Showing posts with label live and let die. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live and let die. Show all posts

Monday, August 19, 2013

The Five Best James Bond Theme Songs

He's lunched with Cubby Broccoli--the late 007 film producer--and has a James Bond memorabilia collection that would be the envy of Auric Goldfinger. Today, guest blogger TerryB counts down his picks for the five best Bond theme songs.

Twenty-three official James Bond films. I’ve been a fan of the 007 films since my college roommate encouraged me to join him at a James Bond Film Festival on campus. Seeing On Her Majesty’s Secret Service in a very cold auditorium amplified the film’s snowy setting. The projectionist cranked the film’s sound after Bond’s wife Tracy is killed in the final moments. The counter-point of the James Bond theme over the film’s emotional ending was a sort of sneer to emotion and reminded us that Bond was an agent first. I fell in love with Bond music that night.

I’ve always said that when *I* win the lottery, one way I’d love to spend the money is mount a one-night concert of all the Bond theme song artists, each performing their theme(s), in order of release. Until that concert can be arranged, here’s a different sorting--my choices for the five best 007 theme songs:

5.  Casino Royale – “You Know My Name,” performed by Chris Cornell.  Written by Chris Cornell and David Arnold. Perhaps the most gritty of all the James Bond themes, this song was meant to be a reflection of the new James Bond (Daniel Craig) and that his Bond was conflicted and not the seemingly indestructible agent played by Roger Moore and Pierce Brosnan. The lyrics describe James Bond’s world this way: I've seen diamonds cut through harder men/Than you yourself/But if you must pretend/You may meet your end/The coldest blood runs through my veins/You know my name.

4.  A View to a Kill – “A View to a Kill,” performed by Duran Duran. Written by John Barry and Duran Duran.  Although Barry had never collaborated with a band for a Bond song, the fast-living, hyper-successful Duran Duran somehow seemed a natural choice to join him in 1985, and the result remains one of the biggest hits of any 007 track. The first Bond theme song to chart #1 in the U.S., it’s lyrically loony: A sacred why/A mystery gaping inside/The weekend's why/Until we dance into the fire/That fatal kiss is all we need. Still, it has a stomping, throbbing beat that was a perfect marriage for James Bond and one of the biggest bands of the time.

3. Live and Let Die – “Live and Let Die,” performed by Paul McCartney and Wings.  Written by Paul and Linda McCartney. Probably the only Bond theme song that has little to do with the film, except sharing a title, this song’s piercing flute notes and eccentric bridge were quite effectively married to the film’s many chase sequences. Turning an innocent into a world-weary cynic (or killing them) is often the path of many Bond heroines. The song lyric captures their journey so well: When you were young and your heart was an open book/You used to say live and let live (You know you did, you know you did, you know you did)/But if this ever changing world in which we live in/Makes you give in and cry/Say live and let die.

2. The Spy Who Loved Me – “Nobody Does It Better,” performed by Carly Simon. Written by Marvin Hamlisch (music) and Carole Bayer Sager (lyrics). A fitting type of theme for nearly all of the Roger Moore-era 007 films, romantically-inclined, but painting Bond with equal palettes of love and vengeance. And both are deadly. The lyric wins for working in the film’s title smoothly and keeping the song palatable for Top 40 radio: I wasn’t looking, but somehow you found me/I tried to hide from your love light/But like heaven above me, the spy who loved me, is keeping all my secrets safe tonight. The title yielded a phrase used in marketing later Bond films: the 13th 007 opus Octopussy ("Nobody does it better…thirteen times") and the 2006 release Casino Royale (the commercials used the song's title, "Nobody Does It Better", as a catch phrase).

1. Goldfinger – “Goldfinger,” performed by Shirley Bassey. Written by John Barry (music) and Anthony Newley & Leslie Bricusse (lyrics). This was the film that perfected the 007 “formula.” Director Guy Hamilton was purported to have suggested the song “Mack the Knife” to John Barry, “a gritty and rough” song on which to model this film’s theme song. Shirley Bassey tops the list with her gutsy, machine gun delivery of the lyric, enunciating every word sharply. And what words would befit a villain’s theme better? For a golden girl knows when he's kissed her/ It's the kiss of death from Mister Goldfinger. At the 2013 Academy Awards, in tribute to 50 Years of James Bond Films, Dame Shirley Bassey performed the song to wide acclaim and a standing ovation.

