programmes such as Dr. Who and Coronation Street as well as films including
Bridget Jones’s Diary in 2001.
Blackman and Kaufmann adopted two children, Lottie and Barnaby, in the 1960s. The couple divorced in 1975. — TCA