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Wikipedia

Bond girl

A Bond girl is a character who is a love interest, female companion or (occasionally) an adversary of James Bond in a novel, film, or video game. Bond girls occasionally have names that are double entendres or puns, such as Pussy Galore, Plenty O'Toole, Holly Goodhead, or Xenia Onatopp. The female leads in the films, such as Ursula Andress, Honor Blackman, or Eva Green, can also be referred to as "Bond girls". The term Bond girl may also be considered as an anachronism,[1][2] with some female cast members in the films preferring the designation Bond woman.[3][4]

Clockwise from top left: Eva Green, Halle Berry, Michelle Yeoh, and Jane Seymour

In novels

Nearly all of Ian Fleming's Bond novels and short stories include one or more female characters who can be said to qualify as Bond girls, most of whom have been adapted for the screen. While Fleming's Bond girls have some individual traits (at least in their literary forms), they also have a great many characteristics in common.[5] One of these is age: The typical Bond girl is in her early to mid-twenties, roughly ten years younger than Bond, who seems to be perennially in his mid-thirties.[6] Examples include Solitaire (25),[7] Tatiana Romanova (24),[8] Vivienne "Viv" Michel (23),[9] and Kissy Suzuki (23).[10] The youngest Bond girl (though she and Bond do not sleep together) may be Gala Brand;[citation needed] she is named for the cruiser in which her father is serving at the time of her birth.[11] Bond's youngest sexual partner in the books is Mariko Ichiban, an 18-year-old masseuse in You Only Live Twice. The eldest Bond girls are Pussy Galore, who Bond speculates is in her early 30s, and 29-year-old Domino Vitali.[citation needed]

Bond girls conform to a fairly well-defined standard of beauty. They possess splendid figures and tend to dress in a slightly masculine, assertive fashion, wear little jewellery—and that in a masculine cut—wide leather belts, and square-toed leather shoes. (There is some variation in dress, though: Bond girls have made their initial appearances in evening wear, in bra and panties and, on occasion, naked.) Most are white; they often sport light though noticeable suntans (although a few, such as Solitaire, Tatiana Romanova, and Pussy Galore, are not only tanless but remarkably pale),[7][12][13] and they generally use little or no makeup and no nail polish, also wearing their nails short.[14] Their hair may be any colour,[12][15][16][17] though they typically wear it in a natural or casual cut that falls heavily to their shoulders. Their features, especially their eyes and mouths, are often widely spaced (e.g. Vesper Lynd, Gala Brand, Tiffany Case, Tatiana Romanova, Honey Ryder, Viv Michel, Mary Goodnight).[18] Their eyes are usually blue (e.g. Vesper Lynd, Gala Brand, Tatiana Romanova, Honey Ryder, Tracy Bond, Mary Goodnight),[19] and sometimes this is true to an unusual and striking degree: Tiffany Case's eyes are chatoyant, varying with the light from grey to grey-blue,[20] while Pussy Galore has deep violet eyes, the only truly violet eyes that Bond had ever seen.[13] The first description of a Bond girl, Casino Royale's Vesper Lynd, is almost a template for the typical dress as well as the general appearance of later Bond girls; she sports nearly all of the features discussed above.[17] In contrast, Dominetta "Domino" Vitali arguably departs to the greatest degree from the template, dressing in white leather doeskin sandals, appearing more tanned, sporting a soft Brigitte Bardot haircut, and giving no indication of widely spaced features.[21] (The departure may be due to the unusual circumstances behind the writing of the novel Thunderball, in which Domino appears.) Even Domino, however, wears rather masculine jewellery.[22][page needed]

The best-known characteristic of Bond girls, apart from their uniform beauty, is their pattern of sexually suggestive names, such as Pussy Galore. Names with less obvious meanings are sometimes explained in the novels. While Solitaire's real name is Simone Latrelle, she is known as Solitaire because she excludes men from her life;[16] Gala Brand, as noted above, is named for her father's cruiser, HMS Galatea; and Tiffany Case received her name from her father, who was so angry that she was not a boy that he gave her mother a thousand dollars and a compact from Tiffany's and then walked out on her.[23] Fleming's penchant for double-entendre names began with the first Bond novel Casino Royale. Conjecture is widespread that the name of the Bond girl in that novel, "Vesper Lynd," was intended to be a pun on "West Berlin," signifying Vesper's divided loyalties as a double agent under Soviet control. Several Bond girls, however, have normal names (e.g. Mary Ann Russell, Judy Havelock, Viv Michel, Tracy Bond (née Teresa Draco, aka Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo).[citation needed]

Most Bond girls are apparently (and sometimes expressly) sexually experienced by the time they meet Bond. Quite often those previous experiences have not been positive, and many Bond girls have had sexual violence inflicted on them in the past, causing them to feel alienated from all men—until Bond comes along. Tiffany Case was gang-raped as a teenager;[24] Honey Ryder was beaten and raped as a teenager by a drunken acquaintance.[25] Pussy Galore was sexually abused at age 12 by her uncle.[26] While there is no such clear-cut trauma in Solitaire's early life, there are suggestions that she, too, avoids men because of their unwanted sexual advances in her past. Kissy Suzuki reports to Bond that during her brief career in Hollywood, when she was 17, "They thought that because I am Japanese I am some sort of an animal and that my body is for everyone."[27] The implication is often that these violent episodes have turned these Bond girls against men, though upon encountering Bond they overcome their earlier antipathy and sleep with him not only willingly but eagerly. The cliché reaches an extreme level in Goldfinger, where Pussy Galore is portrayed as a lesbian when she first meets Bond, but at the end of the novel she sleeps with him. When, in bed, he says to her, "They told me you only liked women," she replies, "I never met a man before."[26]

In Fleming's novels, many Bond girls have some sort of independent job or even career, often one that was considered inappropriate for women in the 1950s. Lynd, Brand, Tatiana Romanova, Mary Ann Russell, and Mary Goodnight are in intelligence or law-enforcement work. Those who are criminals, such as Case and Galore, tend to be similarly independent-minded in how they approach their work—the latter even running her own syndicate. Even those Bond girls who have more conventional or glamorous jobs show themselves to be invested in having an independent outlook on life. While the Bond girls are clearly intended as sex objects, they are nevertheless portrayed in the novels as having a high degree of independence; this is also frequently (but not always) the case in the films.

Most of the novels focus on one particular romance, as some of them do not begin until well into the novel (Casino Royale is a good example). However, several exceptions have been made: In Goldfinger, the Masterton sisters are considered Bond girls (although Tilly is supposedly a lesbian), and after their deaths, Pussy Galore (also supposedly a lesbian) becomes the primary Bond girl. In Thunderball, Bond romances first Patricia Fearing, then later Domino Vitali. In On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Bond enters into a relationship and an eventual marriage with Teresa "Tracy" di Vicenzo, and sleeps with Ruby Windsor, a patient he meets in Blofeld's hideout while posing as a genealogist. In You Only Live Twice, Bond mainly has a relationship with Kissy Suzuki, but also romances Mariko Ichiban, as well as another girl.

Several Bond girls have obvious signs of inner turmoil (Vesper Lynd or Vivienne Michel), and others have traumatic pasts. Most Bond girls whose characters are allowed to develop in the course of the story are flawed, and several have unhappy sexual backgrounds (Ryder, Galore, Case, Michel, and Suzuki, among others).

Inspiration

The inspiration for all of Fleming's Bond girls may be his onetime lover Muriel Wright, who according to The Times:[28]

has a claim to be the fons et origo of the species: pliant and undemanding, beautiful but innocent, outdoorsy, physically tough, implicitly vulnerable and uncomplaining, and then tragically dead, before or soon after marriage.