Monday, March 18, 2013

David Hedison Talks with the Café about Vincent Price, "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea", James Bond, and Love in Italy

David Hedison (photo courtesy
of Diane Kachmar).
Although best known as Captain Lee Crane on the classic TV series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, actor David Hedison has enjoyed a long, successful career in stage, film, and television. Now 85 (but not looking it!), he remains active making personal appearances and contributing to a book on his 1959-60 spy TV series Five Fingers due out in 2013. Mr. Hedison was gracious enough to take a break from his busy schedule and talk with the Café.

Café:  You studied with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio and won a Theater World Award for A Month in the Country, directed by Sir Michael Redgrave. What are some of your favorite stage roles and why?

David Hedison: A Phoenix Too Frequent--it was one of the few roles I really thought I grasped and did justice to. I also was fond of what I did in Two Gentlemen of Verona. Of course, A Month in the Country launched my Hollywood career, so that role was probably the most important one I ever did.

Café: In your films, you've worked with actors such as Vincent Price (The Fly), Robert Mitchum (The Enemy Below), and Claude Rains (The Lost World). Who were some of the actors you most enjoyed working with in your movies?

Claude Rains and David Hedison
in The Lost World (1961).
DH: Claude Rains was in two of my films. He was probably the most patient person I have ever met. I must have asked him a thousand questions. He would let me hang out in his dressing room on The Lost World. A wonderful man and a very underrated actor. Vincent Price was a good friend, he would recommend art for me to buy and invite me over and cook wonderful dinners with his then wife, Mary. I miss him very much. When I married Bridget, Vincent and Mary gave us an autographed copy of their now famous cook book. We still use it today.

Café: What prompted you to change your professional name from Al Hedison to David Hedison?

DH: That was NBC's dictate in 1959 when I did a series they bought. I thought it was stupid then, but I was under exclusive contract to 20th Century-Fox and had no say in the final decision. So I became David Hedison and now everyone asks me why. It gets tiresome.

Café: Producer Irwin Allen originally offered you the role of Captain Lee Crane in the film Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, but you declined because of other commitments. You once said you agreed to do the TV series because of the opportunity to work with Richard Basehart. Had you met Richard Basehart prior to Voyage or did you know him only by reputation?

Hedison with Richard Basehart in Voyage.
DH: I had never met him, but I admired Richard's work very much. I got his number from the studio. I called him up, and we agreed to meet at his house. He liked my enthusiasm, we hit it off and we worked really well together. We made the show work. Richard and I had real chemistry. He taught me so much about being camera ready when I needed to be. Television filming is so very fast, we always had to keep moving on. Voyage shot in six days--we filmed at a very fast pace.

Café: You’ve listed as a favorite Voyage episode “The Phantom Strikes” (which guest starred Alfred Ryder as a U-boat commander trying to “take over” Captain Crane). Are there any other episodes that you recall fondly?

Hedison as Captain Lee Crane in "The Human
Computer" from the season 1 DVD set.
DH: I thought I did good work in several first season episodes when we had better writing. "The Saboteur," where I was brainwashed by the Chinese to kill Admiral Nelson, "The Enemies" where I went mad and tried to kill the Admiral, "Mutiny" where Nelson went mad and I had to stop him.  Hmmm...do I sense a pattern here? Another episode I enjoyed was "The Human Computer." It was the first episode they let me carry--the episode was me, alone on the Seaview with a Russian saboteur. That was fun to do. I also enjoyed the fourth season episode where I turned into a werewolf from an experiment gone bad. I ran amuck and destroyed everything.

Café: You worked with Irwin Allen on Voyage, The Lost World, and the made-for-TV movie Adventures of the Queen. What was he like?

