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Kevin McClory

Kevin O'Donovan McClory (8 June 1924[1] – 20 November 2006) was an Irish screenwriter, film producer, and film director. McClory was best known for producing the James Bond film Thunderball and for his legal battles with the character's creator, Ian Fleming (later United Artists, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures and Eon Productions).[2]

Kevin McClory
McClory in 1959
Born(1924-06-08)8 June 1924
Died20 November 2006(2006-11-20) (aged 82)
Occupation(s)Screenwriter, film producer, film director
Websitewww.kevinmcclory.com

Early years

McClory was born in Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin, in 1924,[1] to noted actor Thomas John O'Donovan McClory (stage name Desmond O'Donovan) and Winifrede (née Doran), a writer, teacher and actress. He suffered from dyslexia. McClory's ancestry goes back to the famous Brontë family. Elinor McClory was the mother of Patrick Prunty who changed his name to Bronte when he emigrated from Ireland to England in 1802. Patrick was the father of Emily, Anne, Charlotte, and Branwell Brontë. McClory's parents, Thomas John O'Donovan McClory (stage name Desmond O'Donovan) and Winifred (née Doran) were actors and theatre producers in Ireland.[3]

Second World War

As a teenaged radio officer in the British Merchant Navy, McClory endured attacks by German U-boats on two different occasions. The first attack occurred on 20 September 1942[4] while he was serving aboard The Mathilda. A U-Boat surfaced and attacked the ship with heavy machine gun fire. The crew of the ship fired back, and the U-Boat retreated. The second attack occurred on 21 February 1943 when McClory was serving on the Norwegian tanker Stigstad, which was attacked by multiple U-boats when it was a part of Convy ON 166. The ship sank, and McClory and the other survivors made it to a life raft. They survived in terrible conditions for two weeks and travelled more than 600 miles before being rescued off the coast of Ireland.[5] Two seaman died on the raft, and a third died soon after they were rescued. McClory suffered severe frostbite and lost the ability to speak for more than a year after the incident. When he recovered his voice, he was left with a pronounced stammer. He served out the rest of the war in Britain's Royal Navy.[6][7]

1950s

McClory started a career at Shepperton Studios in Middlesex as a film boom operator and location manager, where he worked on The Cockleshell Heroes for Warwick Films. He was an assistant to John Huston on films including The African Queen (1951) and Moulin Rouge (1952). He was an assistant director on Huston's version of Moby-Dick (1956), and associate producer and second-unit director on Mike Todd's Around the World in 80 Days (also 1956).

McClory was romantically involved with Elizabeth Taylor. Although he and Taylor reportedly had plans to marry, she eventually left him for her future husband Mike Todd. Todd and McClory fell out over Taylor, yet they managed to complete the final cut of the film side by side. The trio would eventually reconcile, and they remained friends until Todd's untimely death in 1958.[8][9]

In 1957, McClory led an expedition of 25 men in an attempt to drive around the world. He filmed a documentary of the adventure, One Road, as well as a series of ads for his sponsor Ford Motor Company. The team completed the journey in 104 days. He later wrote, produced and directed the 1957 film The Boy and the Bridge, with financial assistance from heiress Josephine Hartford Bryce (sister of Huntington Hartford) and her husband Ivor Bryce, a friend of Ian Fleming.[10]

1960s

Bryce was a close friend of Ian Fleming. In 1958 Fleming approached McClory to produce the first Bond film. McClory rejected all of Fleming's books but felt that the character James Bond could be adapted for the screen. McClory, Bryce, Fleming and Jack Whittingham developed the new James Bond character through a number of treatments and screenplays. McClory, Fleming and Bryce settled on the screenplay Longitude 78 West (later renamed Thunderball) and went into pre-production. Fleming had assigned his interest in the film to McClory and Bryce's company Xanadu and would make no more money from the project. He conspired with Bryce to force McClory out of the film, denying that McClory had any legal interest in the screenplays and treatments that had been written during their collaboration. Later and without permission, Fleming novelised the draft screenplay Thunderball, his ninth novel, in 1961, which initially did not credit McClory or Whittingham. The two engaged libel lawyer Peter Carter-Ruck and sued, and the case opened to the High Court in London on 20 November 1963.

