of Bismarck October 29, 2014
Vol. 1 Issue 4
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JAMES BOND by Kathy Wolfe
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• Bond. James Bond. It’s estimated that more than two billion people – nearly one-third of the world’s population – have heard various actors utter those words as the fictional spy introduced himself in 23 different films. This week, Tidbits focuses on one of our favorite characters, his creator, and those who have played him. • London-born Ian Fleming published his first James Bond novel Casino Royale in 1953. Fleming wrote the book in two months at his Jamaican vacation home. It was met with positive reviews and sold out its first and second month. Fleming himself had worked for British Naval Intelligence during World War II and was well-acquainted with the world of espionage, an experience he used to shape his novels. He based the character of Bond’s boss “M” after his own superior in the Navy, Admiral Sir John Godfrey. • Fleming named his spy James Bond after a noted ornithologist, Dr. James Bond, who had written a book on birdwatching that Fleming had on hand. Fleming said, “I wanted the simplest, dullest, plainestsounding name I could think of. James Bond seemed perfect.” The number 007 was the bus route Fleming frequently used between London and Canterbury. Turn the page for more!
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Tidbits® of Bismarck JAMES BOND (continued): • The fictional Bond’s parents were a Scots gentleman Andrew Bond, employed by a weapons company, and a Swiss woman named Monique Delacroix. When his parents died when James was 11, he was sent to live with an aunt, was enrolled at Eton, and was recruited into the Royal Navy. (Fleming also attended Eton and was involved in naval intelligence). • Fleming wrote a Bond novel every year until his death in 1964, a total of 12. Since then, seven other authors have continued the series, including John Gardner who penned GoldenEye, which became the 17th Bond film. Fleming gave the name GoldenEye to his Jamaican vacation retreat which overlooked the Caribbean, after a World War II military mission he had developed in the event the Nazis invaded Spain. After Fleming’s death, the estate was sold to Bob Marley. • The 1958 novel Dr. No came to the big screen in 1962, the first of 23 Eon Productions “official” James Bond films. A casting contest was held to find the perfect James Bond, seeking a man age 28 to 35, about 6 feet tall (1.8 m), with dark hair, and a British accent. Sean Connery landed the role, edging out Cary Grant and Richard Burton. Dr. No was the only official Bond film seen by Ian Fleming before his death in 1964. • Between 1962 and 1967, Sean Connery starred as James Bond four more times in From Russia with Love, Goldfinger, Thunderball, and You Only Live Twice before retiring from the role. Timothy Dalton was strongly considered as his replacement, but declined, saying that age 25, he was too young for the role. Adam West (Batman) was offered the part, but said no, believing that Bond should be a British actor. • In 1969, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service was released, starring a 30-year-old Australian former used car salesman, George Lazenby. Lazenby’s acting experience was almost non-existent, having most recently appeared in a TV commercial for chocolate bars. For his screen test, he purchased a custom-made suit ordered by Connery, who had failed to pick it up at the tailor’s. He added a Rolex watch and went to Connery’s barber to add to his look. It was Lazenby’s only Bond film. • The studio was advised to bring back Sean Connery, no matter what the cost, and in 1971, Connery returned in Diamonds Are Forever, for a $1.25 million salary and 12.5% of the profits. He donated the entire base salary to a Scottish education charity. This would be the last Bond film Connery made for Eon Productions, although he starred in a non-Eon move, Never Say Never Again in 1983. • Connery wore a toupee in all of his Bond films. During the filming of a fight scene in Diamonds Are Forever, Connery’s opponent accidentally pulled off the toupee. See the next page for more!