DH: Allen was an incredible salesman--he could sell the studio almost anything. Irwin was very good to me. He would always hire me, even though we hardly ever agreed on how I was to the play the role. He wanted me to play a straight, no-nonsense hero. Which I could do, but I never found that kind of role interesting to me as an actor. I prefer to play someone more emotional, more connected, someone with flaws. But I always did whatever job I was hired for and Allen knew he could count on me to show up and do it.

Café: You and your wife Bridget will celebrate your 45th anniversary this year. Congratulations! How did the two of you meet?

DH: I was scouting locations for an independent film I made in Italy in 1968. She was dancing with my location manager--they were at this supper/dance club in Positano, Italy. I knew right away she was the one, but Bridget had to be persuaded to date an actor. I asked her to dance with me that night because it was my birthday...and she said yes. It took another year to persuade Bridget to accept my marriage proposal.

Live and Let Die with Jane Seymour,
Roger Moore, and Hedison.
Café: You’re one of the few actors to appear in multiple James Bond films. How did you come to be cast as Felix Leiter in Let and Let Die (1973) and Licence to Kill (1989)?

DH: Tom Mankiewicz (the screenwriter of Live and Let Die) thought I would be a great Felix Leiter. He set up a meeting for me in London and I got the part. I was supposed to do the film with Sean Connery, but he dropped out and then they cast Roger Moore. That made it very easy for me to do the role as Roger and I had been friends for over a decade at that point. They called me back for Licence to Kill. They had an idea that they wanted to re-use a previous Felix. I was at the Bistro Gardens restaurant in Beverly Hills with my wife. Cubby Broccoli was there with his wife, also having dinner. I waved, but didn't go over. Cubby stopped by my table on the way out--we were friends--we talked a bit and he left. A few weeks later, I got a call in Florida (where I was doing a play with Elizabeth Ashley) and was asked to come back--on my day off--for a meeting with the director in Hollywood. I got the part.

Café: Having worked with Roger Moore and Timothy Dalton, who is your favorite 007?

DH: Roger Moore is a great friend of mine, so that is not a fair question. Roger had his way with the role. That worked for him. Timothy brought his own working style to his take on the role. I was able to work easily with both of them. Roger was less work for me, since I knew him so well. Timothy was very serious about the role and worked hard. We talked and found our relationship and everyone likes what we did in that film. Licence to Kill was very gritty and scores very high in polls among the fans, much more now than it did when it came out.

Jeanne Cooper and Hedison on
The Young and the Restless.
Café: You played Jill Abbott’s father on the long-running daytime drama The Young and the Restless. How would you describe that experience?

DH: I loved working with both ladies. We truly became a family, because all three of us believed in it. Jess (Walton) was lovely, so giving, and Jeanne (Cooper) was so into her role as Katherine Chancellor. It was a real pleasure to go work with them every day.

Café: Are there any current projects or appearances you’d like to share with our readers?

With a fan at Crypticon in 2012
(photo courtesy of Diane Kachmar).
DH: I'm doing a Q &A at a screening of Licence to Kill in Glendale, CA on Tuesday, April 2 at the Alex Theatre. It is the first Q &A in a series of five Bond film screenings that month.


For more information on David Hedison, please visit the web site www.davidhedison.net. You can friend David Hedison on Facebook. Unless otherwise noted,
all photos are courtesy of www.davidhedison.net.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Bond Is Forever: "Live and Let Die"

In the 1960s, Roger Moore was the star of the popular UK series, The Saint. The actor had reportedly been offered the role of James Bond but had to decline. Following On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), after George Lazenby assumed that one Bond film would be enough to secure a successful film career (it wasn't), and Sean Connery left the series, believing that 1971's Diamonds Are Forever would be the final time he was to portray 007 (it wasn't), Moore made his Bond debut in 1973 with Live and Let Die.

After three British agents, stationed in New York, New Orleans, and San Monique (an island in the Caribbeans), are murdered, James Bond is sent to investigate. The agent in New York had been keeping an eye on Dr. Kananga (Yaphet Kotto), nefarious dictator of San Monique. Bond is eventually led to the Fillet of Soul restaurant, run by a mysterious man known as Mr. Big, who has at least one additional Fillet of Soul in New Orleans (which, as it happens, was being monitored by one of the deceased agents). Bond gets help from Solitaire (Jane Seymour), a psychic who specializes in Tarot cards and whose gift is often utilized by Kananga. The agent must elude henchmen with metal claws, voodoo rituals, snakes, crocodiles, and an exceptionally annoying Louisiana sheriff.

