Honor Blackman, Star of 'The Avengers' and 'Goldfinger,' Dies at 94
She was not on the list.
Honor Blackman went for a roll in the hay as Pussy Galore in
the 1964 James Bond film 'Goldfinger.'
The judo expert shockingly quit the popular British TV
series after two seasons to star as Bond girl Pussy Galore in the third 007
film.
Honor Blackman, the beguiling British actress who portrayed
the leather-clad Cathy Gale on TV's The Avengers and then Pussy Galore in
Goldfinger, has died. She was 94.
Blackman, who first won recognition for her performance as
Elizabeth Taylor's friend in the MGM spy tale Conspirator (1949), died at her
home in Lewes, Sussex, of natural causes unrelated to the coronavirus, her
family told The Guardian.
"As well as being a much-adored mother and
grandmother," her family said, "Honor was an actor of hugely prolific
creative talent. With an extraordinary combination of beauty, brains and
physical prowess, along with her unique voice and a dedicated work ethic, she
achieved an unparalleled iconic status in the world of film and entertainment
and with absolute commitment to her craft and total professionalism in all her
endeavors she contributed to some of the great films and theater productions of
our times."
The London native with the icy blue eyes also played a woman
who believes that she has nothing to live for in A Night to Remember (1958),
one of the retellings of the Titanic disaster. And five years later, she
starred as the goddess Hera in Jason and the Argonauts (1963).
Considered a real-life goddess to her adoring fans, Blackman
joined the British series The Avengers for its second season in 1962 as Mrs.
Gale, a widowed anthropologist and black belt in judo who quite ably assists
the bowler-wearing, umbrella-toting John Steed (Patrick Macnee) in solving
crimes. (Gale started out as a revamped version of another character, Doctor
Keel, played by Ian Hendry, who had left the series).
With The Avengers soaring in the ratings and about to air on
ABC in the U.S., Blackman in December 1963 announced that she was exiting after
two seasons to star as Pussy Galore in Goldfinger (1964). She would effectively
be replaced by Diana Rigg as Emma Peel.
"Everybody was quite startled when I decided to leave,
especially since the program was about to go onto film and into color. It was a
bombshell, I'm afraid, for everybody, that I was going, but I thought my
decision was right and I still think it was right," she said in 2011.
"It was two years of a show every fortnight for the
entire year. I used to stand up for hours and hours after rehearsals for
clothes fittings as well as go to the gym for my judo. I also used to do an
enormous amount of publicity for the series, as did Patrick. It was very, very
tough going but great fun."
In her final Avengers episode, "Lobster
Quadrille," Steed says to Gale, "You're going to be pussyfooting
around on some beach," she recalled. "He worked that into the
dialogue because everybody in Great Britain knew where I was going, so it was
sort of an in-joke."
In Goldfinger, her henchwoman character, the leader of an
all-woman flying-display team, trades sexy double entendres — and judo moves —
with Agent 007 (Sean Connery):
Galore: "My name is Pussy Galore."
Bond: "I must be dreaming."
"She was a fascinating creature and the least
predictable of all James Bond's conquests," Blackman once said. "All
the others succumbed quickly, but not Pussy. In the [1959 Ian Fleming] book she
was a lesbian.”
Her action roles led to the publishing of a 1966 book: Honor
Blackman’s Book of Self-Defence.
Wrote one reader on the book's Amazon.com page: "She
truly was an amazing woman well ahead of her time who not only was able to
catch the eye of men with her stunning looks but also able to judo flip them
across the room like a sack of potatoes!"
Honor Blackman was born in East London on Aug. 22, 1925, the
daughter of a civil servant who taught her how to box. She attended the
Guildhall School of Music and Drama and began acting in the West End.
In 1947, she made her motion picture debut with an
uncredited role in Fame Is the Spur, starring Michael Redgrave.
Blackman often was cast as a demure young woman in such late
1940s films as Daughter of Darkness, Quartet and A Boy, A Girl and a Bike. In 1950,
she appeared in So Long at the Fair with Dirk Bogarde and the following year
performed opposite Roger Livesey and Richard Burton in Green Grow the Rushes.
She won notice in The Square Peg (1958) and A Matter of WHO
(1961), with Terry-Thomas. Those performances led to her casting as the
imperious Mrs. Gale.
Blackman followed Goldfinger with three films released in
1965: The Secret of My Success, a comedy with Shirley Jones and Stella Stevens;
the drama Life at the Top (1965), also starring Laurence Harvey; and the tragic
love story Moment to Moment.
In 1966, she starred in the West End production of Wait
Until Dark.