Wright was 26 and "exceptionally beautiful" when she and Fleming met in 1935. A talented rider, skier, and polo player, Wright was independently wealthy and a model. She was devoted to Fleming, despite his repeated unfaithfulness. She died in an air raid in 1944, devastating Fleming, who called Wright "too good to be true".[28]

In film

Ursula Andress (as Honey Ryder) in Dr. No (1962) is widely regarded as the first Bond girl,[29] although she was preceded by both Eunice Gayson as Sylvia Trench and Zena Marshall as Miss Taro in the same film.[30] Goldfinger (1964), the third, established the Bond girl as regularly appearing in Bond films.[31]

There is no set rule on what kind of person a Bond girl will be or what role she will play. She may be an ally or an enemy of Bond, pivotal to the mission or simply there for her looks. There are female characters such as Judi Dench's M, Camille Montes, a Bolivian intelligence agent who teams up with Bond in Quantum of Solace, and Bibi Dahl in For Your Eyes Only, who are not romantic interests of Bond, and hence may not be considered Bond girls.[32][33][34] It has been argued that M's pivotal role in the plot of Skyfall qualifies her as a Bond girl or Bond woman.[35][36][37]

There have been many attempts to break down the numerous Bond girls into a top 10 list for the entire series; characters who often appear in these lists include Anya Amasova (from The Spy Who Loved Me, portrayed by Barbara Bach); Pussy Galore (from Goldfinger, portrayed by Honor Blackman); Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo (from On Her Majesty's Secret Service, portrayed by Diana Rigg); and often ranked Number 1 on the list, Honey Ryder (from Dr. No, portrayed by Ursula Andress).[38][39] Entertainment Weekly put "Bond bathing suits" on its 2009 end-of-the-decade "best-of" list, saying, "And you thought spies were supposed to be inconspicuous! Halle Berry's orange bikini in Die Another Day (2002) and Daniel Craig's supersnug powder blue trunks in Casino Royale (2006) suggest that neither 007 star can keep a secret."[40]

Monica Bellucci in Spectre became the oldest Bond girl at the age of 50, although she stated that she does not consider herself to be a "Bond girl", but a "Bond woman".[41]

Roles and impact

Roald Dahl said that when writing the script for You Only Live Twice, he was advised to use three Bond girls: The first should die "preferably in Bond's arms" early, the second a villain whom Bond seduces before she dies in an unusual and gory way midway, and the third survives to the end of the film.[31] In several, the Bond girl is revealed, after her tryst with Bond, to be a villainess. Examples are Fatima Blush (Barbara Carrera) in Never Say Never Again (1983), Elektra King (Sophie Marceau) in The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Miranda Frost (Rosamund Pike) in Die Another Day (2002). The Dalton films of the 1980s introduced the "Bond woman", who is equal to and challenges Bond, but he remains the heterosexual hero; they are depicted with Dalton and later Bonds and their cars and gadgets, implying that all are possessions that Bond can use and dispose.[31]

As of 2013, there had been only two films in which James Bond falls in love with the Bond girl. The first was On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), in which Countess Tracy di Vicenzo (Diana Rigg) marries Bond but is shot dead by Irma Bunt and Ernst Stavro Blofeld at the story's end. The second was Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) in Casino Royale (2006). Bond confesses his love to her and resigns from MI6 so that they can have a normal life together. He later learns that she had been a double agent working for his enemies. The enemy organisation Quantum had kidnapped her former lover and had been blackmailing her to secure her co-operation. She ends up actually falling in love with Bond, but dies, as Quantum is closing in on her, by drowning in a lift in a building under renovation in Venice.[42][43]

With the exception of these two doomed Bond girls, it is never explained why Bond's love interest in one film is gone by the next, and is never mentioned or even alluded to again. This is not always the case in the novels, which do sometimes make references to the Bond girls who have appeared in previous books. Tiffany Case and Honey Ryder are revealed to have married other men (in From Russia With Love and The Man With the Golden Gun respectively), and in Doctor No, Bond briefly wonders about Solitaire. In John Gardner's novels continuing the franchise Bond girls begin to appear in more than one book, often picking up their relationships with Bond from before, and in one case continuing a romance through two consecutive titles. In Licence Renewed it is specifically noted in an epilogue that Bond and Lavender Peacock stopped seeing each other after a brief romance, but Sukie Tempesta (Nobody Lives for Ever), Beatrice Maria da Ricci (Win, Lose or Die), and Fredericka von Grüsse (Never Send Flowers) all make return appearances in later books. Anthony Horowitz's Trigger Mortis picks up two weeks after the events in Goldfinger with Bond continuing his relationship with Pussy Galore. A unique case is Mary Goodnight, who appears in the novels On Her Majesty's Secret Service and You Only Live Twice as Bond's secretary, before becoming a full-fledged Bond girl in The Man With the Golden Gun.[citation needed]

Effect on career

The role of a Bond girl, as it has evolved in the films, is typically a high-profile part that can sometimes give a major boost to the career of unestablished actresses, although a number of Bond girls were well-established beforehand. For instance, Diana Rigg and Honor Blackman were both cast as Bond girls after they had already become stars in the United Kingdom for their roles in the television series The Avengers. In addition, Halle Berry won an Academy Award in 2002—the award was presented to her while she was filming Die Another Day. Teri Hatcher was already known for her role as Lois Lane in the television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman before she was cast in Tomorrow Never Dies. A few years after playing a Bond girl, she became one of the most highly paid actresses on television, starring in Desperate Housewives. Jane Seymour was an unknown when she was cast in Live and Let Die (the opening credits read "Introducing Jane Seymour"), later won an Emmy Award for playing Maria Callas in a TV movie and then became a household name playing the title role in her TV series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.[44] Kim Basinger has had perhaps the most successful post-Bond career. After her breakout role in Never Say Never Again, she went on to win an Academy Award for her performance in L.A. Confidential and to star in such notable films as 9½ Weeks, Batman, and 8 Mile.

 
Kim Basinger, who played Domino Petachi in Never Say Never Again (1983) and Rosamund Pike, who played Miranda Frost in Die Another Day (2002).

Broccoli's original choice for the role of Domino Derval was Julie Christie following her performance in Billy Liar in 1963. It seems he was disappointed when he met her so instead he considered Raquel Welch after seeing her on the cover of the October 1964 issue of Life magazine. Welch, however, was hired by Richard Zanuck of 20th Century Fox to appear in the film Fantastic Voyage the same year instead.[45] French actress Claudine Auger was ultimately cast in the role. Thunderball launched Auger into a successful European film career but did little for her in the United States.[46]

At one time, it was said that appearing as a Bond girl would damage an actress's career. Lois Chiles is often cited as a case in point, even though her career did not suffer because of her portrayal of Holly Goodhead, but rather because, after she lost her younger brother to non-Hodgkin lymphoma, she decided to take a three-year break from acting, from which her career never recovered. Casting for the female lead in Casino Royale (2006) was hindered by potential actresses' concerns about the effect that playing the role might have on their careers.[47] At that point, some thought that the Bond series had become stale and would therefore be a less desirable vehicle for young actresses. Nevertheless, the up-and-coming actress Eva Green agreed to play the role of Vesper Lynd, and showed those fears to be unfounded when she won BAFTA's Rising Star Award for her performance. Rosamund Pike, who made her feature film debut as Miranda Frost in Die Another Day (2002), went on to earn an Academy Award nomination for Gone Girl.

Multiple appearances

Prior to the series being rebooted in 2006 with Casino Royale, Sylvia Trench was the only Bond girl character to appear in more than one film (Dr. No in 1962 and From Russia with Love in 1963). She was meant to be Bond's regular girlfriend, but was dropped after her appearance in the second film.[citation needed] After the series was rebooted, Moneypenny was re-introduced in Skyfall (2012) as an agent assisting Bond in his mission and her characterisation was closer to that of a Bond girl; following her demotion at the end of Skyfall the character returned for the next film, Spectre (2015), as M's personal assistant and the characterisation of Moneypenny was closer to that of the original series. Léa Seydoux, who played Madeleine Swann in Spectre, reprised her role in No Time to Die (2021).

