Sir Thomas Sean Connery (born 25 August 1930) is a Scottish actor and producer who has won an Academy Award, two BAFTA Awards (one of them being a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award) and three Golden Globes (including the Cecil B. DeMille Award and a Henrietta Award). Connery is best known for portraying the character James Bond, starring in seven Bond films between 1962 and 1983 (six Eon Productions films and the non-canonical Thunderball remake, Never Say Never Again). In 1988, Connery won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Untouchables. His film career also includes such films as Marnie, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, The Hunt for Red October, Highlander, Murder on the Orient Express, Dragonheart, and The Rock. He was knighted in July 2000. Connery has been polled as "The Greatest Living Scot" and "Scotland's Greatest Living National Treasure". In 1989, he was proclaimed "Sexiest Man Alive" by People magazine and in 1999, at age 69, he was voted "Sexiest Man of the Century". Thomas Sean Connery, named Thomas after his grandfather, was born in Fountainbridge, Edinburgh, to Euphemia McBain "Effie" (née McLean), a cleaning woman, and Joseph Connery, a factory worker and lorry driver.
Description
- Born : Thomas Sean Connery, 25 August 1930 (age 84), Fountainbridge, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
- Occupation : Actor
- Years active : 1954–2012
- Political party : Scottish National Party
- Spouse(s) : Diane Cilento (m. 1962–73), Micheline Roquebrune (m. 1975)
- Children : Jason Connery
- Family : Neil Connery (brother)
Connery's first job was as a milkman in Edinburgh with St. Cuthbert's Co-operative Society. He then joined the Royal Navy during which time he got two tattoos, of which his official website says "unlike many tattoos, his were not frivolous—his tattoos reflect two of his lifelong commitments: his family and Scotland. After six decades, his tattoos still reflect those two ideas: One tattoo is a tribute to his parents and reads "Mum and Dad," and the other is self-explanatory, "Scotland Forever."
Connery was later discharged from the navy on medical grounds because of a duodenal ulcer, a condition that affected most of the males in previous generations of his family. Afterward, he returned to the co-op, then worked as, among other things, a lorry driver, a lifeguard at Portobello swimming baths, a labourer, an artist's model for the Edinburgh College of Art, after a suggestion by former Mr. Scotland, Archie Brennan. and a coffin polisher. The modelling earned him 15 shillings an hour, Student artist Richard Demarco who painted several notable early pictures of Connery described the young Connery as "very straight, slightly shy, too, too beautiful for words, a virtual Adonis."
Connery began bodybuilding at the age of 18 and from 1951 time trained heavily with Ellington, a former gym instructor in the British army. While his official website claims he was third in the 1950 Mr. Universe contest, most sources place him in the 1953 competition, either third in the Junior class or failing to place in the Tall Man classification. One of the other competitors mentioned that auditions were being held for a production of South Pacific; and Connery landed a small part. While in Edinburgh, Connery was targeted by the notorious Valdor gang, one of the most ruthless gangs in the city. He was first approached by them in a billiard hall on Lothian Street where he prevented them from stealing from his jacket and was later followed by six gang members to a 15 ft high balcony at the Palais. There Connery launched an attack single-handedly against the gang members, grabbing one by the throat and another by a bicep and cracked their heads together. From then on he was treated with great respect by the gang and gained a reputation as a "hard man".
Connery was a keen footballer, having played for Bonnyrigg Rose in his younger days. He was offered a trial with East Fife. While on tour with South Pacific, Connery played in a football match against a local team that Matt Busby, manager of Manchester United, happened to be scouting. According to reports, Busby was impressed with his physical prowess and offered Connery a contract worth £25 a week immediately after the game. Connery admits that he was tempted to accept, but he recalls, "I realised that a top-class footballer could be over the hill by the age of 30, and I was already 23. I decided to become an actor and it turned out to be one of my more intelligent moves."
Career
- 1950s
In 1958 he had a major role in the melodrama Another Time, Another Place (1958) as a British reporter named Mark Trevor, caught in a love affair opposite Lana Turner and Barry Sullivan. During filming, star Lana Turner's possessive gangster boyfriend, Johnny Stompanato, who was visiting from Los Angeles, believed she was having an affair with Connery. He stormed onto the set and pointed a gun at Connery, only to have Connery disarm him and knock him flat on his back. Stompanato was banned from the set. Connery later recounted that he had to lie low for a while after receiving threats from men linked to Stompanato's boss, Mickey Cohen.