After nine days, the case was settled. Fleming paid McClory damages of £35,000 and his court costs of £52,000, and future versions of the novel were credited as "based on a screen treatment by Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham, and Ian Fleming" – in that order. Fleming and Bryce conveyed to McClory any rights they held in the screenplays and treatments that McClory, Whittingham and Fleming had written during their collaboration. Fleming conveyed to McClory the worldwide film rights in the novel Thunderball. Harry Saltzman's and Albert R. Broccoli's production company Eon Productions later made a deal with McClory for Thunderball to be made into a film in 1965, with McClory producing.[2] Under the deal, Eon licensed McClory's rights for a period of ten years and in return they assigned to McClory any rights they had in the scripts and treatments. McClory made an uncredited cameo in the film.[11]

In 1968 McClory announced plans to make a film about Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins, to star Richard Harris.[12] The film was to have been shot at Ardmore Studios in 1969 but was never made.[why?][13]

1970s–1980s

In 1975, McClory and Richard Harris took out a full-page ad in The Nassau Tribune "demanding an end to internment without trial" in Northern Ireland. Conservative opposition leader Edward Heath who was visiting Nassau at the time called a press conference and advised "Harris and McClory to 'ask their friends to stop murdering people.'"[14]

In 1976, McClory announced he was to produce an original James Bond film to be titled either Warhead, Warhead 8,[2] or James Bond of the Secret Service, but the project was severely hampered as a result of legal action brought by the Fleming Trustees and United Artists. McClory won the case. The Trustees and United Artists appealed to the Supreme Court of Judictature The Senior Courts of England and Wales but again they lost to McClory. Lord Justices Waller, Fox and May affirmed McClory's right to make James Bond films and enjoined the Plaintiffs from taking similar legal action against McClory in the future. McClory went on to license his rights to Jack Schwartzman. The resulting film titled Never Say Never Again starred Sean Connery as Agent 007 in a highly publicized return to the role after a 12-year absence.[citation needed]

In 1988, he attempted an animated TV cartoon in partnership with a Dutch company, James Bond vs. S.P.E.C.T.R.E., but this never came to fruition, and James Bond Jr. was created as EON's counterattack to the aborted McClory animated attempt.[15]

In 1989, McClory attempted to recycle the Warhead script again, retitling the project Atomic Warfare. He approached Pierce Brosnan who had missed out on the role of James Bond to Timothy Dalton due to his contract with NBC's Remington Steele.[16] The film was supposed to be mainly set in Australia.[17]

1990s–2000s

McClory subsequently continued to try to make other adaptations of Thunderball, including Warhead 2000 A.D. which was to be made by Sony.[2] MGM/UA took legal action against Sony and McClory in the United States to prevent the film going into production. MGM/UA abandoned the claim after settling with Sony. His rights were untouched. In 2004, Sony acquired 20% of MGM; however, the production and final say over everything involving the film version of James Bond is controlled by Eon Productions (Albert R. Broccoli's production company) and its parent company Danjaq, LLC.[citation needed] In 1992, he had to license the rights to producer Albert S. Ruddy for a proposed James Bond television show, but EON Productions blocked it, ending any hopes of a TV show.[18]

Prior to Sony's settlement with MGM in 1999, they filed a lawsuit against MGM claiming McClory was the co-author of the cinematic 007 and was owed fees from Danjaq and MGM for all past films. This lawsuit was thrown out in 2000 on the ground that McClory had waited too long to bring his claims. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals later affirmed this decision in 2001.[2][19]

2010s

On 15 November 2013, MGM and Danjaq LLC announced they had acquired all rights and interests of McClory's estate. MGM, Danjaq, and the McClory estate issued a statement saying that they had brought to an "amicable conclusion the legal and business disputes that have arisen periodically for over 50 years."[20]

Personal life

McClory was married twice. He was survived by two sons and two daughters. His first wife was Frederica Ann "Bobo" Sigrist, daughter of Fred Sigrist. He later married Elizabeth O'Brien, daughter of the racehorse trainer Vincent O'Brien.[21] They lived at Baltyboys House in Blessington, County Wicklow.