1. GAMES: What popular board game originally was called Lexiko? 2. MOVIES: Who was the female star of “Pulp Fiction”? 3. TELEVISION: In which television sitcom did the character Reverend Jim appear? 4. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What is the common birthstone associated with the month of February? 5. HISTORY: Which two early American cities were linked by the Natchez Trace route? 6. MYTHOLOGY: What were the Hesperides? 7. GEOGRAPHY: What is the capital of Morocco? 8. FAMOUS QUOTATIONS: Which children’s author once said, “Adults are just obsolete children and the hell with them”? 9. AD SLOGANS: Which cosmetics company used the advertising slogan, “Maybe she’s born with it”? 10. PHOBIAS: What kind of fear is represented by the condition called “thalassophobia”? (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
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JAMES BOND (continued): • In 1973, Roger Moore stepped into the role for Live and Let Die, a Bond with a more comical air about him. Moore is the current record holder for the most Bond films with seven, including The Man with the Golden Gun, The Spy Who Loved Me, and For Your Eyes Only. His final Bond film was 1985’s A View To Kill, when he was 58 years old, making him also the oldest James Bond actor. With all the firearms used on the movie set, Moore had to overcome his hoplophobia, the fear of weapons, the result of a childhood accident when he was shot in the leg by his brother with an air rifle. •
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1. How many times did Coach Ron Fraser take the University of Miami (Fla.) baseball team to the College World Series during his 30-year career? 2. Who holds the major-league career record for most outfield assists? 3. In 2013, Atlanta’s Tony Gonzalez joined two other NFL players who caught a touchdown pass in 17 or more seasons. Name the other two. 4. The San Francisco Dons, in 1956, became the third school to win backto-back NCAA men’s basketball championships. Name the first two to do it.
Queen Elizabeth II knighted Sean Connery in 2000 and Roger Moore in 2003
• In 1984, Pierce Brosnan’s wife had a part in For Your Eyes Only, and met producer Albert Broccoli on the movie set. Roger Moore was preparing to step down from the role, and Broccoli felt Brosnan would be the perfect replacement. Brosnan was offered the role in 1986, but was forced to decline due to his contract for the TV series Remington Steele. Timothy Dalton then got another chance at the Bond role, when he was selected for 1987’s The Living Daylights and 1989’s Licence to Kill, bringing a more serious interpretation of the character back into the role after Moore’s light-hearted approach. • In 1995, Pierce Brosnan got his second chance, appearing in GoldenEye, the world’s fourth highest-grossing film that year. There were three more in the next seven years, and Brosnan’s run ended in 2002. • There was a four-year gap before the return of James Bond, this time in the form of Daniel Craig, who was met with a negative reaction. However, it didn’t take long for filmgoers to take a liking to the new Bond in 2006’s Casino Royale. It was followed up with Quantum of Solace in 2008. The year of Bond’s 50th anniversary, 2012, marked the release of Skyfall, which has become the highest-grossing Bond film of all time, overtaking Thunderball, starring Connery, which had held the title for 47 years. Craig is the first Bond actor to be younger than the Bond series.
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5. Who holds the record for most career shutouts by a St. Louis Blues goalie? 6. Which country’s men’s soccer team has reached three World Cup finals without winning one? 7. Who was the last French bicyclist to win the Tour de France? (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
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Tidbits® of Bismarck FAMOUS CANADIANS:
JOHN CANDY • Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, funny man John Candy made us all laugh with his comedy roles. Let’s look at his Canadian roots and subsequent success. • Candy was a native of Newmarket, Ontario. At age four, he lost his 35-year-old car salesman father to a heart attack, an event that followed John Candy his entire life. He attended a strict Catholic high school, where he was active in football and hockey. An injury brought his athletic ambitions to an end, but it allowed Candy to pursue his love of comedy and acting. He improved his skills at Toronto’s Centennial Community College, modeling his comedy after the likes of Abbott & Costello, Jackie Gleason, and the Three Stooges. • After a few bit parts in Canadian TV, Candy encountered fellow Canadian and struggling young comedian Dan Aykroyd, who persuaded him to try out for the Second City improvisational comedy troupe in Toronto. Candy was invited to join the main troupe in Chicago, where he united with other upcoming stars including Gilda Radner, John Belushi, Eugene Levy, and Bill Murray. This group became part of a new TV series called SCTV in 1976, of which Candy’s impersonations of celebrities was a huge part.
