Bond girl Honor Blackman (Pussy Galore) turns 90
By: Anders Frejdh
Published:
2015-08-22
Birthday for one of the most famous "Bond girls", Honor Blackman, who portrayed Pussy Galore in Goldfinger (1964) (1964) directed by Guy Hamilton. When Honor Blackman played Pussy Galore in Goldfinger she was 39, five years older than Sean Connery and until SPECTRE the oldest Bond Girl (as Monica Belucci has taken over that title).
About Sean, she said: "Of course there was a sexual chemistry between Sean and I. I couldn’t really help being attracted to him. I think he is the sexiest man I’ve ever met. coupled with that fantastic accent, I did fancy him. He was the perfect Bond. I would have gone further if I wasn’t married at the time."
With this page, we would like to celebrate Ms. Blackman on her 90th birthday.
"Dear Honor, happy birthday and much love from Sweden."
About Honor Blackman: (official biography)
Honor Blackman was born in Plaistow, Newham, London.
For her sixteenth birthday her father offered her a choice: a bicycle or elocution classes. She chose the latter.
Her elocution teacher was an inspirational woman who introduced her to a world of poetry and theatre previously unknown to her. In the process Honor discovered talents she didn't know she had. Her teacher advised Honor's father to enrol her in the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, which she duly attended part-time while working as an office clerk in the Home Office.
It was suggested to Honor - upon her graduation - she should audition as an understudy in a West End play,
The Guinea Pig. She did, and was successful in securing the job. Further good fortune came her way when the show's lead actress fell ill, Honor stepped in. Two more West End plays followed but as a princiapal.
Her first film appearance soon followed; a non-speaking part in
Fame is the Spur (1947), at Denham Studios, in which she was killed by a cavalryman - life almost imitating art alas, as she was nearly killed by the horse that stepped on her hair whilst she was on the ground.
Joining the Rank Organisation’s stable of talent at Pinewood, Honor appeared in a number of movies including
Quartet (1948) and
So Long at the Fair (1950) with Dirk Bogarde, next came the film of the sinking of the Titanic -
A Night to Remember (1958) and a Norman Wisdom comedy
The Square Peg (1958). Television work soon followed and began to dominate her career with appearances in episodes of The Vise for the Danziger Brothers, Douglas Fairbanks Jr Presents, The New Adventures of Charlie Chan, African Patrol, The Invisible Man, The Pursuers, Kraft Mystery Theatre and The Saint, opposite
Roger Moore, amongst them.
Meanwhile in her personal life, Honor married Bill Sankey in 1946, but divorced eight years later. In 1961 she married actor Maurice Kaufmann and very soon after went to meet legendary producer Leonard White with a view to playing Cathy Gale in
The Avengers. White was looking to replace to replace Ian Hendry, Patrick Macnee's original partner in The Avengers.
Cathy Gale was unlike any character on TV before. She was smart, sexy, intelligent and could hold her own in any fight scenario (she even wrote a book on self defence as a result of the programme). In her leather clad outfit, she became a pin up for full blooded males all over the world and an inspiration to women striving for equality of the sexes.
During the second season of the show, Honor released a record with Macnee, entitled Kinky Boots. It was a surprise hit, peaking at number 5 on re-release in 1990 - after being played incessantly by BBC Radio 1 breakfast show presenter Simon Mayo.
After 43 episodes of
The Avengers Honor decided to move on, and returned to movies with director
Guy Hamilton casting her as Pussy Galore in the definitive Bond movie,
Goldfinger (1964), in 1964.
Producer
Albert R. Broccoli admitted Honor had been cast on the back of her success in
The Avengers, despite the fact that the American audience had never even seen the programme. Broccoli said, "The Brits would love her because they knew her as Mrs. Gale, the Yanks would like her because she was so good, it was a perfect combination".
Post-Bond, Honor continued to blend film, TV and stage work. She next co-starred with Laurence Harvey in
Life at the Top (1965) and
Shalako (1968) in which she was partnered firstly with Jack Hawkins and then Stephen Boyd not Sean Connery, sadly, he had Brigitte Bardot in her first film outside France. She also starred in an episode of Armchair Theatre. Alongside Richard Attenborough, she appeared in
The Last Grenade (1970) and then signed up for a film version of DH Lawrence’s
The Virgin and the Gypsy. In 1971, Honor and Maurice Kaufmann both appeared in horror movie
Fright. The couple divorced in 1975, but remained firm friends. They had two children together, Lottie and Barnarby.
Further credits include Columbo, To The Devil A Daughter, Robin’s Nest, Crown Court, The Cat and The Canary, Never The Twain, Lace, Minder, and Dr Who. In 1990 Honor was cast in ITV’s new sitcom, The Upper Hand and won over a whole new generation of fans as Laura West; clocking up 94 episodes in six years!
Into the new millennium Honor remained as busy as ever. Appearances in
Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001), and popular TV shows Dr Terribles House Of Horror, New Tricks, Midsommer Murders, The Royal and Coronation Street added to her formidable CV.
From 2005 to 2006 she opened Cameron Macintosh's My Fair Lady in Manchester and Birmingham and has performed four one-woman shows nationwide, the present one being
Word Of Honor.
She appeared in the wonderful black comedy film,
Colour Me Kubrick with John Malkovich in 2005 and in April 2007 she took over the role of Fraulein Schneider from actress Sheila Hancock, in Cabaret at the Lyric Theatre in London's West End. She left the show at the end of September 2007.
Outside of acting, Honor is involved with an organization called
Fairtrade, which aims to ensure that third world producers get treated fairly and can make a living from their work. She is a signed supporter of
Republic, The Campaign for an Elected Head of State, the UK campaign to replace the monarchy with a republic. She is also a passionate supporter of the work that
Liberty does.
Meanwhile, her career continues and Honor is still in huge demand with theatre, voice over and acting work.
Editor's note:
For other posts covering Honor Blackman featured on
From Sweden with Love,
click here.
For other Bond Girls presented on
From Sweden with Love,
click here.
Photo above:
Honor Blackman at Pinewood Studios in April 2008. © From Sweden with Love. All rights reserved.
Learn more about Honor Blackman's film, television and theatre work on her official website:
www.honorblackman.co.uk
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