Death

He died on 20 November 2006, aged 82, at St. Columcille's Hospital in the Dublin suburb of Loughlinstown, from a cerebral hemorrhage, four days after the British release of Casino Royale.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Kevin McClory death certificate". Retrieved 8 November 2015.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e J.C. Maçek III (5 October 2012). "The Non-Bonds: James Bond's Bitter, Decades-Long Battle... with James Bond". PopMatters.
  3. ^ . www.washingtoninternational.com. 10 June 2011. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011.
  4. ^ "D/S Mathilda - Norwegian Merchant Fleet 1939-1945". Warsailors.com. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  5. ^ "Stigstad (Norwegian Motor tanker) - Ships hit by German U-boats during WWII". uboat.net. 21 February 1943. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  6. ^ "The Stigstad - UBoat.net". Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  7. ^ Keegan, Patricia E. . Washingtoninternational.com. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  8. ^ A Valuable Property: The Life Story Of Michael Todd by Michael Todd Jr and Susan McCarthy Todd.
  9. ^ C. David Heymann. Liz: An Intimate Biography of Elizabeth Taylor
  10. ^ Callan, Michael Feeney Sean Connery Random House, 31 Oct 2012
  11. ^ . Obsessional.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 January 2015. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  12. ^ Feeney Callan 2003, p. 188.
  13. ^ Slide 1988, p. 31.
  14. ^ Feeney Callan 2003, p. 267.
  15. ^ "Films: The Nineties". www.liner-notes.com. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  16. ^ "10 Negative Ways Kevin McClory Affected The 007 Franchise". MI6-HQ.com. 17 November 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  17. ^ "Gevonden in Delpher - Trouw".
  18. ^ "Whither James Bond?". www.for-your-eyes-only.com. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  19. ^ "Universalexports.net" (PDF). Retrieved 3 April 2015.
  20. ^ "MI6-HQ.com". 15 November 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  21. ^ Kevin McClory at IMDb

External links

  • Kevin McClory at IMDb
  • Universal Exports webpage
  • Obituary in The Times, 15 December 2006
  • Filmbuffonline.com
Bond Movie Producer
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Harry Saltzman
Albert R. Broccoli
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1965
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Jerry Bresler
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Never Say Never Again
1983
With: Jack Schwartzman
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A View to a Kill

