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miss moneypenny Tagged Articles at Cinematical

RIP: Reel Important People -- October 1, 2007

Filed under: Obits », James Bond », Cinematical Indie »

  • Sally Brophy (1928-2007) - Actress who played Veronica Cartwright's character's mother in The Children's Hour. She also appears with Bette Davis in Storm Center. She died of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma September 18, in Princeton, New Jersey. (NY Times)
  • Michael Evans (1926-2007) - Actor who appears in Bye Bye Birdie, Time After Time and The Sword and the Sorcerer. He died September 4. (BBC News)
  • István Gaál (1933-2007) - Hungarian filmmaker who tied for the 1970 Cannes Jury Prize with Magasiskola (Falcons). He also wrote and directed Sodrásban and Cserepek and wrote the novel A Ménesgazda (Stud Farm), which András Kovács made into a 1978 film. He died September 25 in Budapest. (Odeon.hu)
  • Richard T. Heffron (1930-2007) - Director of Futureworld, Foolin' Around, and the concert doc Fillmore. He also wrote the screenplay for and was an associate producer on The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery, which starred Steve McQueen. He died August 27 in Seattle. (son-in-law)
  • Christine Hewett (?-2007) - Model and actress (pictured) best known for appearing in the Mos Eisley cantina sequence in Star Wars as the character "Brea Tonnika" (or technically another character impersonating that character, apparently). She also appears in Die Another Day, Superman IV: The Quest for Peace, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Bridget Jones' s Diary. She most recently doubled for Vanessa Redgrave in the filming of The Riddle. She of died of cancer September 19, in England. (Wookieepedia)

Lois "Miss Moneypenny" Maxwell Dies, Age 80

Filed under: Action », Fandom », Obits », James Bond »

No matter what happened to James Bond, he could always count on a little flirtation in the office, before being sent back out to battle nuclear-powered squids or what have you. In 14 of the 007 films, Lois Maxwell played the secretary who dallied with Bond before he was called into the main office. At the time of her death from cancer, the actress was living about as far away from the Universal Exports office as a person could get, in the seaside Perth, Australia suburb of Fremantle. Born in Kitchner, Ontario, Maxwell started out in movies with an uncredited part in Michael Powell's 1946 Stairway to Heaven aka A Matter of Life and Death. While Maxwell had been a long time actress -- she played the nurse in Kubrick's Lolita -- she was best known for the role she played from 1962-1985 in films from Dr. No to A View to a Kill.

The BBC's obit mentions that Moneypenny had a first name, Jane, but she was always referred to as Penny. AP's obit has a quote from Roger Moore claiming that Maxwell was disappointed not to get the role of M, when it turned out that the producers were going to cast a woman as the new boss. (The role, as no Bond geek needs reminding, went to Judi Dench). Moneypenny's yearning for Bond got rather poignant at times. There's some real wistfulness in the scene where she's asking Sean Connery in Diamonds Are Forever to bring her back "a ring, with a diamond in it..." Incidentally, Steven Jay Rubin's Complete James Bond Movie Encyclopedia claims that Maxwell was complimented on the casting by Ian Fleming himself: "You, my dear, are exactly the woman I visualized."

 
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