In the Eon series, three actresses have made reappearances as different Bond girls: Martine Beswick and Nadja Regin both first appeared in From Russia with Love, and then appeared in Thunderball and Goldfinger respectively. Maud Adams played Andrea Anders in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) and the eponymous character in Octopussy (1983).

If the non-Eon produced films, Casino Royale (1967) and Never Say Never Again (1983), are included, several other actresses have also been a Bond girl more than once: Ursula Andress in Dr. No (1962) and Casino Royale; Angela Scoular in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969) and Casino Royale; Valerie Leon in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Never Say Never Again.[48]

List of Bond girls

Ian Fleming stories

Title (publication date) Bond girl
Casino Royale (1953) Vesper Lynd
Live and Let Die (1954) Simone "Solitaire" Latrelle
Moonraker (1955) Gala Brand
Diamonds Are Forever (1956) Tiffany Case
From Russia, with Love (1957) Corporal Tatiana Romanova
Dr. No (1958) Honeychile Rider
Goldfinger (1959)
"From a View to a Kill" (1960) Mary Ann Russell
"For Your Eyes Only" (1960) Judy Havelock
"Quantum of Solace" (1960)
"Risico" (1960) Lisl Baum
"The Hildebrand Rarity" (1960) Liz Krest
Thunderball (1961)
The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) Vivienne Michel
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1963)
You Only Live Twice (1964)
The Man with the Golden Gun (1965, posthumously) Mary Goodnight
"The Living Daylights" (1966, posth.) Trigger
"The Property of a Lady" (1966, posth.) Maria Freudenstein
"Octopussy" (1966, posth.)
"007 in New York" (1966, posth.) Solange

Mary Goodnight was a supporting character in several Bond novels before graduating to full Bond girl in The Man with the Golden Gun. Several short stories, such as "Quantum of Solace", "The Hildebrand Rarity", "The Living Daylights", and "The Property of a Lady", feature female characters in prominent roles, but none of these women interact with Bond in a romantic way.

Post-Fleming stories

Title (publication date) Author Bond girl
Colonel Sun (1968) Kingsley Amis, as Robert Markham Ariadne Alexandrou
Licence Renewed (1981) John Gardner Lavender Peacock
For Special Services (1982) John Gardner
  • Cedar Leiter
  • Nena Bismaquer
Icebreaker (1983) John Gardner
  • Paula Vacker
  • Rivke Ingber
Role of Honour (1984) John Gardner Persephone "Percy" Proud
Nobody Lives for Ever (1986) John Gardner Sukie Tempesta
No Deals, Mr. Bond (1987) John Gardner Ebbie Heritage
Scorpius (1988) John Gardner Harriett Horner
Win, Lose or Die (1989) John Gardner
  • Clover Pennington
  • Beatrice Maria da Ricci
Brokenclaw (1990) John Gardner Sue Chi-Ho
The Man from Barbarossa (1991) John Gardner
  • Stephanie Adoré
  • Nina Bibikova
Death is Forever (1992) John Gardner Elizabeth "Easy" St. John
Never Send Flowers (1993) John Gardner Fredericka "Flicka" von Grüsse
SeaFire (1994) John Gardner Fredericka "Flicka" von Grüsse
COLD (1996) John Gardner
  • Sukie Tempesta
  • Beatrice Maria da Ricci
"Blast From the Past" (1997) Raymond Benson
Zero Minus Ten (1997) Raymond Benson Sunni Pei
The Facts of Death (1998) Raymond Benson
  • Niki Mirakos
  • Hera Volopoulos
"Midsummer Night's Doom" (1999) Raymond Benson
High Time to Kill (1999) Raymond Benson
  • Helena Marksbury
  • Hope Kendal
"Live at Five" (1999) Raymond Benson Janet Davies
DoubleShot (2000) Raymond Benson
  • Kimberly Feare
  • Heidi Taunt
  • Hedi Taunt
Never Dream of Dying (2001) Raymond Benson Tylyn Mignonne
The Man with the Red Tattoo (2002) Raymond Benson
  • Reiko Tamura
  • Mayumi McMahon
Devil May Care (2008) Sebastian Faulks Scarlett Papava
Carte Blanche (2011) Jeffery Deaver
  • Felicity Willing
  • Ophelia "Philly" Maidenstone
Solo (2013) William Boyd
  • Bryce Fitzjohn
  • Efua Blessing Ogilvy-Grant
Trigger Mortis (2015) Anthony Horowitz
Forever and a Day (2018) Anthony Horowitz Joanne "Sixtine / Madame 16" Brochet
With a Mind to Kill (2022) Anthony Horowitz TBA

Eon Productions films

There are several different archetypes for Bond girls: romantic interests, those who assist him, femme fatales (who invariably make an attempt on Bond's life), and sacrificial lambs (female allies or associates of Bond who wind up dead).[49] Since it is debatable whether certain girls fulfil certain tropes (e.g. If Bond kisses a girl, does that make her a romantic interest? Is Pussy Galore a "femme fatale" due to her being in league with Goldfinger?), the following criteria are used for determining inclusion: women with whom sexual encounters are implied; the woman who principally assists Bond; femme fatales are taken to be women who attempt to kill Bond; sacrificial lambs are taken to be women with an allegiance to Bond whose death is instigated by the main villain or his henchmen.

Film Sexual partners Main sidekick Femme fatale Sacrificial lamb
Dr. No Honey Ryder Miss Taro
From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova Rosa Klebb (Lotte Lenya)
Goldfinger Pussy Galore Bonita (Nadja Regin)
Thunderball Domino Derval Fiona Volpe Paula Caplan (Martine Beswick)
You Only Live Twice Kissy Suzuki Helga Brandt Aki
On Her Majesty's Secret Service Teresa di Vicenzo Irma Bunt (Ilse Steppat) Teresa di Vicenzo
Diamonds Are Forever Tiffany Case (Jill St. John) Tiffany Case
Plenty O'Toole (Lana Wood)
Live and Let Die
Solitaire Rosie Carver
The Man with the Golden Gun
Mary Goodnight Andrea Anders
The Spy Who Loved Me
Anya Amasova Naomi (Caroline Munro) Felicca (Olga Bisera)
Moonraker Holly Goodhead
  • Private Jet Hostess (Leila Shenna)
  • Blonde Beauty (Irka Bochenko)
Corinne Dufour
For Your Eyes Only
Melina Havelock Countess Lisl von Schlaf
Octopussy
Octopussy
A View to a Kill Stacey Sutton
May Day
The Living Daylights
Kara Milovy
Licence to Kill
Pam Bouvier Della Churchill (Priscilla Barnes)
GoldenEye Natalya Simonova Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen)
Tomorrow Never Dies
Wai Lin Paris Carver
The World Is Not Enough
Dr. Christmas Jones
Die Another Day Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson Miranda Frost
Casino Royale Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) Vesper Lynd Valenka (Ivana Miličević)
Quantum of Solace Strawberry Fields (Gemma Arterton) Camille Montes (Olga Kurylenko) Strawberry Fields
Skyfall Eve Moneypenny (Naomie Harris) Sévérine
Spectre Dr. Madeleine Swann
No Time to Die Dr. Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux)

Non-Eon films

In addition to the Eon Productions films, there have been two Bond films produced by independent studios and one television production. The roles are not as easily categorized.