In 1959, Connery landed a leading role in Robert Stevenson's Walt Disney Productions film Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959) alongside Albert Sharpe, Janet Munro, and Jimmy O'Dea. The film is a tale about a wily Irishman and his battle of wits with leprechauns. Upon the film's initial release, A. H. Weiler of the New York Times praised the cast (save Connery whom he described as "merely tall, dark, and handsome") and thought the film an "overpoweringly charming concoction of standard Gaelic tall stories, fantasy and romance.". In his book The Disney Films, film critic and historian Leonard Maltin stated that, "Darby O'Gill and the Little People is not only one of Disney's best films, but is certainly one of the best fantasies ever put on film." He also had a prominent television role in Rudolph Cartier's 1961 production of Anna Karenina for BBC Television, in which he co-starred with Claire Bloom.
- James Bond : 1962–71, 1983
Sean Connery's selection as James Bond owed a lot to Dana Broccoli, wife of Cubby Broccoli, who is reputed to have been instrumental in persuading Cubby that Sean Connery was the right man. James Bond's creator, Ian Fleming, originally doubted Connery's casting, saying, "He's not what I envisioned of James Bond looks" and "I'm looking for Commander Bond and not an overgrown stunt-man," adding that Connery (muscular, 6' 2", and a Scot) was unrefined. However, Fleming's girlfriend told him Connery had the requisite sexual charisma. Fleming changed his mind after the successful Dr. No premiere; he was so impressed, he created a half-Scottish, half-Swiss heritage for the literary James Bond in the later novels.
Connery's portrayal of Bond owes much to stylistic tutelage from director Terence Young, polishing the actor while using his physical grace and presence for the action. Robert Cotton wrote in one Connery biography that Lois Maxwell (the first Miss Moneypenny) noticed, "Terence took Sean under his wing. He took him to dinner, showed him how to walk, how to talk, even how to eat." Cotton wrote, "Some cast members remarked that Connery was simply doing a Terence Young impression, but Young and Connery knew they were on the right track." The tutoring was successful; Connery received thousands of fan letters a week, and the actor became one of the great male sex symbols of film. In 2005, From Russia with Love was adapted by Electronic Arts into a video game, titled James Bond 007: From Russia with Love, which featured all-new voice work by Connery as well as his likeness, and those of several of the film's supporting cast.
- Beyond Bond
In 1981, Connery appeared in the film Time Bandits as Agamemnon. The casting choice derives from a joke Michael Palin included in the script, in which he describes the character removing his mask as being "Sean Connery — or someone of equal but cheaper stature". When shown the script, Connery was happy to play the supporting role. After his experience with Never Say Never Again in 1983 and the following court case, Connery became unhappy with the major studios and for two years did not make any films. Following the successful European production The Name of the Rose (1986), for which he won a BAFTA award, Connery's interest in more commercial material was revived. That same year, a supporting role in Highlander showcased his ability to play older mentors to younger leads, which would become a recurring role in many of his later films.
The following year, his acclaimed performance as a hard-nosed Irish-American cop in The Untouchables (1987) earned him the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, his sole nomination throughout his career. His subsequent box-office hits included Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), in which he played Henry Jones Sr., the title character's father, The Hunt for Red October (1990) (where he was reportedly called in at two weeks' notice), The Russia House (1990), The Rock (1996), and Entrapment (1999). In 1996, he voiced the role of Draco the dragon in the film Dragonheart. Both Last Crusade and The Rock alluded to his James Bond days. Steven Spielberg and George Lucas wanted "the father of Indiana Jones" (although Connery is only 12 years older than Ford) to be Connery since Bond directly inspired the Indiana Jones series, while his character in The Rock, John Patrick Mason, was a British secret service agent imprisoned since the 1960s.
In 1998, Sean Connery received a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award. In recent years, Connery's films have included several box office and critical disappointments such as First Knight (1995), The Avengers (1998), and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003), but he also received positive reviews, including his performance in Finding Forrester (2000). He also later received a Crystal Globe for outstanding artistic contribution to world cinema.
