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Archive for the ‘Roger Moore News’ Category

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, May 6, 2012 10:58 am

The Bond movies remain the longest continually running film series in movie history, and 2012 marks its fiftieth anniversary. While there have been many actors that have taken on the coveted role of James Bond, the most renowned 007 – and the one with most panache and charisma – is undoubtedly Sir Roger Moore, KBE. To celebrate the film franchise’s wonderful heritage, Roger Moore has written a book that features all the Bond movies, along with a wonderfully witty account of his own involvement in them. From the girls to the villains, from the cars to the cocktails, from the gadgets to the locations, this beautiful book is illustrated with many iconic images from all the films plus many previously unseen shots from the Bond archive. This is the ultimate James Bond book, written by the ultimate James Bond, with all the affection and good humour he brought to the role. It is the perfect gift for all fans of this much-loved series.

You can buy your copy from AMAZON

Posted by alan, April 2, 2012 9:06 pm
Question 1Hello Sir Roger

I hope you are well.
What would be your ‘chosen specialised subject’ if you were to appear on Mastermind?
Thanks
Jeremy Smith
Hi Jeremy
Do you really think they’d ever invite me!?
Probably the life and work of Roger Moore between 1973 and 1974. I might stand a chance of getting a few answers correct.

Question 2
Dear Sir Roger,
Just finished watching my new DVD set of The Persuaders! Loved Terry Thomas’s character in the last episode. I wondered what he was like to work with? I’ve just statred reading aTerry Thomas in The Persaders biography of TT and he seems to have been an amazing character in real life too. If the show had run for more than one season, do you think he would have made a good returning character for the occasional story since the three of you seemed to work so well together?
Regards
Simon
Hello Simon
I absolutely loved working with Terry Thomas. He was huge fun. It was around the time of our filming that he first became ill, and that year he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. I would have dearly loved to have worked with him again but alas it never worked out that way.
Question 3
Hello Sir Roger,
Thanks for answering my questions in past months. I was reading the press recently and it was mentioned that Live and Let Die still holds the record of most watched film on British TV – 23 millions viewers in 1981 – and The Spy who loved Me is number 3, with over 20 millions. In France, The Persuaders is still the most watched show on TV. Some achievements. You have written in lenght about working with Guy Hamilton and the famous Bond producers on Live and and Let Die, but I would like to know how proud you really were about taking on the role of Bond? Kind regards, Laurent (from France and Yorkshire).
I Berges
Hi Laurent
Of course I was delighted and honoured to be chosen as Bond. I’ve always said that I owe a lot to 007 coming into my life, and continue to be associated with the franchise very happily giving interviews and taking part in documentaries and PR events. I had a bit of a career before Bond, but those films really took my life to another level and I’m very grateful to them and everyone involved.
Question 4
Hello Sir Roger
I’m in the middle of reading Dawn French’s latest book A Tiny Bit Marvellous (I think that’s what it’s called), but i prefer Dear Fatty. Can you recommend any good books you’ve read lately (bios or not, doesn’t matter), please?
Thanks again, and i hope whatever project (with UNICEF or whatever), you are working on, or if you’re just taking a well earned break, enjoy yourself and take care.
Oh and by the way, today i bought a dvd of that great movie you made with Patrick Macnee and your son Geoffrey, Sherlock Holmes in New York. I hadn’t seen it for such a long time. (The first time i saw it was on tv in Bangkok and you had to turn the tv sound down and turn on the radio for the english soundtrack).Which was ok until they stopped it for half an hour while they broadcast the news grrr.
I hope you do get a copy of this dvd and show it to Geoffrey’s children (a free copy of course). It was lovely to see you both working with each other so well (as you did in Fire, Ice and Dynamite).
The audio commentary was also great. Thanks for making the movie then doing the commentary for it recently.
You Aussie fan always
Noel
Hi Noel
Oh, has it come out? Great!
I look forward to showing it to my granddaughters so they can see their father at their age!
I’m devouring a few books at the moment: Jeffrey Archer’s Sin Of The Father, Before I Go To Sleep by SJ Watson, Shadows of the Workhouse by Jennifer Worth and My Dear I wanted To Tell you by Louisa Young. All terrific reads and all very different.
Question 5
Dear Sir Roger,
I have a short question, but perhaps a bit difficult to answer:
You always seem to be a very happy, humorous, smiling and merry person. Nevertheless, do you sometimes experience dark periods in your life? Unhappiness, disappointment, sadness or even depression? Even your former Prime Minister Winston Churchill referred to occasional so called „black dog“ periods. If so, how do you get rid of these feelings? What brings back happiness, optimism and joy to your life?
Thank you very much and kind regards
Martin
Hello Martin
It’s far easier to be happy and nice than depressed and miserable … but yes we all have the odd worry, and the odd bout of ill health which makes us feel sorry for ourselves; but overall I’m very happy and very lucky with where I am today. I’ve just enjoyed a lovely walk with Kristina, we called for a few groceries on the way home and now I’m going to prepare a little lunch. So I prefer to concentrate on being happy, which is very easy right now, than anything else!
Question 6
Dear Sir Roger Moore,
I would just like to ask what did you find most challenging when acting as Bond?
Thankyou for your time
R.Flower
Hello R Flower.
Probably having to fire a gun and not blink. I’m a total coward so often blinked before I pulled the trigger!
Sir Roger Moore fans
There is a brand-new Google plus account for Sir Roger MooreSir Roger Moore and his web manger both on Google Plus
Why don’t you come over and be one of the first to register as a follower.
Google plus in my opinion has more functionality than Facebook with its circles feature to separate the postings. And also you’re not limited to 160 characters like twitter.
If you’re quick you can register your own Google plus vanity URL before somebody else takes it by going to this website http://gplus.to/
Also at the very pleased if you follow me, http://goplus.us/alandavidson
I will be happy to return the favour
Alan Davidson
Sir Roger Moore web manager
Posted by Marie-France Vienne, February 9, 2012 3:30 pm