kevin, mcclory, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kevin O Donovan McClory 8 June 1924 1 20 November 2006 was an Irish screenwriter film producer and film director McClory was best known for producing the James Bond film Thunderball and for his legal battles with the character s creator Ian Fleming later United Artists Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures and Eon Productions 2 Kevin McCloryMcClory in 1959Born 1924 06 08 8 June 1924Dun Laoghaire County Dublin Irish Free StateDied20 November 2006 2006 11 20 aged 82 St Columcille s Hospital Loughlinstown County Dublin Ireland 1 Occupation s Screenwriter film producer film directorWebsitewww wbr kevinmcclory wbr com Contents 1 Early years 2 Second World War 3 1950s 4 1960s 5 1970s 1980s 6 1990s 2000s 7 2010s 8 Personal life 9 Death 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly years EditMcClory was born in Dun Laoghaire County Dublin in 1924 1 to noted actor Thomas John O Donovan McClory stage name Desmond O Donovan and Winifrede nee Doran a writer teacher and actress He suffered from dyslexia McClory s ancestry goes back to the famous Bronte family Elinor McClory was the mother of Patrick Prunty who changed his name to Bronte when he emigrated from Ireland to England in 1802 Patrick was the father of Emily Anne Charlotte and Branwell Bronte McClory s parents Thomas John O Donovan McClory stage name Desmond O Donovan and Winifred nee Doran were actors and theatre producers in Ireland 3 Second World War EditAs a teenaged radio officer in the British Merchant Navy McClory endured attacks by German U boats on two different occasions The first attack occurred on 20 September 1942 4 while he was serving aboard The Mathilda A U Boat surfaced and attacked the ship with heavy machine gun fire The crew of the ship fired back and the U Boat retreated The second attack occurred on 21 February 1943 when McClory was serving on the Norwegian tanker Stigstad which was attacked by multiple U boats when it was a part of Convy ON 166 The ship sank and McClory and the other survivors made it to a life raft They survived in terrible conditions for two weeks and travelled more than 600 miles before being rescued off the coast of Ireland 5 Two seaman died on the raft and a third died soon after they were rescued McClory suffered severe frostbite and lost the ability to speak for more than a year after the incident When he recovered his voice he was left with a pronounced stammer He served out the rest of the war in Britain s Royal Navy 6 7 1950s EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kevin McClory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message McClory started a career at Shepperton Studios in Middlesex as a film boom operator and location manager where he worked on The Cockleshell Heroes for Warwick Films He was an assistant to John Huston on films including The African Queen 1951 and Moulin Rouge 1952 He was an assistant director on Huston s version of Moby Dick 1956 and associate producer and second unit director on Mike Todd s Around the World in 80 Days also 1956 McClory was romantically involved with Elizabeth Taylor Although he and Taylor reportedly had plans to marry she eventually left him for her future husband Mike Todd Todd and McClory fell out over Taylor yet they managed to complete the final cut of the film side by side The trio would eventually reconcile and they remained friends until Todd s untimely death in 1958 8 9 In 1957 McClory led an expedition of 25 men in an attempt to drive around the world He filmed a documentary of the adventure One Road as well as a series of ads for his sponsor Ford Motor Company The team completed the journey in 104 days He later wrote produced and directed the 1957 film The Boy and the Bridge with financial assistance from heiress Josephine Hartford Bryce sister of Huntington Hartford and her husband Ivor Bryce a friend of Ian Fleming 10 1960s EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kevin McClory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bryce was a close friend of Ian Fleming In 1958 Fleming approached McClory to produce the first Bond film McClory rejected all of Fleming s books but felt that the character James Bond could be adapted for the screen McClory Bryce Fleming and Jack Whittingham developed the new James Bond character through a number of treatments and screenplays McClory Fleming and Bryce settled on the screenplay Longitude 78 West later renamed Thunderball and went into pre production Fleming had assigned his interest in the film to McClory and Bryce s company Xanadu and would make no more money from the project He conspired with Bryce to force McClory out of the film denying that McClory had any legal interest in the screenplays and treatments that had been written during their collaboration Later and without permission Fleming novelised the draft screenplay Thunderball his ninth novel in 1961 which initially did not credit McClory or Whittingham The two engaged libel lawyer Peter Carter Ruck and sued and the case opened to the High Court in London on 20 November 1963 After nine days the case was settled Fleming paid McClory damages of 35 000 and his court costs of 52 000 and future versions of the novel were credited as based on a screen treatment by Kevin McClory Jack Whittingham and Ian Fleming in that order Fleming and Bryce conveyed to McClory any rights they held in the screenplays and treatments that McClory Whittingham and Fleming had written during their collaboration Fleming conveyed to McClory the worldwide film rights in the novel Thunderball Harry Saltzman s and Albert R Broccoli s production company Eon Productions later made a deal with McClory for Thunderball to be made into a film in 1965 with McClory producing 2 Under the deal Eon licensed McClory s rights for a period of ten years and in return they assigned to McClory any rights they had in the scripts and treatments McClory made an uncredited cameo in the film 11 In 1968 McClory announced plans to make a film about Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins to star Richard Harris 12 The film