Film Bond girl Actress
Casino Royale
(1954 television production)
Valerie Mathis Linda Christian
Casino Royale
1967 film
Vesper Lynd Ursula Andress
Miss Goodthighs Jacqueline Bisset
Miss Moneypenny Barbara Bouchet
Agent Mimi/Lady Fiona McTarry Deborah Kerr
The Detainer Daliah Lavi
Mata Bond Joanna Pettet
Buttercup Angela Scoular
Never Say Never Again
1983 film
Domino Petachi Kim Basinger
Fatima Blush Barbara Carrera
Patricia Fearing Prunella Gee
Lady in Bahamas Valerie Leon
Nicole Saskia Cohen Tanugi

Video games

Game Bond girl Actress
Agent Under Fire Zoe Nightshade Caron Pascoe (voice)
Adrian Malprave Eve Karpf (voice)
Dr. Natalya Damescu Beatie Edney (voice)
Nightfire Dominique Paradis Lena Reno (voice)
Zoe Nightshade Jeanne Mori (voice)
Alura McCall Kimberley Davies (voice)
Makiko Hayashi Tamlyn Tomita (voice)
Everything or Nothing Serena St. Germaine Shannon Elizabeth
Dr. Katya Nadanova Heidi Klum
Miss Nagai Misaki Ito
Mya Starling Mýa
GoldenEye: Rogue Agent Pussy Galore Jeannie Elias (voice)
Xenia Onatopp Jenya Lano (voice)
From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova Daniela Bianchi (likeness), Kari Wahlgren (voice)
Eva Adara Maria Menounos
Elizabeth Stark Natasha Bedingfield
Blood Stone Nicole Hunter Joss Stone (likeness and voice)
GoldenEye 007 Xenia Onatopp Kate Magowan (likeness and voice)
Natalya Simonova Kirsty Mitchell (likeness and voice)
007 Legends Holly Goodhead Jane Perry
Tracy Draco Diana Rigg (likeness), Nicola Walker (voice)
Pam Bouvier Carey Lowell
Jinx Gabriela Montaraz (likeness), Madalena Alberto (voice)
Pussy Galore Honor Blackman (likeness), Natasha Little (voice)

Documentary

In 2002 former Bond girl Maryam d'Abo co-wrote the book Bond Girls Are Forever: The Women of James Bond. This book later became a DVD exclusive documentary featuring d'Abo and other Bond girls, including Ursula Andress. In some locations, the documentary was released as a gift with the purchase of Die Another Day on DVD. The featurette was included on the DVD release of Casino Royale (2006).

See also

References

  1. ^ Ford, Clementine (14 October 2015). "Are Bond girls sexist?". BBC Culture.
  2. ^ Handy, Bruce (27 October 2015). "Girls" to Spectre". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  3. ^ Smith, Nigel M. (17 September 2015). "Monica Bellucci: 'I'm not a Bond girl, I'm a Bond woman'". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  4. ^ Anderson, Steve (26 October 2015). "Spectre's Naomie Harris: We should ditch demeaning 'Bond girl' term – and it's time we stopped talking about a black James Bond". The Independent. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  5. ^ For a general discussion of the characteristics of the Fleming Bond girl, see the relevant chapters of O. F. Snelling, 007 James Bond: A Report (Signet, 1965).
  6. ^ James Bond (literary character)#Background
  7. ^ a b Fleming, Ian, Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 10.
  8. ^ Fleming, Ian, From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 9.
  9. ^ Fleming, Ian, The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2.
  10. ^ Fleming, Ian, You Only Live Twice (Glidrose, 1964), ch. 12.
  11. ^ Fleming, Ian, Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 16.
  12. ^ a b From Russia, With Love, ch. 8
  13. ^ a b Fleming, Ian, Goldfinger (Glidrose, 1959), ch. 17.
  14. ^ Snelling, 007 James Bond: A Report.
  15. ^ Fleming, Ian, The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4
  16. ^ a b Fleming, Ian, Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 7.
  17. ^ a b Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5.
  18. ^ Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5; ibid., Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 11; ibid., Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 5; ibid., From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 8; ibid., Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 8; ibid., The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2; ibid., The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4.
  19. ^ Fleming, Ian, Casino Royale (Glidrose, 1953), ch. 5; ibid., Live and Let Die (MacMillan, 1954), ch. 7; ibid., Moonraker (MacMillan, 1955), ch. 11; ibid., From Russia, With Love (MacMillan, 1957), ch. 8; ibid., Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 8; ibid., The Spy Who Loved Me (Glidrose, 1962), ch. 2; ibid., On Her Majesty's Secret Service (Glidrose, 1963), ch. 3; ibid., The Man with the Golden Gun (Glidrose, 1965), ch. 4.
  20. ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 5.
  21. ^ Fleming, Ian, Thunderball (Glidrose, 1961), ch. 11
  22. ^ Fleming, Ian (1961). Thunderball. Jonathan Cape.
  23. ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 22.
  24. ^ Fleming, Ian, Diamonds are Forever (MacMillan, 1956), ch. 8.
  25. ^ Fleming, Ian, Doctor No (Glidrose, 1958), ch. 11.
  26. ^ a b Fleming, Ian, Goldfinger (Glidrose, 1959), ch. 23.
  27. ^ Fleming, Ian, You Only Live Twice (Glidrose, 1964), ch. 14.
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  29. ^ . Fox News Magazine. 5 November 2012. Archived from the original on 2 September 2015. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  30. ^ Brown, Brigid (8 November 2012). "The Early Bond Girls: Where Are They Now?". Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  31. ^ a b c Watson, Nigel. "Bond Age Man". Talking Pictures.
  32. ^ Jütting 2007, p. 65.
  33. ^ Lipp 2006, p. 34.
  34. ^ Comentale, Watt & Willman 2005, p. 134.
  35. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (25 October 2012). "Skyfall – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  36. ^ Slater, Tom (2 November 2012). "Judi Dench: the ultimate Bond girl". spiked-online.com. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  37. ^ Rosenberg, Alyssa (9 November 2012). "The End of the Bond Girl and the Rise of the Bond Woman". slate.com. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  38. ^ . Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2008.
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  40. ^ Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (11 December 2009), "The 100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows, Albums, Books, Characters, Scenes, Episodes, Songs, Dresses, Music Videos, and Trends That Entertained Us Over the Past 10 Years". Entertainment Weekly. (1079/1080):74-84
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  43. ^ "'Quantum of Solace's Mr. White Says He's Returning for 'Spectre'". Screen Rant. 4 December 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
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Bibliography