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• Candy began getting significant roles in 1979, beginning with Steven Spielberg’s 1941, alongside his friend Dan Aykroyd. He appeared again with Akyroyd the following year in the hit The Blues Brothers. 1981 brought a role in Stripes, then another in 1983’s National Lampoon’s Vacation. But his breakout role was in 1984’s Splash, a comedy about a mermaid who washes ashore, in which he played Tom Hanks’ brother.
• It was American author and critic H.L. Mencken who made the following sage observation: “Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag and begin slitting throats.” • The condor is the largest flying land bird in the Western Hemisphere -- and one of the slowest in reproducing. The female lays only one egg every two years. • Those who study such things claim that Napoleon Bonaparte was afraid of cats. • Confectioner Milton Hershey suffered through founding two candy companies that ended in failure, then succeeded on his third attempt, and finally sold that company and used the proceeds to found the Hershey Company. After all his hard work, though, he seemed to be less interested in enjoying the fruits of his labors than in helping others. In 1909 he established the Hershey Industrial School for Orphaned Boys, and 10 years later he donated control of the company to a trust for the school. Today the institution is called the Milton Hershey School, and it continues to have a controlling interest in the candy company. • Don’t consider yourself uneducated if you’ve never heard of anthropodermic bibliopegy; the practice of binding books with human skin is not (one can hope) common in modern times. • Scotsman John Paul Jones is best known for his naval exploits for the nascent United States during the Revolutionary War, and for his infamous utterance, “We have not yet begun to fight!” Most people don’t realize, though, that he was born John Paul and only adopted the surname “Jones” on his first trip to America, where he came to flee charges in the deaths of two sailors under his command. *** • Thought for the Day: “Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler.” -Albert Einstein (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
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JOHN CANDY (continued):
• Candy is also fondly remembered for his role in 1987’s Spaceballs and Planes, Trains, & Automobiles. Candy’s success of 1989 was the wildly-popular Uncle Buck.
• On Nov. 1, 1512, the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome, one of Italian artist Michelangelo’s finest works, is first exhibited to the public. Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes consist of nine panels devoted to biblical world history. The most famous of these is The Creation of Adam, a painting in which the arms of God and Adam are stretching toward each other. • On Oct. 27, 1858, Theodore Roosevelt, the future 26th president of the United States, is born in New York City. As president, he insisted on a strong navy, encouraged the construction of the Panama Canal and set aside land for America’s first national parks and monuments. • On Oct. 29, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson assured social activist Jane Addams that he had no intention of leading the U.S. into war; he was re-elected on the slogan “He Kept Us Out of War.” By April 1917 Wilson delivered his war message to Congress and the U.S. entered World War I. • On Oct. 28, 1922, hundreds of people gather around radios to hear the first-ever cross-country telephone broadcast of a college football game, played between the Chicago Maroons and the Princeton Tigers. The first live broadcast of a college football game didn’t happen until 1924. • On Oct. 31, 1961, five years after Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev denounced Stalinism, Joseph Stalin’s embalmed body is removed from public display in Lenin’s tomb in Moscow’s Red Square. When Vladimir Lenin died in 1924, he was embalmed and placed in a mausoleum featuring glass casing. • On Oct. 30, 1974, 32-year-old Muhammad Ali becomes the heavyweight champion of the world for the second time when he knocks out 25-year-old champ George Foreman in the “Rumble in the Jungle.” Seven years before, Ali had lost his title when the government accused him of draft-dodging. • On Nov. 2, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signs a bill designating a federal holiday honoring Martin Luther King, Jr., to be observed on the third Monday of January. King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
• Even with the success of Home Alone in 1990, Candy’s career took a bit of a dive, as he appeared in several unsuccessful films in the early part of the decade. He renewed his success with a dramatic role in Oliver Stone’s JFK, and in 1993’s Cool Runnings, in which he played the coach of the real-life first Jamaican bobsled team. • Candy’s leisure activities included his 20acre farm 50 miles (80 km) north of Toronto, where he and his wife were raising their two children. In 1991, he also became part owner, along with Wayne Gretzky and Bruce McNall, of the Canadian Football League’s Toronto Argonauts. • With both his father’s and grandfather’s deaths from heart attacks always in the back of his mind, the 325-lb. (147-kg) Candy often tried crash diets and joined gyms. However, his success was brief and fleeting, with the weight always finding its way back. At one time, his weight ballooned to 375 lbs. (170 kg) and his waistline grew to 59 inches (150 cm). He also smoked a pack of cigarettes a day, which, along with the weight and lack of exercise, contributed to his death by heart attack in 1994 at age 43 while filming the western comedy Wagons East in Mexico. The film was released five months after Candy’s death, with several scenes needing to have his image digitally inserted. • John Candy appeared in 40 feature films over the course of his career.