Sir Roger Moore and Joanna Lumley are backing a new campaign to raise funds to help the U.K.’s elderly during the winter.

The pair has thrown its support behind charity Age UK’s Bobble Day, which urges the British public to buy colourful knitted accessories to attach to their winter clothes to raise funds for old folk struggling through the cold season as part of the organisation’s Spread The Warmth drive.

Former Bond star Sir Roger, who reveals he was labelled ‘The Big Knit’ by Sir Michael Caine because of his early days as a sweater model, is eager for Brits to purchase the charitable accessories.


He says, “This ‘Big Knit’ now supports Age UK’s Bobble Day and I’ll be urging everyone to wear their favourite knitwear on February 10th: you too could look as debonair, suave and sophisticated as me – Bobble-O-Seven! But more importantly, you will also be helping to save lives by supporting Age UK’s Spread the Warmth campaign.”

Absolutely Fabulous actress Lumley adds, “Please join me in making a donation to Age UK to help older people who are suffering from the cold this winter. It’s a hugely important cause; let’s Spread the Warmth together.”

Rolling Stones rocker Ronnie Wood’s ex-wife Jo is also supporting the campaign.

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, February 1, 2012 5:12 pm

Roger Moore and Danish actress Brigitte Nielsen will be Austrian entrepreneur Richard Lugner’s special guests at this year’s Opera Ball in Vienna.

The 79-year-old Lugner makes headlines in Austria every year by inviting celebrities to the ball, the highlight of Vienna’s social calendar with tickets starting at 250 euros ($327) and boxes going for as much as 18,500 euros. His previous guests have included actresses Andie MacDowell and Faye Dunaway, although in recent years, Lugner has favoured starlets and scandal-sheet regulars like party girl Paris Hilton.


Last year Karima El Mahroug, the teenage Moroccan woman known as “Ruby the Heart-Stealer” who was at the centre of a sex scandal involving former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, was on his arm.


“I look forward to coming to Vienna,” Nielsen, 48, said in a video message at a press conference in the Austrian capital, confirming she would attend the February 16 ball.

The former wife of action star Sylvester Stallone, Nielsen appeared in films like “Rocky IV” and “Beverly Hills Cop II” in the 1980s and most recently in the German production of the reality show “I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here”.

British actor Moore, 84, and his wife will also join Lugner in his box, the Austrian said, adding that “lots of women go crazy for him.”

Top model Helena Christensen, 43, will also attend the ball as a guest of lingerie company Triumph.

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, January 26, 2012 9:57 pm

Sir Roger Moore could be swapping 007’s trademark vodka martinis for a glass of sherry in “Downton Abbey” after it emerged that producers want the veteran star to make a cameo appearance in the next series.

Programme insiders say it is hoped Sir Roger, 84, will appear in the third series later this year as a potential love interest for Dame Maggie Smith’s character Violet Crawley. “Sir Roger is considered the perfect choice and his involvement would obviously go down very well with fans of the show,” we’re told. “He would represent an exciting part of Violet’s past. Hopefully Sir Roger will be able to fit it into his schedule.”