bond, girl, character, love, interest, female, companion, occasionally, adversary, james, bond, novel, film, video, game, occasionally, have, names, that, double, entendres, puns, such, pussy, galore, plenty, toole, holly, goodhead, xenia, onatopp, female, lea. A Bond girl is a character who is a love interest female companion or occasionally an adversary of James Bond in a novel film or video game Bond girls occasionally have names that are double entendres or puns such as Pussy Galore Plenty O Toole Holly Goodhead or Xenia Onatopp The female leads in the films such as Ursula Andress Honor Blackman or Eva Green can also be referred to as Bond girls The term Bond girl may also be considered as an anachronism 1 2 with some female cast members in the films preferring the designation Bond woman 3 4 Clockwise from top left Eva Green Halle Berry Michelle Yeoh and Jane Seymour Contents 1 In novels 1 1 Inspiration 2 In film 2 1 Roles and impact 2 2 Effect on career 2 3 Multiple appearances 3 List of Bond girls 3 1 Ian Fleming stories 3 2 Post Fleming stories 3 3 Eon Productions films 3 4 Non Eon films 3 5 Video games 4 Documentary 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyIn novels EditThis article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Bond girl news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article or section possibly contains synthesis of material which does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nearly all of Ian Fleming s Bond novels and short stories include one or more female characters who can be said to qualify as Bond girls most of whom have been adapted for the screen While Fleming s Bond girls have some individual traits at least in their literary forms they also have a great many characteristics in common 5 One of these is age The typical Bond girl is in her early to mid twenties roughly ten years younger than Bond who seems to be perennially in his mid thirties 6 Examples include Solitaire 25 7 Tatiana Romanova 24 8 Vivienne Viv Michel 23 9 and Kissy Suzuki 23 10 The youngest Bond girl though she and Bond do not sleep together may be Gala Brand citation needed she is named for the cruiser in which her father is serving at the time of her birth 11 Bond s youngest sexual partner in the books is Mariko Ichiban an 18 year old masseuse in You Only Live Twice The eldest Bond girls are Pussy Galore who Bond speculates is in her early 30s and 29 year old Domino Vitali citation needed Bond girls conform to a fairly well defined standard of beauty They possess splendid figures and tend to dress in a slightly masculine assertive fashion wear little jewellery and that in a masculine cut wide leather belts and square toed leather shoes There is some variation in dress though Bond girls have made their initial appearances in evening wear in bra and panties and on occasion naked Most are white they often sport light though noticeable suntans although a few such as Solitaire Tatiana Romanova and Pussy Galore are not only tanless but remarkably pale 7 12 13 and they generally use little or no makeup and no nail polish also wearing their nails short 14 Their hair may be any colour 12 15 16 17 though they typically wear it in a natural or casual cut that falls heavily to their shoulders Their features especially their eyes and mouths are often widely spaced e g Vesper Lynd Gala Brand Tiffany Case Tatiana Romanova Honey Ryder Viv Michel Mary Goodnight 18 Their eyes are usually blue e g Vesper Lynd Gala Brand Tatiana Romanova Honey Ryder Tracy Bond Mary Goodnight 19 and sometimes this is true to an unusual and striking degree Tiffany Case s eyes are chatoyant varying with the light from grey to grey blue 20 while Pussy Galore has deep violet eyes the only truly violet eyes that Bond had ever seen 13 The first description of a Bond girl Casino Royale s Vesper Lynd is almost a template for the typical dress as well as the general appearance of later Bond girls she sports nearly all of the features discussed above 17 In contrast Dominetta Domino Vitali arguably departs to the greatest degree from the template dressing in white leather doeskin sandals appearing more tanned sporting a soft Brigitte Bardot haircut and giving no indication of widely spaced features 21 The departure may be due to the unusual circumstances behind the writing of the novel Thunderball in which Domino appears Even Domino however wears rather masculine jewellery 22 page needed The best known characteristic of Bond girls apart from their uniform beauty is their pattern of sexually suggestive names such as Pussy Galore Names with less obvious meanings are sometimes explained in the novels While Solitaire s real name is Simone Latrelle she is known as Solitaire because she excludes men from her life 16 Gala Brand as noted above is named for her father s cruiser HMS Galatea and Tiffany Case received her name from her father who was so angry that she was not a boy that he gave her mother a thousand dollars and a compact from Tiffany s and then walked out on her 23 Fleming s penchant for double entendre names began with the first Bond novel Casino Royale Conjecture is widespread that the name of the Bond girl in that novel Vesper Lynd was intended to be a pun on West Berlin signifying Vesper s divided loyalties as a double agent under Soviet control Several Bond girls however have normal names e g Mary Ann Russell Judy Havelock Viv Michel Tracy Bond nee Teresa Draco aka Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo citation needed Most Bond girls are apparently and sometimes expressly sexually experienced by the time they meet Bond Quite often those previous experiences have not been positive and many Bond girls have had sexual violence inflicted on them in the past causing them to feel alienated from all men until Bond comes along Tiffany Case was gang raped as a teenager 24 Honey Ryder was beaten and raped as a teenager by a drunken acquaintance 25 Pussy Galore was sexually abused at age 12 by her uncle 26 While there is no such clear cut trauma in Solitaire s early life there are suggestions that she too avoids men because of their unwanted sexual advances in her past Kissy Suzuki reports to Bond that during her brief career in Hollywood when she was 17 They thought that because I am Japanese I am some sort of an animal and that my body is for everyone 27 The implication is often that these violent episodes have turned these Bond girls against men though upon encountering Bond they overcome their earlier antipathy and sleep with him not only willingly but eagerly The cliche reaches an extreme level in Goldfinger where Pussy Galore is portrayed as a lesbian when she first meets Bond but at the end of the novel she sleeps with him When in bed he says to her They told me you only liked women she replies I never met a man before 26 In Fleming s novels many Bond girls have some sort of independent job or even career often one that was considered inappropriate for women in the 1950s Lynd Brand Tatiana Romanova Mary Ann Russell and Mary Goodnight are in intelligence or law enforcement work Those who are criminals such as Case and Galore tend to be similarly independent minded in how they approach their work the latter even running her own syndicate Even those Bond girls who have more conventional or glamorous jobs show themselves to be invested in having an independent outlook on life While the Bond girls are clearly intended as sex objects they are nevertheless portrayed in the novels as having a high degree of independence this is also frequently but not always the case in the films Most of the novels focus on one particular romance as some of them do not begin until well into the novel Casino Royale is a good example However several exceptions have been made In Goldfinger the Masterton sisters are considered Bond girls although Tilly is supposedly a lesbian and after their deaths Pussy Galore also supposedly a lesbian becomes the primary Bond girl In Thunderball Bond romances first Patricia Fearing then later Domino Vitali In On Her Majesty s Secret Service Bond enters into a relationship and an eventual marriage with Teresa Tracy di Vicenzo and sleeps with Ruby Windsor a patient he meets in Blofeld s hideout while posing as a genealogist In You Only Live Twice Bond mainly has a relationship with Kissy Suzuki but also romances Mariko Ichiban as