- Retirement
In September 2004, media reports indicated that Connery intended to retire after pulling out of Josiah's Canon, which was set for a 2005 release. However, in a December 2004 interview with The Scotsman newspaper from his home in the Bahamas, Connery explained he had taken a break from acting to concentrate on writing his autobiography. At the Tartan Day celebrations in New York in March 2006, Connery again confirmed his retirement from acting, and stated that he is now writing a history book. On 25 August 2008, his 78th birthday, Connery unveiled his autobiography, Being a Scot, co-written with Murray Grigor.
He was planning to star in an $80 million movie about Saladin and the Crusades that would be filmed in Jordan before the producer Moustapha Akkad was killed in the 2005 Amman bombings. When Connery received the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award on 8 June 2006, he again confirmed his retirement from acting. On 7 June 2007, he denied rumours that he would appear in the fourth Indiana Jones film, stating that "retirement is just too much damned fun".
Connery returned to voice acting, playing the title character in the animated short Sir Billi the Vet, and in 2005 he recorded voiceovers for a new video game version of his Bond film From Russia with Love. In an interview on the game disc, Connery stated that he was very happy that the producers of the game (EA Games) had approached him to voice Bond and that he hoped to do another one in the near future. In 2010, he reprised his role as the title character in the animated film Sir Billi, serving also as executive producer.
In April 2011, his spokesman confirmed that Connery has retired from making public appearances. In the film Transformers: Dark of the Moon, the character Sentinel Prime's features were mostly based on Connery. When Leonard Nimoy was to voice the role, however, the effects were altered to incorporate Nimoy's acting as well. Sean Connery has a villa in Kranidi, Greece. His neighbour is the Dutch crown-prince with whom he shares a helicopter platform.
- Personal life
Connery, a keen golfer, owned the Domaine de Terre Blanche in the South of France for twenty years (from 1979) where he planned to build his dream golf course on the 266 acres (108 ha) of land but the dream was not realised until he sold it to German billionaire Dietmar Hopp in 1999. Connery has also always had an interest in football. Connery supported Celtic in the 1960s, but began supporting their Old Firm rivals Rangers in the 1990s. Commenting on his change of allegiance, Connery stated "I've always supported the team I thought played the best soccer ... religious affiliations in sport mean nothing to me." He has been awarded the rank of Shodan (1st dan) in Kyokushin karate. Connery was knighted in July 2000. He had been nominated for a knighthood in 1997 and 1998, but these nominations were vetoed by Donald Dewar due to Connery's political views.
Connery is a member of the Scottish National Party (SNP), a centre-left political party campaigning for Scottish independence, and has supported the party financially and through personal appearances. His funding of the SNP ceased in 2001, when the UK Parliament passed legislation that prohibited overseas funding of political activities in the UK. In 2008, Connery said in the Scottish Sunday Express he believed that Scotland will become an independent country within his lifetime and praised the work of the SNP in a minority government after their victory in the 2007 Scottish Parliament election. Connery has been criticised for commenting on UK politics while living as a tax exile in the Bahamas, although he released documents in 2003 showing that he had paid £3.7 million in UK taxes between 1997/98 and 2002/03. Connery has sworn not to return to Scotland until it becomes an independent state.
In 1993, news that Connery was undergoing radiation treatment for an undisclosed throat ailment sparked media reports that the actor was suffering from throat cancer following years of heavy smoking, and he was falsely declared dead by the Japanese and South African news agencies. Connery immediately appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman to deny all of this. In a February 1995 interview with Entertainment Weekly, he said that the radiation treatment was to remove nodules from his vocal cords. (His father, a heavy smoker, died from throat cancer in 1972.) In 2003, he had surgery to remove cataracts from both eyes. On 12 March 2006, he announced he was recovering from surgery in January to remove a kidney tumour. In 2008, he chipped a bone in his shoulder after falling while playing golf. In October 2009, he told Wine Spectator magazine that he has been diagnosed with a heart condition.
Tribute
- Connery has been polled as "The Greatest Living Scot".
- A bronze bust sculpture of Connery was placed in the capital city of Estonia.