was to have been shot at Ardmore Studios in 1969 but was never made why 13 1970s 1980s EditIn 1975 McClory and Richard Harris took out a full page ad in The Nassau Tribune demanding an end to internment without trial in Northern Ireland Conservative opposition leader Edward Heath who was visiting Nassau at the time called a press conference and advised Harris and McClory to ask their friends to stop murdering people 14 In 1976 McClory announced he was to produce an original James Bond film to be titled either Warhead Warhead 8 2 or James Bond of the Secret Service but the project was severely hampered as a result of legal action brought by the Fleming Trustees and United Artists McClory won the case The Trustees and United Artists appealed to the Supreme Court of Judictature The Senior Courts of England and Wales but again they lost to McClory Lord Justices Waller Fox and May affirmed McClory s right to make James Bond films and enjoined the Plaintiffs from taking similar legal action against McClory in the future McClory went on to license his rights to Jack Schwartzman The resulting film titled Never Say Never Again starred Sean Connery as Agent 007 in a highly publicized return to the role after a 12 year absence citation needed In 1988 he attempted an animated TV cartoon in partnership with a Dutch company James Bond vs S P E C T R E but this never came to fruition and James Bond Jr was created as EON s counterattack to the aborted McClory animated attempt 15 In 1989 McClory attempted to recycle the Warhead script again retitling the project Atomic Warfare He approached Pierce Brosnan who had missed out on the role of James Bond to Timothy Dalton due to his contract with NBC s Remington Steele 16 The film was supposed to be mainly set in Australia 17 1990s 2000s EditMcClory subsequently continued to try to make other adaptations of Thunderball including Warhead 2000 A D which was to be made by Sony 2 MGM UA took legal action against Sony and McClory in the United States to prevent the film going into production MGM UA abandoned the claim after settling with Sony His rights were untouched In 2004 Sony acquired 20 of MGM however the production and final say over everything involving the film version of James Bond is controlled by Eon Productions Albert R Broccoli s production company and its parent company Danjaq LLC citation needed In 1992 he had to license the rights to producer Albert S Ruddy for a proposed James Bond television show but EON Productions blocked it ending any hopes of a TV show 18 Prior to Sony s settlement with MGM in 1999 they filed a lawsuit against MGM claiming McClory was the co author of the cinematic 007 and was owed fees from Danjaq and MGM for all past films This lawsuit was thrown out in 2000 on the ground that McClory had waited too long to bring his claims The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals later affirmed this decision in 2001 2 19 2010s EditOn 15 November 2013 MGM and Danjaq LLC announced they had acquired all rights and interests of McClory s estate MGM Danjaq and the McClory estate issued a statement saying that they had brought to an amicable conclusion the legal and business disputes that have arisen periodically for over 50 years 20 Personal life EditMcClory was married twice He was survived by two sons and two daughters His first wife was Frederica Ann Bobo Sigrist daughter of Fred Sigrist He later married Elizabeth O Brien daughter of the racehorse trainer Vincent O Brien 21 They lived at Baltyboys House in Blessington County Wicklow Death EditHe died on 20 November 2006 aged 82 at St Columcille s Hospital in the Dublin suburb of Loughlinstown from a cerebral hemorrhage four days after the British release of Casino Royale 1 See also EditControversy over Thunderball The Battle for BondReferences Edit a b c d Kevin McClory death certificate Retrieved 8 November 2015 permanent dead link a b c d e J C Macek III 5 October 2012 The Non Bonds James Bond s Bitter Decades Long Battle with James Bond PopMatters news Page CFM www washingtoninternational com 10 June 2011 Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 D S Mathilda Norwegian Merchant Fleet 1939 1945 Warsailors com Retrieved 16 April 2017 Stigstad Norwegian Motor tanker Ships hit by German U boats during WWII uboat net 21 February 1943 Retrieved 16 April 2017 The Stigstad UBoat net Retrieved 8 November 2015 Keegan Patricia E Kevin McClory James Bond Screenwriter s Washington Connection Washingtoninternational com Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 7 October 2010 A Valuable Property The Life Story Of Michael Todd by Michael Todd Jr and Susan McCarthy Todd C David Heymann Liz An Intimate Biography of Elizabeth Taylor Callan Michael Feeney Sean Connery Random House 31 Oct 2012 Thunderball Obsessional co uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 7 October 2010 Feeney Callan 2003 p 188 sfn error no target CITEREFFeeney Callan2003 help Slide 1988 p 31 sfn error no target CITEREFSlide1988 help Feeney Callan 2003 p 267 sfn error no target CITEREFFeeney Callan2003 help Films The Nineties www liner notes com Retrieved 8 September 2021 10 Negative Ways Kevin McClory Affected The 007 Franchise MI6 HQ com 17 November 2013 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Gevonden in Delpher Trouw Whither James Bond www for your eyes only com Retrieved 8 September 2021 Universalexports net PDF Retrieved 3 April 2015 MI6 HQ com 15 November 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Kevin McClory at IMDbExternal links EditKevin McClory at IMDb Universal Exports webpage Obituary in The Independent 7 December 2006 Obituary in The Times 15 December 2006 Filmbuffonline comBond Movie ProducerPrevious Harry SaltzmanAlbert R BroccoliGoldfinger Thunderball1965 Next Charles K FeldmanJerry BreslerCasino RoyalePrevious Albert R BroccoliOctopussy Never Say Never Again1983 With Jack Schwartzman Next Albert R BroccoliA View to a Kill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kevin McClory amp oldid 1147464094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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