well as another girl Several Bond girls have obvious signs of inner turmoil Vesper Lynd or Vivienne Michel and others have traumatic pasts Most Bond girls whose characters are allowed to develop in the course of the story are flawed and several have unhappy sexual backgrounds Ryder Galore Case Michel and Suzuki among others Inspiration Edit The inspiration for all of Fleming s Bond girls may be his onetime lover Muriel Wright who according to The Times 28 has a claim to be the fons et origo of the species pliant and undemanding beautiful but innocent outdoorsy physically tough implicitly vulnerable and uncomplaining and then tragically dead before or soon after marriage Wright was 26 and exceptionally beautiful when she and Fleming met in 1935 A talented rider skier and polo player Wright was independently wealthy and a model She was devoted to Fleming despite his repeated unfaithfulness She died in an air raid in 1944 devastating Fleming who called Wright too good to be true 28 In film EditUrsula Andress as Honey Ryder in Dr No 1962 is widely regarded as the first Bond girl 29 although she was preceded by both Eunice Gayson as Sylvia Trench and Zena Marshall as Miss Taro in the same film 30 Goldfinger 1964 the third established the Bond girl as regularly appearing in Bond films 31 There is no set rule on what kind of person a Bond girl will be or what role she will play She may be an ally or an enemy of Bond pivotal to the mission or simply there for her looks There are female characters such as Judi Dench s M Camille Montes a Bolivian intelligence agent who teams up with Bond in Quantum of Solace and Bibi Dahl in For Your Eyes Only who are not romantic interests of Bond and hence may not be considered Bond girls 32 33 34 It has been argued that M s pivotal role in the plot of Skyfall qualifies her as a Bond girl or Bond woman 35 36 37 There have been many attempts to break down the numerous Bond girls into a top 10 list for the entire series characters who often appear in these lists include Anya Amasova from The Spy Who Loved Me portrayed by Barbara Bach Pussy Galore from Goldfinger portrayed by Honor Blackman Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo from On Her Majesty s Secret Service portrayed by Diana Rigg and often ranked Number 1 on the list Honey Ryder from Dr No portrayed by Ursula Andress 38 39 Entertainment Weekly put Bond bathing suits on its 2009 end of the decade best of list saying And you thought spies were supposed to be inconspicuous Halle Berry s orange bikini in Die Another Day 2002 and Daniel Craig s supersnug powder blue trunks in Casino Royale 2006 suggest that neither 007 star can keep a secret 40 Monica Bellucci in Spectre became the oldest Bond girl at the age of 50 although she stated that she does not consider herself to be a Bond girl but a Bond woman 41 Roles and impact Edit Roald Dahl said that when writing the script for You Only Live Twice he was advised to use three Bond girls The first should die preferably in Bond s arms early the second a villain whom Bond seduces before she dies in an unusual and gory way midway and the third survives to the end of the film 31 In several the Bond girl is revealed after her tryst with Bond to be a villainess Examples are Fatima Blush Barbara Carrera in Never Say Never Again 1983 Elektra King Sophie Marceau in The World Is Not Enough 1999 and Miranda Frost Rosamund Pike in Die Another Day 2002 The Dalton films of the 1980s introduced the Bond woman who is equal to and challenges Bond but he remains the heterosexual hero they are depicted with Dalton and later Bonds and their cars and gadgets implying that all are possessions that Bond can use and dispose 31 As of 2013 there had been only two films in which James Bond falls in love with the Bond girl The first was On Her Majesty s Secret Service 1969 in which Countess Tracy di Vicenzo Diana Rigg marries Bond but is shot dead by Irma Bunt and Ernst Stavro Blofeld at the story s end The second was Vesper Lynd Eva Green in Casino Royale 2006 Bond confesses his love to her and resigns from MI6 so that they can have a normal life together He later learns that she had been a double agent working for his enemies The enemy organisation Quantum had kidnapped her former lover and had been blackmailing her to secure her co operation She ends up actually falling in love with Bond but dies as Quantum is closing in on her by drowning in a lift in a building under renovation in Venice 42 43 With the exception of these two doomed Bond girls it is never explained why Bond s love interest in one film is gone by the next and is never mentioned or even alluded to again This is not always the case in the novels which do sometimes make references to the Bond girls who have appeared in previous books Tiffany Case and Honey Ryder are revealed to have married other men in From Russia With Love and The Man With the Golden Gun respectively and in Doctor No Bond briefly wonders about Solitaire In John Gardner s novels continuing the franchise Bond girls begin to appear in more than one book often picking up their relationships with Bond from before and in one case continuing a romance through two consecutive titles In Licence Renewed it is specifically noted in an epilogue that Bond and Lavender Peacock stopped seeing each other after a brief romance but Sukie Tempesta Nobody Lives for Ever Beatrice Maria da Ricci Win Lose or Die and Fredericka von Grusse Never Send Flowers all make return appearances in later books Anthony Horowitz s Trigger Mortis picks up two weeks after the events in Goldfinger with Bond continuing his relationship with Pussy Galore A unique case is Mary Goodnight who appears in the novels On Her Majesty s Secret Service and You Only Live Twice as Bond s secretary before becoming a full fledged Bond girl in The Man With the Golden Gun citation needed Effect on career Edit The role of a Bond girl as it has evolved in the films is typically a high profile part that can sometimes give a major boost to the career of unestablished actresses although a number of Bond girls were well established beforehand For instance Diana Rigg and Honor Blackman were both cast as Bond girls after they had already become stars in the United Kingdom for their roles in the television series The Avengers In addition Halle Berry won an Academy Award in 2002 the award was presented to her while she was filming Die Another Day Teri Hatcher was already known for her role as Lois Lane in the television series Lois amp Clark The New Adventures of Superman before she was cast in Tomorrow Never Dies A few years after playing a Bond girl she became one of the most highly paid actresses on television starring in Desperate Housewives Jane Seymour was an unknown when she was cast in Live and Let Die the opening credits read Introducing Jane Seymour later won an Emmy Award for playing Maria Callas in a TV movie and then became a household name playing the title role in her TV series Dr Quinn Medicine Woman 44 Kim Basinger has had perhaps the most successful post Bond career After her breakout role in Never Say Never Again she went on to win an Academy Award for her performance in L A Confidential and to star in such notable films as 9 Weeks Batman and 8 Mile Kim Basinger who played Domino Petachi in Never Say Never Again 1983 and Rosamund Pike who played Miranda Frost in Die Another Day 2002 Broccoli s original choice for the role of Domino Derval was Julie Christie following her performance in Billy Liar in 1963 It seems he was disappointed when he met her so instead he considered Raquel Welch after seeing her on the cover of the October 1964 issue of Life magazine Welch however was hired by Richard Zanuck of 20th Century Fox to appear in the film Fantastic Voyage the same year instead 45 French actress Claudine Auger was ultimately cast in the role Thunderball launched Auger into a successful European film career but did little for her in the United States 46 At one time it was said that appearing as a Bond girl would damage an actress s career Lois Chiles is often cited as a case in point even though her career did not suffer because of her portrayal of Holly Goodhead but rather because after she lost her younger brother to non Hodgkin lymphoma she decided to take a three year break from acting from which her career never recovered Casting for the female lead in