New York Post

GONE, JAMES BOND

Legendary 007 Sean Connery leaves us shaken and stirred

- By EILEEN A J CONNELLY

Actor Sean Connery, the big screen’s first, wittiest and most revered James Bond, has died, his family said Saturday. He was 90 years old.

Connery died peacefully in his sleep at his home in the Bahamas, having been “unwell for some time,” his son told the BBC.

“A sad day for all who knew and loved my dad and a sad loss for all people around the world who enjoyed the wonderful gift he had as an actor,” said Jason Connery.

“He had dementia and it took its toll on him” in his final months, his wife of 45 years, artist Micheline Roquebrune, told the Mail on Sunday.

“He got his final wish to slip away without any fuss.”

Best known for his seven turns as Bond, beginning with 1962’s “Dr. No,” the Scottish-born Connery, who became Sir Sean in 2000, freed himself from the debonair typecastin­g to play myriad other roles besides Agent 007.

His decades-long career was filled with accolades, including an Oscar, two BAFTAs and being crowned People magazine’s “Sexiest Man of the Century” in 1999.

Bond producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli were “devastated” by his passing, saying Connery’s “gritty and witty portrayal of the sexy and charismati­c secret agent” was largely responsibl­e for the success of the spy-movie series.

“He was and shall always be remembered as the original James Bond whose indelible entrance into cinema history began when he announced those unforgetta­ble words, ‘The name’s Bond . . . James Bond,’ ” they said in a statement Saturday.

Daniel Craig, the current Bond, said Connery “defined an era and a style” and that the “wit and charm he portrayed on screen could be measured in megawatts.”

Thomas Sean Connery was born of Irish ancestry in the slums of Edinburgh, Scotland, on Aug. 25, 1930. The son of a cleaning woman and a factory worker, he left school in his early teens to earn 1 pound a week delivering milk.

“We were very poor,” he once said. “But I never knew how poor because that’s how everyone was there.”

He was drafted into the Royal Navy at age 17, but was discharged three years later due to a serious case of ulcers. He returned to Edinburgh and worked odd jobs, including as a milkman, lifeguard and — while broke and homeless at age 21 — as a polisher at a coffin factory.

“I know he spent a few nights sleeping in a coffin just after he started,” co-worker Tommy Wark told The Scotsman in 2005.

Connery also took up bodybuildi­ng and placed third in the 1951 Mr. Universe competitio­n in London. It was during that competitio­n that a fellow bodybuilde­r suggested he audition for a bit role in a London production of “South Pacific.”

Despite his utter lack of experience and his thick brogue, he got a part in the chorus, and his career had begun.

His first film role came that same year, in the B-movie crime yarn “No Road Back.” He went on to star opposite Lana Turner in “Another Time, Another Place” (1958) and landed several roles that leaned on his looks, such as “Tarzan’s Great Adventure” in 1959.

His turn as Count Vronsky to Claire Bloom’s Anna Karenina on the BBC helped raise him to the top of a newspaper poll asking readers to suggest the ideal James Bond, the superspy in a popular series of novels by Ian Fleming.

Connery landed the 1962 film role without a screen test, after an interview with producers Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman, according to Variety. It was a controvers­ial choice at the time, as Connery was an unknown outside Britain.

Connery’s effortless delivery of the character’s signature line: “Bond, James Bond,” propelled him to internatio­nal stardom.

His stature grew alongside the extraordin­ary popularity of the series as he reprised the role in “From Russia With Love,” “Goldfinger” and “Thunderbal­l” over the next four years. He also donned the tuxedo

for “You Only Live Twice” in 1967, and “Diamonds are Forever” in 1971, and returned to the role a final time in “Never Say Never Again,” in 1983.

Although he was paid only $30,000 for “Dr. No,” by 1964 he received $400,000 for his role as a wealthy widower in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Marnie,” and was soon earning $750,000 a film. By the 1980s his price tag was regularly more than $5 million.

But when he decided to end his career, he had no trouble walking away from still more millions. Connery was 74 when he turned down $17.5 million to play a lead role as an aging thief in a Brett Ratner project in 2004, the director told Showbiz411.com.

As he turned 80, Connery told the UK Daily Record in 2010 that “From Russia With Love” was his favorite Bond movie. “The story was intriguing, and the locations were intriguing,” he said. “It was an internatio­nal movie in every sense of the word.”

He broke away from Bond for many other roles, from a soldier-turned-adventurer in John Huston’s “The Man Who Would Be King” (1975) to a defecting Russian submarine captain in the 1990 Tom Clancy thriller “The Hunt for Red October.” Other hits included “Murder on the Orient Express” (1974), “Highlander” (1986) and as Harrison Ford’s on-screen father in “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989).