- Connery shared a Henrietta Award with Charles Bronson for "World Film Favorite – Male" in 1972.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | Lilacs in the Spring | Undetermined role | (uncredited) |
1957 | No Road Back | Spike | |
1957 | Hell Drivers | Johnny Kates | |
1957 | Action of the Tiger | Mike | |
1957 | Time Lock | Welder No. 2 | |
1958 | Another Time, Another Place | Mark Trevor | |
1958 | A Night to Remember | RMS Titanic deck hand | uncredited |
1959 | Darby O'Gill and the Little People | Michael McBride | |
1959 | Tarzan's Greatest Adventure | O'Bannion | |
1961 | On the Fiddle | Pedlar Pascoe | |
1961 | The Frightened City | Paddy Damion | |
1962 | The Longest Day | Pte. Flanagan | |
1962 | Dr. No | James Bond | |
1963 | From Russia with Love | James Bond | |
1964 | Marnie | Mark Rutland | |
1964 | Woman of Straw | Anthony Richmond | |
1964 | Goldfinger | James Bond | |
1965 | The Hill | Trooper Joe Roberts | |
1965 | Thunderball | James Bond | |
1966 | Un monde nouveau | Himself | (cameo) |
1966 | A Fine Madness | Samson Shillitoe | |
1967 | You Only Live Twice | James Bond | |
1967 | The Bowler and the Bunnet | Himself | (Director; documentary) |
1968 | Shalako | Moses Zebulon 'Shalako' Carlin | |
1970 | The Molly Maguires | Jack Kehoe | |
1971 | The Red Tent | Roald Amundsen | |
1971 | The Anderson Tapes | John Anderson | |
1971 | Diamonds Are Forever | James Bond | |
1972 | España campo de golf | Himself | (short subject) |
1973 | The Offence | Detective Sergeant Johnson | |
1974 | Zardoz | Zed | |
1974 | Murder on the Orient Express | Colonel Arbuthnot | |
1975 | Ransom | Nils Tahlvik | |
1975 | The Dream Factory | Himself | (documentary) |
1975 | The Wind and the Lion | Mulay Achmed Mohammed el-Raisuli the Magnificent | |
1975 | The Man Who Would Be King | Daniel Dravot | |
1976 | Robin and Marian | Robin Hood | |
1976 | The Next Man | Khalil Abdul-Muhsen | |
1977 | A Bridge Too Far | Maj. Gen. Roy Urquhart | |
1979 | The First Great Train Robbery | Edward Pierce/John Simms/Geoffrey | |
1979 | Meteor | Dr. Paul Bradley | |
1979 | Cuba | Maj. Robert Dapes | |
1981 | Outland | Marshal William T. O'Niel | Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Actor |
1981 | Time Bandits | King Agamemnon/Fireman | |
1982 | G'olé! | Narrator | (documentary) |
1982 | Five Days One Summer | Douglas Meredith | |
1982 | Wrong Is Right | Patrick Hale | |
1983 | Sean Connery's Edinburgh | Himself | (short subject) |
1983 | Never Say Never Again | James Bond | (Non-Eon Productions James Bond film) |
1984 | Sword of the Valiant | The Green Knight | |
1986 | Highlander | Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez | |
1986 | The Name of the Rose | William of Baskerville | BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role |
1987 | The Untouchables | Jim Malone |
|
1988 | The Presidio | Lt. Col. Alan Caldwell | |
1988 | Memories of Me | Cameo (as himself) | |
1989 | Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade | Professor Henry Jones Senior |
|
1989 | Family Business | Jessie McMullen | |
1990 | The Hunt for Red October | Captain Marko Ramius | Nominated — BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role |
1990 | The Russia House | Bartholomew 'Barley' Scott Blair | |
1991 | Highlander II: The Quickening | Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez | |
1991 | Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves | King Richard I | (uncredited cameo) |
1992 | Medicine Man | Dr. Robert Campbell | |
1993 | Rising Sun | Capt. John Connor | (also executive producer) |
1994 | A Good Man in Africa | Dr. Alex Murray | |
1995 | Just Cause | Paul Armstrong | (also executive producer) |
1995 | First Knight | King Arthur | |
1996 | Dragonheart | Draco | (voice) |
1996 | The Rock | Capt. John Patrick Mason (Ret.) | (also executive producer) |
1998 | The Avengers | Sir August de Wynter | |
1998 | Playing by Heart | Paul | |
1999 | Entrapment | Robert MacDougal | (also producer) |
2000 | Finding Forrester | William Forrester | |
2003 | The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen | Allan Quatermain | (also executive producer) |
2012 | Sir Billi[ | Sir Billi | (voice, executive producer) animated film |
Other roles
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | 007: From Russia with Love | James Bond | (voice and likeness) video game |
Source : Wikipedia.