Casino Royale 2006 was hindered by potential actresses concerns about the effect that playing the role might have on their careers 47 At that point some thought that the Bond series had become stale and would therefore be a less desirable vehicle for young actresses Nevertheless the up and coming actress Eva Green agreed to play the role of Vesper Lynd and showed those fears to be unfounded when she won BAFTA s Rising Star Award for her performance Rosamund Pike who made her feature film debut as Miranda Frost in Die Another Day 2002 went on to earn an Academy Award nomination for Gone Girl Multiple appearances Edit Prior to the series being rebooted in 2006 with Casino Royale Sylvia Trench was the only Bond girl character to appear in more than one film Dr No in 1962 and From Russia with Love in 1963 She was meant to be Bond s regular girlfriend but was dropped after her appearance in the second film citation needed After the series was rebooted Moneypenny was re introduced in Skyfall 2012 as an agent assisting Bond in his mission and her characterisation was closer to that of a Bond girl following her demotion at the end of Skyfall the character returned for the next film Spectre 2015 as M s personal assistant and the characterisation of Moneypenny was closer to that of the original series Lea Seydoux who played Madeleine Swann in Spectre reprised her role in No Time to Die 2021 In the Eon series three actresses have made reappearances as different Bond girls Martine Beswick and Nadja Regin both first appeared in From Russia with Love and then appeared in Thunderball and Goldfinger respectively Maud Adams played Andrea Anders in The Man with the Golden Gun 1974 and the eponymous character in Octopussy 1983 If the non Eon produced films Casino Royale 1967 and Never Say Never Again 1983 are included several other actresses have also been a Bond girl more than once Ursula Andress in Dr No 1962 and Casino Royale Angela Scoular in On Her Majesty s Secret Service 1969 and Casino Royale Valerie Leon in The Spy Who Loved Me 1977 and Never Say Never Again 48 List of Bond girls EditIan Fleming stories Edit Title publication date Bond girlCasino Royale 1953 Vesper LyndLive and Let Die 1954 Simone Solitaire LatrelleMoonraker 1955 Gala BrandDiamonds Are Forever 1956 Tiffany CaseFrom Russia with Love 1957 Corporal Tatiana RomanovaDr No 1958 Honeychile RiderGoldfinger 1959 Pussy GaloreJill MastertonTilly Masterton From a View to a Kill 1960 Mary Ann Russell For Your Eyes Only 1960 Judy Havelock Quantum of Solace 1960 Risico 1960 Lisl Baum The Hildebrand Rarity 1960 Liz KrestThunderball 1961 Dominetta Domino VitaliPatricia FearingThe Spy Who Loved Me 1962 Vivienne MichelOn Her Majesty s Secret Service 1963 Teresa di VicenzoRuby WindsorYou Only Live Twice 1964 Kissy SuzukiMariko Ichibanunnamed girlThe Man with the Golden Gun 1965 posthumously Mary Goodnight The Living Daylights 1966 posth Trigger The Property of a Lady 1966 posth Maria Freudenstein Octopussy 1966 posth 007 in New York 1966 posth SolangeMary Goodnight was a supporting character in several Bond novels before graduating to full Bond girl in The Man with the Golden Gun Several short stories such as Quantum of Solace The Hildebrand Rarity The Living Daylights and The Property of a Lady feature female characters in prominent roles but none of these women interact with Bond in a romantic way Post Fleming stories Edit Title publication date Author Bond girlColonel Sun 1968 Kingsley Amis as Robert Markham Ariadne AlexandrouLicence Renewed 1981 John Gardner Lavender PeacockFor Special Services 1982 John Gardner Cedar LeiterNena BismaquerIcebreaker 1983 John Gardner Paula VackerRivke IngberRole of Honour 1984 John Gardner Persephone Percy ProudNobody Lives for Ever 1986 John Gardner Sukie TempestaNo Deals Mr Bond 1987 John Gardner Ebbie HeritageScorpius 1988 John Gardner Harriett HornerWin Lose or Die 1989 John Gardner Clover PenningtonBeatrice Maria da RicciBrokenclaw 1990 John Gardner Sue Chi HoThe Man from Barbarossa 1991 John Gardner Stephanie AdoreNina BibikovaDeath is Forever 1992 John Gardner Elizabeth Easy St JohnNever Send Flowers 1993 John Gardner Fredericka Flicka von GrusseSeaFire 1994 John Gardner Fredericka Flicka von GrusseCOLD 1996 John Gardner Sukie TempestaBeatrice Maria da Ricci Blast From the Past 1997 Raymond Benson Zero Minus Ten 1997 Raymond Benson Sunni PeiThe Facts of Death 1998 Raymond Benson Niki MirakosHera Volopoulos Midsummer Night s Doom 1999 Raymond Benson Lisa DerganVictoria ZdrokHigh Time to Kill 1999 Raymond Benson Helena MarksburyHope Kendal Live at Five 1999 Raymond Benson Janet DaviesDoubleShot 2000 Raymond Benson Kimberly FeareHeidi TauntHedi TauntNever Dream of Dying 2001 Raymond Benson Tylyn MignonneThe Man with the Red Tattoo 2002 Raymond Benson Reiko TamuraMayumi McMahonDevil May Care 2008 Sebastian Faulks Scarlett PapavaCarte Blanche 2011 Jeffery Deaver Felicity WillingOphelia Philly MaidenstoneSolo 2013 William Boyd Bryce FitzjohnEfua Blessing Ogilvy GrantTrigger Mortis 2015 Anthony Horowitz Jeopardy LaneLogan FairfaxPussy GaloreForever and a Day 2018 Anthony Horowitz Joanne Sixtine Madame 16 BrochetWith a Mind to Kill 2022 Anthony Horowitz TBAEon Productions films Edit There are several different archetypes for Bond girls romantic interests those who assist him femme fatales who invariably make an attempt on Bond s life and sacrificial lambs female allies or associates of Bond who wind up dead 49 Since it is debatable whether certain girls fulfil certain tropes e g If Bond kisses a girl does that make her a romantic interest Is Pussy Galore a femme fatale due to her being in league with Goldfinger the following criteria are used for determining inclusion women with whom sexual encounters are implied the woman who principally assists Bond femme fatales are taken to be women who attempt to kill Bond sacrificial lambs are taken to be women with an allegiance to Bond whose death is instigated by the main villain or his henchmen Film Sexual partners Main sidekick Femme fatale Sacrificial lambDr No Sylvia Trench Eunice Gayson Miss Taro Zena Marshall Honey Ryder Ursula Andress Honey Ryder Miss Taro From Russia with Love Sylvia Trench Eunice Gayson Vida Aliza Gur Zora Martine Beswick Tatiana Romanova Daniela Bianchi Tatiana Romanova Rosa Klebb Lotte Lenya Goldfinger Jill Masterson Shirley Eaton Pussy Galore Honor Blackman Pussy Galore Bonita Nadja Regin Jill MastersonTilly Masterson Tania Mallet Thunderball Patricia Pat Fearing Molly Peters Fiona Volpe Luciana Paluzzi Domino Derval Claudine Auger Domino Derval Fiona Volpe Paula Caplan Martine Beswick You Only Live Twice Aki Akiko Wakabayashi Helga Brandt Karin Dor Kissy Suzuki Mie Hama Kissy Suzuki Helga Brandt AkiOn Her Majesty s Secret Service Teresa di Vicenzo Diana Rigg Ruby Bartlett Angela Scoular Nancy Catherine Schell Teresa di Vicenzo Irma Bunt Ilse Steppat Teresa di VicenzoDiamonds Are Forever Tiffany Case Jill St John Tiffany Case Bambi Lola Larson Thumper Trina Parks Plenty O Toole Lana Wood Live and Let Die Miss Caruso Madeline Smith Rosie Carver Gloria Hendry Solitaire Jane Seymour Solitaire Rosie CarverThe Man with the Golden Gun Andrea Anders Maud Adams Mary Goodnight Britt Ekland Mary Goodnight Andrea AndersThe Spy Who Loved Me Log Cabin Girl Sue Vanner Harem Tent Girl Dawn Rodrigues Anya Amasova Barbara Bach Anya Amasova Naomi Caroline Munro Felicca Olga Bisera Moonraker Corinne Dufour Corinne Clery Manuela Emily Bolton Holly Goodhead Lois Chiles Holly Goodhead Private Jet Hostess Leila Shenna Blonde Beauty Irka Bochenko Corinne DufourFor Your Eyes Only Countess Lisl von Schlaf Cassandra Harris Melina Havelock Carole Bouquet Melina Havelock Countess Lisl von SchlafOctopussy Magda Kristina Wayborn Octopussy Maud Adams Octopussy A View to a Kill Kimberley Jones Mary Stavin May Day Grace Jones Pola Ivanova Fiona Fullerton Stacey Sutton Tanya Roberts Stacey Sutton May DayJenny Flex Alison Doody Pan Ho Papillon Soo Soo May DayThe Living Daylights Linda Kell Tyler Kara Milovy Maryam d Abo Kara Milovy Licence to Kill Pam Bouvier Carey Lowell Lupe Lamora Talisa Soto Pam Bouvier Della Churchill Priscilla Barnes GoldenEye Caroline Serena Gordon Natalya Simonova Izabella Scorupco Natalya Simonova Xenia Onatopp Famke Janssen Tomorrow Never Dies Prof Inga Bergstrom Cecilie Thomsen Paris Carver Teri Hatcher Wai Lin