Later, Blackman played in Richard Donner's Lola (1970),
opposite Charles Bronson and Susan George; The Last Grenade (1970), in which
she was the wife of Richard Attenborough's character; Fright (1971), a horror
film with George yet again; and The Cat and the Canary, a 1978 version of the
haunted-house amusement.
More recently, Blackman appeared in Bridget Jones's Diary
(2001), Color Me Kubrick (2005), the noir thriller I, Anna (2012) and Cockneys
vs. Zombies (2012).
For most of the 1990s, Blackman starred as Laura West in the
long-running ITV sitcom The Upper Hand. The series was an adaptation of the ABC
hit Who's the Boss? with Blackman playing the role originated by Katherine
Helmond — the sexually active mother of an advertising exec who employs a male
live-in housekeeper.
Blackman was married twice, the second time to actor Maurice
Kaufmann. They appeared together in Fright and adopted two children, Lottie and
Barnaby. Survivors also include her grandchildren Daisy, Oscar, Olive and Toby.
Partial filmography
Blackman appeared in the following films:
Fame Is the Spur
(1947) – Emma (uncredited film debut)
Quartet (1948) –
Paula
Daughter of
Darkness (1948) – Julie Tallent
Diamond City
(1949) – Mary Hart
A Boy, a Girl and
a Bike (1949) – Susie Bates
Conspirator (1949)
– Joyce
So Long at the
Fair (1950) – Rhoda O'Donovan
Green Grow the
Rushes (1951) – Meg Cuffley
Come Die My Love
(1952) - Eva
The Delavine
Affair (1954) – Maxine Banner
The Rainbow Jacket
(1954) – Mrs. Tyler
Diplomatic
Passport (1954) – Marcelle
Breakaway (1955) –
Paula Grant/Paula Jackson
The Glass Cage
(1955) – Jenny Pelham
Suspended Alibi
(1957) – Lynn Pearson
You Pay Your Money
(1957) – Susie Westlake
Account Rendered
(1957) – Sarah Hayward
African Patrol
(TV, 1958-1959) – Pat Murray
A Night to
Remember (1958) – Liz Lucas
Danger List
(short, 1959) – Gillian Freeman
The Square Peg
(1959) – Leslie Cartland
A Matter of WHO
(1961) – Sister Bryan
Serena (1962) –
Ann Rogers
The Saint (TV
series) (1962) – Pauline Stone
The Avengers (TV
series, 1962–1964) – Cathy Gale
Jason and the
Argonauts (1963) – Hera
Goldfinger (1964)
– Pussy Galore
The Secret of My Success (1965) – Baroness
Lily von Luckenberg
Moment to Moment
(1965) – Daphne Field
Life at the Top
(1965) – Norah Huxley
Shalako (1968) –
Lady Julia Daggett
A Twist of Sand
(1968) – Julie Chambois
Kampf um Rom I (1968)
– Amalaswintha
Kampf um Rom II
(1969) – Amalaswintha
Twinky, also known
as Lola (1969) – Mummy
The Virgin and the
Gypsy (1970) – Mrs. Fawcett
Fright (1971) –
Helen
Something Big
(1971) – Mary Anna Morgan
Boney: Boney In
Venom House (TV, 1972) – Mary Answorth
Columbo: Dagger of
the Mind (TV, 1972) – Lillian Stanhope
To the Devil a
Daughter (1976) – Anna Fountain
Ragtime Summer
(1977) – Mrs. Boswell
The Cat and the
Canary (1978) – Susan Sillsby
Orpheus in the Underworld
(BBC TV, 1983) – Juno/Empress Eugénie
The First
Olympics: Athens 1896 (TV, 1984) – Ursula Schumann
Minder on the
Orient Express (TV, 1985) – Helen Speeder
Doctor Who (1986)
Terror of the Vervoids – Professor Lasky
The Upper Hand (TV
series, 1990–1996) – Laura West
Tale of the Mummy
(1998) – Captain Shea
To Walk with Lions
(1999) – Joy Adamson
Bridget Jones's
Diary (2001) – Penny Husbands-Bosworth
New Tricks (2005)
– Kitty Campbell
Summer Solstice
(2005) – Countess Lucinda Reeves
Hotel Babylon
(2009) – Constance Evergreen
Reuniting the
Rubins (2010) – Gran Rubin
I, Anna (2012) –
Joan
Cockneys vs
Zombies (2012) – Peggy
Casualty (2013) –
Agatha Kirkpatrick
By Any Means
(2013) – Celia Butler
You, Me & Them
(2015) – Rose Walker
No comments:
Post a Comment