In one of his greatest late-career roles, Connery won the 1988 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for portraying a tough Irish cop in Prohibitio­n-era Chicago in Brian De Palma’s “The Untouchabl­es.”

Though he groused that he was “fed up” with James Bond — once even stating “I’d like to kill him” — by the time he clinched his Oscar he was at peace with the role that had made him rich and famous.

“The name’s Connery,” he said as he e received the award. “Sean Connery.”

His last screen appearance was in 2003’s “The League of Extraordin­ary Gentlemen.””

Connery was devoted to his native Scotland and sported a tattoo from his Navy years that read “Scotland Forever.”

He used his stature to press for the re-establishm­ent of a Scottish parliament. When the body reconvened in 1999, 296 years after its last meeting, Connery was invited to address the first session, where he was greeted with a thunderous ovation. His autobiogra­phy, “Being a Scot,” was published in 2008.

“Our nation today mourns one of her best loved sons,” Scottish Prime Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted Saturday. “Sean was a lifelong advocate of an independen­t Scotland and those of us who share that belief owe him a great debt of gratitude.”

He called being knighted by Queen Elizabeth II “one of the proudest days of my life,” and asked that the investitur­e be performed at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh.

Other awards over his career included Kennedy Center Honors in 1999 and the American Film Institute’s lifetime achievemen­t award in 2006, where he announced his retirement.

After retiring to Nassau in the Bahamas, he spent much of his time golfing.

Craig, whose latest Bond film, “No Time To Die,” has been delayed to next year due to the pandemic, said Connery will continue to influence actors and filmmakers­s for years to come.

Family members of Roger Moore, who died in 2017 and played Bond in seven films, tweeted that they were “infinitely sad” to hear the news of Connery’s passing.

Connery was married to actress Diane Cilento from 1962 to 1973. The couple divorced in 1973 and Cilento died in 2011.

Connery is survived by Roquebrune, whom he married in 1975; his son by Cilento, actor Jason Connery; his brother, Neil, and a grandson.

Sean Connery’s impact was felt by movie lovers around the world as well as his fellow actors, many of whom took to social media to pay tribute to the late star:

w Only wishing 90th be condoling birthday. a few Sean weeks with all Now, the ago his I’m best family I was very for sad and his to friends. as James Of Bond course, inspired Sean me Connery personally but seems to have encapsulat­ed an age, the Sixties. I met Sean a couple of times and I was pleased he’d given my Bond film, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, his seal of approval . . . But, to me, the most important thing was his work went far beyond Bond: into charity, into family, into politics and into golf. A man after my own heart. A great actor, a great man and underappre­ciated artist has left us. My thoughts are with Lady Micheline and Sean’s children and grandchild­ren. -George Lazenby b

Sir Sean Connery, you were my greatest James Bond as a boy, and as a man who became James Bond himself. You cast a long shadow of cinematic splendor that will live on forever. You led the way for us all who followed in your iconic footsteps. Each man in his turn looked to you with reverence and admiration as we forged ahead with our own interpreta­tions of the role. You were mighty in every way, as an actor and as a man, and will remain so till the end of time. You were loved by the world, and will be missed. God bless, rest now, be at peace. -Pierce Brosnan

Sean Connery was a legend. One of the greatest actors of all time. He provided endless entertainm­ent for all of us & inspiratio­n for me. I’m not just saying that because he was a bodybuilde­r who placed in the Mr. r. Universe contest! He was an icon. . My thoughts are with his family. -Arnold Schwarzene­gger ge

Saddened by the news of the passing of Sir Sean Connery. A wonderful w man who I had the pleasure of working with in Time Bandits. We crossed paths many times over the years. Such immense talent and a vibrant human. And the only one of us to find The Holy Grail. -John Cleese

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 ??  ?? LEGEND: Onetime bodybuilde­r (inset) Sean Connery leans with effortless cool against an Aston Martin in 1964’s “Goldfinger,” is knighted in 2000 (top, with wife Micheline), aids Indiana Jones in 1989’s “The Last Crusade” and is flanked by Bond girls in 1965.
LEGEND: Onetime bodybuilde­r (inset) Sean Connery leans with effortless cool against an Aston Martin in 1964’s “Goldfinger,” is knighted in 2000 (top, with wife Micheline), aids Indiana Jones in 1989’s “The Last Crusade” and is flanked by Bond girls in 1965.

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