Michelle Yeoh Wai Lin Paris CarverThe World Is Not Enough Dr Molly Warmflash Serena Scott Thomas Elektra King Sophie Marceau Dr Christmas Jones Denise Richards Dr Christmas Jones Giulietta da Vinci Maria Grazia Cucinotta Elektra King Die Another Day Giacinta Jinx Johnson Halle Berry Miranda Frost Rosamund Pike Giacinta Jinx Johnson Miranda Frost Casino Royale Vesper Lynd Eva Green Vesper Lynd Valenka Ivana Milicevic Solange Dimitrios Caterina Murino Vesper LyndQuantum of Solace Strawberry Fields Gemma Arterton Camille Montes Olga Kurylenko Strawberry FieldsSkyfall Bond s Lover Tonia Sotiropoulou Severine Berenice Marlohe Eve Moneypenny Naomie Harris SeverineSpectre Lucia Sciarra Monica Bellucci Dr Madeleine Swann Lea Seydoux Dr Madeleine Swann No Time to Die Dr Madeleine Swann Lea Seydoux Dr Madeleine SwannNomi Lashana Lynch Non Eon films Edit In addition to the Eon Productions films there have been two Bond films produced by independent studios and one television production The roles are not as easily categorized Film Bond girl ActressCasino Royale 1954 television production Valerie Mathis Linda ChristianCasino Royale1967 film Vesper Lynd Ursula AndressMiss Goodthighs Jacqueline BissetMiss Moneypenny Barbara BouchetAgent Mimi Lady Fiona McTarry Deborah KerrThe Detainer Daliah LaviMata Bond Joanna PettetButtercup Angela ScoularNever Say Never Again1983 film Domino Petachi Kim BasingerFatima Blush Barbara CarreraPatricia Fearing Prunella GeeLady in Bahamas Valerie LeonNicole Saskia Cohen TanugiVideo games Edit Game Bond girl ActressAgent Under Fire Zoe Nightshade Caron Pascoe voice Adrian Malprave Eve Karpf voice Dr Natalya Damescu Beatie Edney voice Nightfire Dominique Paradis Lena Reno voice Zoe Nightshade Jeanne Mori voice Alura McCall Kimberley Davies voice Makiko Hayashi Tamlyn Tomita voice Everything or Nothing Serena St Germaine Shannon ElizabethDr Katya Nadanova Heidi KlumMiss Nagai Misaki ItoMya Starling MyaGoldenEye Rogue Agent Pussy Galore Jeannie Elias voice Xenia Onatopp Jenya Lano voice From Russia with Love Tatiana Romanova Daniela Bianchi likeness Kari Wahlgren voice Eva Adara Maria MenounosElizabeth Stark Natasha BedingfieldBlood Stone Nicole Hunter Joss Stone likeness and voice GoldenEye 007 Xenia Onatopp Kate Magowan likeness and voice Natalya Simonova Kirsty Mitchell likeness and voice 007 Legends Holly Goodhead Jane PerryTracy Draco Diana Rigg likeness Nicola Walker voice Pam Bouvier Carey LowellJinx Gabriela Montaraz likeness Madalena Alberto voice Pussy Galore Honor Blackman likeness Natasha Little voice Documentary EditIn 2002 former Bond girl Maryam d Abo co wrote the book Bond Girls Are Forever The Women of James Bond This book later became a DVD exclusive documentary featuring d Abo and other Bond girls including Ursula Andress In some locations the documentary was released as a gift with the purchase of Die Another Day on DVD The featurette was included on the DVD release of Casino Royale 2006 See also Edit United Kingdom portal Film portal Biography portalOutline of James Bond Category Bond girlsReferences Edit Ford Clementine 14 October 2015 Are Bond girls sexist BBC Culture Handy Bruce 27 October 2015 Girls to Spectre Vanity Fair Retrieved 28 March 2022 Smith Nigel M 17 September 2015 Monica Bellucci I m not a Bond girl I m a Bond woman The Guardian Retrieved 28 March 2022 Anderson Steve 26 October 2015 Spectre s Naomie Harris We should ditch demeaning Bond girl term and it s time we stopped talking about a black James Bond The Independent Retrieved 28 March 2022 For a general discussion of the characteristics of the Fleming Bond girl see the relevant chapters of O F Snelling 007 James Bond A Report Signet 1965 James Bond literary character Background a b Fleming Ian Live and Let Die MacMillan 1954 ch 10 Fleming Ian From Russia With Love MacMillan 1957 ch 9 Fleming Ian The Spy Who Loved Me Glidrose 1962 ch 2 Fleming Ian You Only Live Twice Glidrose 1964 ch 12 Fleming Ian Moonraker MacMillan 1955 ch 16 a b From Russia With Love ch 8 a b Fleming Ian Goldfinger Glidrose 1959 ch 17 Snelling 007 James Bond A Report Fleming Ian The Man with the Golden Gun Glidrose 1965 ch 4 a b Fleming Ian Live and Let Die MacMillan 1954 ch 7 a b Fleming Ian Casino Royale Glidrose 1953 ch 5 Fleming Ian Casino Royale Glidrose 1953 ch 5 ibid Moonraker MacMillan 1955 ch 11 ibid Diamonds are Forever MacMillan 1956 ch 5 ibid From Russia With Love MacMillan 1957 ch 8 ibid Doctor No Glidrose 1958 ch 8 ibid The Spy Who Loved Me Glidrose 1962 ch 2 ibid The Man with the Golden Gun Glidrose 1965 ch 4 Fleming Ian Casino Royale Glidrose 1953 ch 5 ibid Live and Let Die MacMillan 1954 ch 7 ibid Moonraker MacMillan 1955 ch 11 ibid From Russia With Love MacMillan 1957 ch 8 ibid Doctor No Glidrose 1958 ch 8 ibid The Spy Who Loved Me Glidrose 1962 ch 2 ibid On Her Majesty s Secret Service Glidrose 1963 ch 3 ibid The Man with the Golden Gun Glidrose 1965 ch 4 Fleming Ian Diamonds are Forever MacMillan 1956 ch 5 Fleming Ian Thunderball Glidrose 1961 ch 11 Fleming Ian 1961 Thunderball Jonathan Cape Fleming Ian Diamonds are Forever MacMillan 1956 ch 22 Fleming Ian Diamonds are Forever MacMillan 1956 ch 8 Fleming Ian Doctor No Glidrose 1958 ch 11 a b Fleming Ian Goldfinger Glidrose 1959 ch 23 Fleming Ian You Only Live Twice Glidrose 1964 ch 14 a b Macintyre Ben 5 April 2008 Was Ian Fleming the real 007 The Times London Archived from the original on 31 May 2010 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Get The Look Bond Girl Bikinis Fox News Magazine 5 November 2012 Archived from the original on 2 September 2015 Retrieved 18 August 2015 Brown Brigid 8 November 2012 The Early Bond Girls Where Are They Now Retrieved 18 August 2015 a b c Watson Nigel Bond Age Man Talking Pictures Jutting 2007 p 65 Lipp 2006 p 34 Comentale Watt amp Willman 2005 p 134 Bradshaw Peter 25 October 2012 Skyfall review The Guardian Retrieved 6 May 2016 Slater Tom 2 November 2012 Judi Dench the ultimate Bond girl spiked online com Retrieved 6 May 2016 Rosenberg Alyssa 9 November 2012 The End of the Bond Girl and the Rise of the Bond Woman slate com Retrieved 6 May 2016 The 10 Best Bond Girls EW com Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 15 February 2008 Top 10 Bond Babes 26 February 2007 Archived from the original on 21 March 2012 Geier Thom Jensen Jeff Jordan Tina Lyons Margaret Markovitz Adam Nashawaty Chris Pastorek Whitney Rice Lynette Rottenberg Josh Schwartz Missy Slezak Michael Snierson Dan Stack Tim Stroup Kate Tucker Ken Vary Adam B Vozick Levinson Simon Ward Kate 11 December 2009 The 100 Greatest Movies TV Shows Albums Books Characters Scenes Episodes Songs Dresses Music Videos and Trends That Entertained Us Over the Past 10 Years Entertainment Weekly 1079 1080 74 84 McCluskey Megan Monica Bellucci Says She Is a Bond Woman Not a Bond Girl Time Retrieved 1 October 2017 Eva Green is Vesper Lynd in Casino Royale Movie Web 12 November 2006 Retrieved 18 August 2015 Quantum of Solace s Mr White Says He s Returning for Spectre Screen Rant 4 December 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2015 From Bond Girl To Medicine Woman Jane Seymour s Big Break NPR org Retrieved 29 September 2017 Production notes for Thunderball MI6 co uk Archived from the original on 18 December 2007 Retrieved 30 December 2007 Mann Roderick 29 November 1986 Bond Was No Boost For Auger Los Angeles Times Retrieved 21 July 2012 Curse of the Bond Girl Cinema com 25 April 2001 Retrieved 29 March 2012 Pearce Tilly November 2 2020 Sir Sean Connery remembered by Bond girl Valerie Leon after caring for her during awkward sex scene Metro United Kingdom Associated Newspapers Limited Persall Steve 7 November 2012 Four kinds of unforgettable Bond girls Retrieved 17 August 2015 Bibliography EditComentale Edward P Watt Stephen Willman Skip 2005 Ian Fleming amp James Bond the cultural politics of 007 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 21743 1 Jutting Kerstin 2007 Grow Up 007 James Bond Over the Decades Formula Vs Innovation GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3 638 85372 9 Lipp Deborah 2006 The Ultimate James Bond Fan Book New York Sterling amp Ross Publishers ISBN 978 0 9766372 8 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bond girl amp oldid 1144297646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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