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Posted

Great in Bond as 007, and also in the Saint. 

Another good actor passed on

  • Like 1
Posted

A sad passing, almost lost in a bad day.

Such an amazing public speaker too.

The Bond I grew up with, so always my favourite. I still remember seeing the Spy Who Loved Me at the cinema while on holiday with my parents, a huge build up to the films release had me bouncing off the walls with excitement, and I wasn't disappointed!

After the film, dragged my dad around half the toy shops of Bournemouth as I had to have the toy Esprit and matching "Stromburg" Jet ranger helicopter, to shoot down with the little toy missiles the Lotus fired. :d happy days. And another little piece of childhood gone.

  • Like 3
Posted

Agree with all the comments, but above all he seemed a genuinely nice man who did not take his success for granted. He did a lot of work for Unicef as he aged.

reading some of the stories about him he was always generous with his money and time for fans and the needy.

His Bond was perfect for the time where the gadgets were a big part of the story where good always overcame evil, no matter what the odds against him. Seems fitting to remember that after yesterday.

 

Posted
6 hours ago, Ian Tolfree (tolf) - North London AO said:

Great in Bond as 007, and also in the Saint. 

Another good actor passed on

He wasn't really an Actor Ian,  he just played out his characters as  himself, a rare gift.     

  • Like 1
Posted

The role he had in The Cannonball Run, where he played a man pretending to be James Bond was so funny sending himself up. And as usual at the end of the film the outtakes were even funnier with him in them

  • Like 1
Posted

I can go back to his "Ivanhoe" TV series days , (giving my age away now ) :t-up:

One of britains better exports 

 

Ivanhoe (1958-1959 TV series)(3 disc set, 36 episodes) DVD-R

  • Like 1
Posted

Is that when TV's had a porthole on the front to watch the picture on, and a cabinet big enough to use as a dining table?

Posted
21 hours ago, SootySport said:

He wasn't really an Actor Ian,  he just played out his characters as  himself, a rare gift.     

Well said  - nails it for me :yes:

Posted

He used to be seen in The Bridge Hotel on Western Avenue, Greenford quite often. He had the same model Volvo (P1800) as he drove as 'The Saint' - perhaps the very same car - and it was often in the Bridge car park. Nobody had a bad word to say about him with possible exception of his ex-wives... :oops:

Posted
10 hours ago, Dave Eastwood (Gadgetman) - Club Secretary said:

Is that when TV's had a porthole on the front to watch the picture on, and a cabinet big enough to use as a dining table?

Aye , it were an home built kit from plans ,  the ally chassis was pre drilled with cut outs for the valves , all ex army  EF50  type stuff . We couldnt afford the cabinet kit so that was home grown and was moohassive about 3ft long X 18inch deep to house  7 inch screen ! 

Only 1 channel , BBC !  ,  the "Interlude" (the potters wheel etc. ) was shown along with Test Card C for most of the day in lue of programs , all the street came in to watch the Coronation in glorious black and white .  1953 ? later we fitted a convertor for ITV when that came out 

 

https://youtu.be/jUzGF401vLc

 

Posted

Like this one Bernie?

1928_Baird_Model_B_-_Exterior_View.JPG

 

:p

Posted

And back to the thread gents.......

Posted

He was my favourite Bond, always got out of a scrape with a gadget, a quip or a seduction...

The "Gentleman Bond" is how I'll remember him.

And the jealousy I felt when a mate got the underwater Lotus with the orange firing missiles.

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