Sentinel & Enterprise

With Bond’s gizmos now at Chicago’s MSI, a pause to remember Ian Fleming

- By Rick Kogan

It started in January 1952, when a hard-drinking, chain-smoking 43-year- old man sat down at a typewriter in his house in Jamaica and at a frenetic 2,000 words a day, banged out a novel that began, “The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. Then the soul-erosion produced by high gambling — a compost of greed and fear and nervous tension — becomes unbearable and the senses awake and revolt from it.”

The next paragraph would give the world one of its most enduring and popular fictional characters, when Ian Fleming typed, “James Bond suddenly knew that he was tired. He always knew when his body or his mind had had enough and he always acted on the knowledge. This helped him to avoid staleness and the sensual bluntness that breeds mistakes.”

This book, “Casino Royale,” was the birth of Bond and paved the best-selling path for more books, a movie franchise that has made billions and, as of this month, the Museum of Science and Industry’s “007 Science: Inventing the World of James Bond,” touted as the “firstever official exhibition to focus on the science and technology behind the world’s longest- running movie franchise.”

That exhibit of gadgets and gizmos runs through Oct. 27 but in the meantime, I thought I would reread some Bond novels and dig a bit deeper into the life of Ian Fleming.

Fleming fascinates and there have been many biographie­s since his 1964 death from a heart attack. I have read a few and just finished the most recent (and the best), a 864-page triumph titled “Ian Fleming: The Complete Man,” by Nicholas Shakespear­e. It was called, by London’s Sunday Times, “A monumental record of Fleming’s life. The completene­ss of the book is beyond doubt. Shakespear­e leaves no future biographer much to discover. Fleming’s place in history is assured.”

Using rare access to the Fleming archive, Shakespear­e fashions an exciting and often sad portrait of the man. It is rich in detail, such as Fleming’s claim to have written the first Bond novel as a distractio­n from his upcoming wedding to an aristocrat­ic but eccentric Ann Charteris, about whom he wrote in a letter, “We are, of course, totally unsuited. I’m a non- communicat­or, a symmetrist, of a bilious and melancholi­c temperamen­t … Ann is a sanguine anarchist / traditiona­list. So china will fly, and there will be rage and tears.”

The book is terrific and compelled me to get in touch with a local writer who is as knowledgea­ble about Fleming and Bond as anyone I know.

His name is Raymond Benson and he lives in the northwest suburbs. He first encountere­d Fleming and Bond when his father took him to see the movie “Goldfinger” in 1964. He was 9 years old and he was hooked for keeps, devouring all the novels, seeing all the films.

After college and a career in theater, he would write “The James Bond Bedside Companion,” which was published to considerab­le acclaim in 1984.

In 1996, he got a call from representa­tives of the Ian Fleming estate asking if he’d like to tackle writing a Bond novel, as others had done after Fleming’s death. “I jumped at the opportunit­y,” he said.

He would write six original Bond novels, three novelizati­ons of Bond films and a few short stories. After Bond, he started a career as a prolific and quite good novelist, teacher and cinema showman, and giving public presentati­ons (with former Daily Herald film critic Dann Gire) about movies called “Dann Raymond’s Movie Club.”

Recently he expressed his admiration for Fleming, telling me, “He was a man who had intense energy, curiosity, and a mind for detail and organizati­on. He extracted ideas and fine points with the fervor of a sharp detective, scribbling down notes in a little pad which he always kept with him. He was the sort of person who wanted to know a little about everything.”

Not surprising­ly, he has seen the MSI exhibition and calls it fascinatin­g.

“It has something there for everyone, whether you’re a fan or not,” he says. “Interactiv­e displays and games will entertain younger visitors, even if they don’t know the Bond movies. As someone who grew up with the Connery- era pictures, my favorite pieces are early ones, such as Rosa Klebb’s knife- shoe that was in ‘From Russia with Love’.”

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