Bond Girls: now and then
Tomorrow Never Dies – but it sure does wrinkle. Here’s a look at some of the Bond girls over the years, and how they’re faring in the present day.
2008: Quantum of Solace
Daniel Craig’s current James Bond outing with Olga Kurylenko. Discovered when she was 13, she began modelling before moving into films. Her last action movie was in Hitman, where she had a face tattoo and got it on with a bald bloke with guns.

2006: Casino Royale
Daniel Craig’s first outing in his tux with Eva Green. Another model-turned-actress, Eva was in Kingdom of Heaven (a Ridley Scott epic) before getting Casino Royale. After her Bond film she appeared in The Golden Compass and is soon to be seen in Franklyn playing a woman with multiple personalities.

2001: Die Another Day
Halle Berry sold the movie on her Ursula Andress beach scene re-enactment (here’s a comparison), although this was the last of the Bond franchise for Pierce Brosnan, who in spite of vying for another shot as the secret agent got dumped as part of the re-imagining of the series with Daniel Craig onboard instead. They were talking about a spin-off with Berry as Jinx. Thankfully the Hollywood bigwigs seem to have forgotten about that after seeing her as Catwoman.

1999: The World Is Not Enough
Denise Richards was the other Bond girl in this title, but I discount her on the grounds that she couldn’t act if her life depended on it, and hopefully some day it will. Sophie Marceau was the one true Bond girl here. She’s massive in France, with a movie out next year called Percussions where she stars opposite Christopher Lambert, who apparently still gets work also.

1997: Tomorrow Never Dies
Teri Hatcher makes an appearance as the Bond Girl ‘Paris Carver’ soon after her days as Lois Lane. In TND she plays a desperate wife married to a power hungry sociopath and seduced by Bond. Her career picked up again with Desperate Housewives. Michelle Yeoh of Crouching Tiger plays the other Bond Girl in this outing.

1995: Goldeneye
After a six year break, the franchise came back with Pierce Brosnan as Bond. Goldeneye was probably Brosnan’s best Bond movie. Izabella Scorupco didn’t really get the career break she was looking for, and like so many Bond Girls before her has faded into obscurity – only making a brief appearance on Alias and dragon movie Reign of Fire since her Bond days.

1989: Licence To Kill
Timothy Dalton’s last go in the tuxedo, and Carey Lowell as another Bond girl who really hasn’t done much of note since her flirtations with the Bond.

1987: The Living Daylights
Going for the bob-cut like its going out of fashion or something, Maryam d’Abo played the cello, not the sexiest of instruments – but with its case easily converted to a sled for a quick and daring escape down a snowy mountain, they’d have been screwed if she’d played the violin. Maryam still pops up every now and again in TV movies.

1985: A View To A Kill
Obviously things aren’t going so well for Tanya Roberts these days, reduced to wearing just a couple of old paisley ties she found in her granddad’s loft. She does look like the archetypical 80’s babe in her part as Stacy Sutton. Roger Moore’s last go at saying ‘Bond, James Bond’, before he lost his licence to kill. He was really old anyway (he was 58 at the time). She was most recently a regular as Donna’s mum/mom, Midge on That ’70s Show.

1983: Octopussy
Fact: there will never be a Bond with a title as awesome as Octopussy. Maud Adams plays the title role of Octopussy herself, which must have been delightful for her given that her real name’s ‘Maud’. These days she does a bit of work in her homeland, Sweden. Her English-speaking work tends to be bit parts in various TV series and low-budget Indie movies. She’s the only Bond Girl to make a repeat on-screen appearance, since she also had a role in The Man With The Golden Gun.

1981: For Your Eyes Only
Melina Havelock was the name of Carole Bouquet’s character, with Roger Moore in full swing as the geriatric Bond. She’s French, and still keeps herself pretty busy in her home country in various French TV shows, movies and other things the rest of the world won’t ever see (other than Quebec, eh?).

1979: Moonraker
Lois Chiles has chosen to keep her haircut from when she played Dr Holly Goodhead, only 30 short years ago. Less consistant is her career, these days limited to guest appearances on TV shows.

1977: The Spy Who Loved Me
Where the list starts looking at the real wrinklies. Barbara Bach played Major Anya Amasova opposite Roger Moore. One of the better-reviewed Bond movies, this outing saw three Oscar nominations. She’s now married to Ringo Starr and hasn’t done any acting work since 1986.

1974: The Man With The Golden Gun
Roger Moore’s first movie playing Bond. Britt Ekland was stunning. She now looks like she’s permanently pressed her lips up against a car window. Her only listed work since 1992 was a small part in Lexx.

1973: Live And Let Die
Jane Seymour starred opposite Roger Moore as Solitaire. Despite the name, Jane doesn’t seem to prefer playing with herself – she’s now on her fourth marriage. She keeps busy with TV work and lives in the UK.

1971: Diamonds Are Forever
Diamonds are forever, but Lazemby definitely wasn’t. Sean Connery comes back for one final shot as Bond. Did you know he wore a wig in every Bond movie? Jill St. John has the honour of acting alongside the great Scotsman playing the great Englishman wearing the great wig. The last thing she did of note was Seinfield in 1997.