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1. Name the group that released “Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose?” 2. Which “morning” is mentioned in “Easy?” Who released the song? 3. Name the group that was originally called “The Rick Z Combo” and “Rick and the Raiders.”
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4. Who had a hit with “You Were on My Mind”? 5. Name the song that contains this lyric: “Friends all tried to warn me but I held my head up high, All the time to warn me but I only passed them by, They all tried to tell me but I guess I didn’t care, I turned my back and left them standing there.” (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
Tidbits® of Bismarck
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Despite combining the crime drama and supernatural thriller genres, the action feels bythe-numbers. The most the movie has to offer is a climactic exorcism and a lot of sudden noises to try to fry your nerves. What’s missing is the right psychological trickery to make all of that spookiness into real nightmare fuel.
EDITOR’S NOTE: DVDs reviewed in this column will be available in stores the week of Oct. 27, 2014. PICKS OF THE WEEK Begin Again (R) -- This is one of those enchanting movies where the music almost eclipses the entire story. Greta (Keira Knightley) is a songwriter and sometimes-singer who’s hit a low point, breathing her feelings into a microphone in a stale little lounge in New York City. Her voice has a deep effect on Dan (Mark Ruffalo), a disgraced music producer who’s hit an even lower low. Dan convinces Greta to take a chance and produce a record with him, shunning studios and making music in the streets. This is the follow-up feature from John Carney, the director of the wildly successful, low-budget musicians-in-love movie “Once.” Carney -- a musician himself -- knows how to make audiences feel that love of music. Funny thing is, he got better dramatic performances in “Once,” when his actors were musicians instead of movie stars.
Life of Crime (R) -- Frank Dawson (Tim Robbins) has a lot of money, a gorgeous wife (Jennifer Aniston) and a team of bumbling career-criminals plotting to kidnap her for a huge ransom. The masterminds didn’t realize one important detail: Frank is an amoral slob who can save a lot of money if his wife disappears, since he wants to get rid of her and go full-time with his enthusiastic mistress in South Beach. It’s an uncomfortable realization for the kidnappers and the wife, really. This crime-comedy unfolds into a full-on confusing caper. The chuckles are worth the rental fee.
DOG OF THE WEEK “The Prince” (R) -- Since “Taken” was such a surprise hit, we’ve been stuck in a painparade of shoddily made Dad-gets-revenge flicks. Hopefully, this last lump indicates that we’re near the end. Paul (Jason Patric) is your generic knife-jawed protagonist, playing it safe as a mechanic with presumably dark secrets in his past. You know the drill: Baddies kidnap innocent daughter; Dad grunts his way through a homicidal rampage until the credits roll. John Cusack, who plays a brooding buddy to the boring hero, looks like he’s in literal agony Deliver Us from Evil (R) -- Sick of exorcism from being on-screen. Bruce Willis plays a bad movies yet? How about a crime-solving exorcist guy who looks about as bored as the audience. who works for the NYPD?! Fortunately, there’s a 2001 memoir by a real-life cop detailing his TV RELEASES “experiences” fighting the supernatural. Ralph “WKRP In Cincinnati: The Complete Series” Sarchie (Eric Bana) has great cop-intuition, a “Vera, Set 4” smart-mouth partner (Joel McHale) and a bone “Masterpiece: Death Comes to Pemberley” to pick with the Man Upstairs. He meets up with “Big Valley -- Season 4” a too-cool-for-Sunday-school renegade priest (Edgar Ramirez) who helps Sarchie realize that (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. he should be doing the Lord’s work.