Live and Let Die was released during the run of blaxploitation films -- movies featuring a predominantly black cast aimed at black audiences. The majority of these films highlighted an urban setting, such as Shaft (1971) with Richard Roundtree, Black Caesar with Fred Williamson and Coffy with Pam Grier (both 1973). Julius Harris, who plays Tee Hee (the aforementioned clawed bad guy), starred in a number of movies of this genre, including Black Caesar, Hell Up in Harlem (1973), and Friday Foster (1975), with Grier and Harris' Live and Let Die co-star, Kotto. Live and Let Die is sometimes criticized for exploiting either the black actors or the genre itself. Such an argument, however, overlooks the strong showings from the supporting cast, particularly Kotto, Harris, and even Earl Jolly Brown as Whisper, who earns his nickname by only speaking in a whispering voice.

Jane Seymour is one of my favorite Bond girls. Solitaire is a dynamic, multi-dimensional character, able to play both sides and keep herself moderately safe. And since Kunanga fully believes in her psychic abilities and Bond needs her assistance in locating Kunanga, Solitaire is a woman on whom both the good guy and the bad guy must rely. Seymour is also incredibly beautiful, and Solitaire seems just a bit out of Bond's league, an idea which is strengthened by the fact that 007 has to employ Tarot-card trickery to get the lady to sleep with him.

In addition to Bond's deception of Solitaire, Live and Let Die does have its flaws. Clifton James stars as J.W. Pepper, the Louisiana sheriff who tries to stop 007 as the agent is chased by Kunanga's men. Pepper was possibly included to add comic relief, but the comedy falls flat, and the sheriff just proves superfluous to a chase sequence that is already overlong. Likewise, the manner in which Bond disposes of the villain is preposterous.
By Live and Let Die, the Bond formula had been solidified. A pre-credit sequence, followed by a title song performed by a popular artist, in this case Paul McCartney and Wings with a wonderfully memorable tune. A beautiful Bond girl, a wealthy, powerful Bond villain, and baddies with colorful names such as Mr. Big and Whisper. And, unlike Dr. No (last month's Bond Is Forever selection), Bond is equipped with gadgets (although Q (Desmond Llewelyn) does not appear in Live and Let Die, he is mentioned by name as M hands 007 a watch loaded with goodies).

There are many familiar faces in this Bond outing. In addition to others mentioned, some viewers may recognize Geoffrey Holder from the 1982 adaptation of
Annie. Holder had also starred in commercials for the soft drink, 7-Up, in the 1970s, and was brought back in the '80s after the success of Annie. Fans of the British film studio, Hammer Film Productions, might notice Hammer regular Madeline Smith, who shares Bond's bed at the film's beginning. Smith had significant roles in Taste the Blood of Dracula, The Vampire Lovers (both 1970), and Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974). And perhaps actor Roy Stewart is not well known to Bond fans, but, in Live and Let Die, he is playing Quarrel, Jr., the son of Bond's partner in Dr. No (1962).
George Martin, who produced nearly everything The Beatles recorded, also produced the title song and handled the film's score (which may explain why McCartney's song is incorporated throughout the film). This was the first Bond film not scored by John Barry, who would return the following year for The Man with the Golden Gun. The song, "Live and Let Die", was covered by rock band, Guns n' Roses, for Use Your Illusion I in 1991. The single was a hit, although not as much as the original.

By 1973, David Hedison was the fifth actor to portray CIA agent and Bond friend, Felix Leiter. However, Hedison reprised the role in
Licence to Kill in 1989 and, aside from actor Jeffrey Wright (who has starred in 2006's Casino Royale and 2008's Quantum of Solace with Daniel Craig), is the only actor to play Felix more than once.

I would love to hear other people's thoughts on
Live and Let Die. Any Solitaire fans? And how about Connery vs. Moore as 007?

Bond Is Forever
will return next month with From Russia with Love (1963).