1969: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
George Lazemby appears as the only actor to play Bond just once in a movie (Bob Holness once played him in a radio play, and Barry Nelson played him in a TV adaptation of Casino Royale). Diana Rigg appears as the woman who Bond marries. The whole movie has a dark sense of doom about it. Still, Diana Rigg was pretty hot stuff back in her day – Emma Peel being her best known character, kicking ass through the late-sixties in The Avengers.

1967: You Only Live Twice
Japanese actress Akiko Wakabayashi was one of the first Asian Bond girls, and also a nightmare name for the guys doing the opening credits. Wakabayashi played Aki, which is the least imaginative Bond girl name I’ve come across. Akiko left acting after Japanese filmakers started cutting budgets when the economy started looking shaky, and she didn’t bother getting back into it after things were back on the up. In one interview with G-FAN Magazine she said she didn’t get back into acting because of injuries she sustained during the making of a movie (it’s not clear which movie this is, but apparently it’s not You Only Live Twice).

1965: Thunderball
Claudine Auger plays Domino opposite Sean Connery’s Bond. Her accent was too thick for English audiences so her voice was dubbed by the same woman who did the dubbing for Ursula Andress – Nikki Van der Zyl. Although she only played voices, it technically makes Van der Zyl the only actress beside Maud Adams to play a Bond girl more than once (thanks to Brandt for the correction here).

1964: Goldfinger
Honor Blackman is a bit of an English institution. I remember her when I was growing up playing the granny in ‘The Upper Hand‘, the British remake of the US series ‘Who’s The Boss?‘. She also preceded Diana Rigg in The Avengers. Still, in the world of Bond she’s remembered for playing Pussy Galore. She’s now in her 80s and still working on various TV shows in the UK.

1963: From Russia With Love
Daniela Bianchi was another actress to get dubbed because of her thick Italian accent (she had to speak her lines phonetically as she didn’t speak English). Daniela married into money a couple of years later and didn’t need to work ever again.

1962: Dr No
The Bond movie to feature Ursula Andress, who’s scene where she walks onto the beach from the sea is the most well-renowned scene out of every Bond movie. As mentioned above, her voice was dubbed over because her English wasn’t clear enough. The rest of her performance is all Ursula. She still works occasionally (as in once every few years) and lives in Europe (possibly Switzerland or Rome) with her long-term partner, Lorenzo Rispoli.







wow!
I’m gonna have nightmares!
Carey Lowell is the ADA on Law and Order.
Way to do your homework, Ben. Though Anon makes it look current, Carey Lowell did six years on Law and Order, a wildly popular US process drama.
There are a number of Law and Order franchises beyond the main show (SVU, Criminal Intent, etc.). Lowell reprised the role, this time as JUDGE Jamie Ross, in the short-lived “Trial by Jury” branch of the franchise.
“…hasn’t done much of note.” Sheesh.
Maryam D’Abo also did a coffee table book, “Bond Girls are Forever” back in 2003. The book is pretty strong on text (and short on pics) considering that it’s a coffee table book.
And Olga Kurylenko’s then and now photos make it seem like she’s hardly changed…
‘Although she only played voices, it technically makes Van der Zyl the only actress to play a Bond girl more than once.’
Correction. Maud Adams appeared in Octopussy and The Man With the Golden Gun, so that claim is false.
@Brandt – thanks, I’ll update the article.
Though it’s not even a credited part, as long as we’re getting into technicalities, Maud Adams also dropped in on the filming of A View to a Kill and scored a cameo, making her the only bond girl to appear in three films! check out the proof here=> http://www.bondmovies.com/cameos/#avtak
Great list of Bond Girls , but you should go see the new movie if you haven’t seen it already .
You left out who I regard as the best of the Bond girls: Shirley Eaton in ‘Goldfinger’. She did’nt have much screen time but made an incredible impression as the ‘Golden Girl’.
This growing old thing is a serious problem!
You posted the same pic twice for Kurylenko. I know she’s current, but it’s still a little odd to do that.
Tempus Fugit
I am surprised how many of them still look pretty darned good for their age. many of these women are a testament to what good genetics can get you. Of course the ones who have had a lot of plastic surgery look creepy, but plastic surgery does that.
Interesting. Thanks.
loving your work Ben
Carey Lowell is Mrs Richard Gere.
Maud Adams, Tanya Roberts, and Carole Bouquet are the only ones who appear to have retained their looks without (obvious) plastic surgery.
Man, how the beauty has fallen off some of these roses. Jane Seymour still looks good. Thanks for updating some of the women I used to fantasize about.
Olga Kurylenko sure hasn’t changed since QoS. Good for her
Yet another Avengers girl, Joanna Lumley, was in OHMSS.
My favorite is still Shirley Eaton, the golden girl in ‘Goldfinger’.
Lois Chiles was a professor of theater at the University of Houston, last I heard.
we all age its a fact of life…..
Problem:
1974: The Man With The Golden Gun
“Roger Moore’s first movie playing Bond.”
…
1973: Live And Let Die
“Jane Seymour starred opposite Roger Moore as Solitaire.”