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MORE JAMES BOND • The Bond films have been filled with interesting gadgets and weaponry, along with some pretty fast cars. But these weren’t Ian Fleming’s only stories about fascinating automobiles. In 1964, Fleming penned the story Chitty Chitty Bang Bang for his young son Caspar. The story about a magical flying car was made into a musical film in 1968, starring Dick van Dyke and produced by Albert Broccoli. It was the only non-Bond film Broccoli produced after the Bond series began. • Beautiful women have always been a significant part of the Bond films and gave many actresses their start in the movie business. The very first Bond girl was Swiss-born Ursula Andress, who had the role of Honey Ryder in 1962’s Dr. No. Andress received a Golden Globe for the New Star of the Year for her work. Her career was set, as she appeared the following year with Elvis Presley in Fun in Acapulco, and went on to star in nearly 30 movies and several television appearances. • Several beauties received a career boost from their Bond girl role, including Jill St. John, Britt Eklund, Kim Basinger, Jane Seymour, Denise Richards, Barbara Bach, and Halle Berry. Bond’s only wife throughout the series has been Diana Rigg as Tracy Bond in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. She was shot and killed on their wedding day. • The Bond girl in From Russia With Love was the 1960 Miss Universe runner-up, Italian Daniela Bianchi. She spoke no English, and began taking classes as soon as she was selected for the role, but in the end, producers opted to dub over her voice.
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MORE JAMES BOND (continued):
• Not everyone wants to be James Bond. Actors who’ve said no to the role include Cary Grant, Liam Neeson, Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds, and Hugh Jackman. When Jackman turned it down, the part went to Daniel Craig. • And not everyone wants to be a Bond girl! Actresses Angelina Jolie, Charlize Theron, Rachel McAdams, and Ashley Judd have all turned down the opportunity to be James Bond’s love interest. • Bond movies have boosted the careers of several singers as well. Shirley Bassey holds the record for singing the most themes with Goldfinger, Diamonds Are Forever, and Moonraker. Alicia Keys crooned the theme to Quantum of Solace. Sheryl Crow was responsible for the theme song from Tomorrow Never Dies, while Carly Simon made “Nobody Does It Better” famous from The Spy Who Loved Me. Madonna not only sang the theme from Die Another Day, she had a role as a minor Bond girl in the film. Paul McCartney and Wings were responsible for Live and Let Die in 1972. Most recently, British singer-songwriter Adele co-wrote and performed “Skyfall,” the title song for the 2012 film.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Scrabble Uma Thurman “Taxi” Amethyst Nashville, Tenn. and Natchez, Miss. 6. Greek nymphs of the evening 7. Rabat 8. Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) 9. Maybelline 10. A fear of the sea
• One of the biggest fans of Ian Fleming’s spy novels was none other than President John F. Kennedy. In a 1961 interview with LIFE magazine, after JFK declared that From Russia With Love was one of his favorite books, sales of the novel skyrocketed. Ironically, the film version of the book was the last movie Kennedy ever saw, viewing it at the White House the day before he left for Dallas in November of 1963.
1.
2.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Sports Quiz Answers Twelve times, winning it all twice (1982, ‘85). Tris Speaker, with 449. Irving Fryar (17 seasons) and Jerry Rice (19 seasons). Oklahoma A&M (1945-46) and Kentucky (1948-49). Jaroslav Halak, with 20 shutouts (201014). The Netherlands (1974, ‘78, 2010). Bernard Hinault, in 1985.
Trivia Test Answers
3. 4. 5.
Flash Back Trivia Answers Tony Orlando and Dawn, in 1973. One of the co-writers, Irwin Levine, wanted the song to sound like it could have come from the Ragtime era, the early 1900s. “Easy like Sunday morning ...” go the lyrics, by the Commodores in 1977. The McCoys, of “Sloopy” fame. Ian & Sylvia in 1964, We Five in 1965 and Crispian St. Peter in 1966. “Burning Bridges,” by The Mike Curb Congregation, 1970. The song was used as the theme song in Clint Eastwood’s film “Kelly’s Heroes,” the story of an infantry unit in France during World War II.
(c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
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