It has emerged that fellow national treasure Joan Collins, 78, is being lined up for a role in the next series and she has announced that she would be happy to join the cast, while the recent Christmas edition saw Nigel Havers appear as the caddish Lord Hepworth. Downton triumphed at the Golden Globes at the weekend winning the best mini-series gong and there has even been talk of a Hollywood adaptation.

Express.co.uk

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, December 10, 2011 2:27 pm

Sir Roger Moore says his penchant for gambling secured him the role of James Bond. Before securing the coveted part, Roger appeared in a number of successful TV shows, including the long-lasting series The Saint. Roger says his love for gambling at the time struck a chord with Bond producers.

“When I was in The Saint I thought I was Bond and gambled. The producers thought I’d be a good replacement,” he smiled in an interview with BBC Breakfast. Roger is currently starring in “A Princess for Christmas”, which premiered on the Hallmark Channel earlier this month. The 84-yearold star says the festive movie was a welcome change from his high octane action films. “There’s no bombs, no explosions and no-one gets a disease,” he said, referring to the dramatic Bond storylines. “This is a happy story.”


In the early 1950s, Roger worked as a male model, appearing in print advertisements for knitwear which earned him the amusing nickname ‘The Big Knit’. The star laughs when he thinks of his early reputation, given to him by a fellow British actor. “Only Sir Michael Caine!” he laughed. Roger has enjoyed an illustrious film and television career. He is shocked when he thinks about how long it has spanned.

“It’s further than I can count,” he quipped.


Posted by alan, December 1, 2011 9:44 pm

Question 1 

Hello Sir Roger: 

I hope you and your family are doing well. I have a question about filming scenes. Obviously, an actor must memorize and know his lines. Inevitably, in the filming of a scene, there will be moments when the actor forgets his lines. Are there cue cards off camera for the actor to read off? Or is there someone off camera to whisper the forgotten line? Or is the scene simply done again? 

With kind regards, 

Ellis

Hello Ellis

On films you do occasionally dry, and you’re given your script to look at and they then ‘go once more’ on the scene. There isn’t a prompter like in the theatre (as that is live of course, you can’t pause to go look at a script) and rarely are idiot boards used. My friend Desmond Llewelyn used them occasionally for technical dialogue as he got older, but they are a bit of a distraction.

Learn your lines and don’t bump into the furniture!

Question 2

Dear Sir Roger, 

Of course when asked about the most exotic Bond locations, one immediately thinks of Jamaica, India, Thailand, etc. However my own favourite locations are the three Italian ones in three consecutive of your Bonds: 

- Sardinia – in Spy Who Loved Me

- Venice – in Moonraker

- Cortina – in For Your Eyes Only 

Luckily I have been able to visit all three, they are quite close to Austria… 

I would like to ask you if you indeed enjoyed filming in those locations and perhaps which of the three you liked best. 

Thanks and best wishes always 

Martin

Hello Martin

I have enjoyed the majority of locations I’ve worked in, but Sardinia has always – and probably always will – rate of my favourite. It was just heavenly!

If you’ve been to all three, which do you prefer I ask? 


Question 3 

Dear Sir Roger , 

   I’m a 14 year old girl from Greece and I’m a huge fan of you so when I saw on your official website that everyone can ask you a question each month I decided to write you. I love your movies and your TV series. Last summer I read your book ”My word is my Bond” and I found it great. I also admire your work in UNICEF so much. My question is as follows:What was the funniest that ever happened to you while you were shooting a movie?I also like to ask you if you have any plans about starring in another movie after ”Christmas at Castlebury Hall”?

   Well, thank you very much for reading my letter. 

   Will you come to Greece soon? 

With my best wishes 

   Marili Antoniou

Dear Marili

Oh goodness, there are so many funny things I can’t recall them all but on Boat Trip (which I made around the Greek Islands) I was asked to pretend to whisper something into Horatio Sanz’s ear for him then to react with disgust. I didn’t have to say anything, but make it look as though I did. Anyhow, I did actually whisper a few words into his ear which caused him to almost convulse in disgust – no acting was required! The whole crew fell apart and Horatio wouldn’t speak to me for ages!! It was all great fun.

If I’m offered another movie I’ll certainly consider it.

Question 4 

Hello Sir Roger,

I really hope everything is fine with you! 

I’m ALWAYS glad to read all news about you. 

Further to the best James Bond ever of my life (!!!) I’ve always admired another British actor too often undervalued, too quickly forgotten, too soon passed away: Michael Billington, the “dark” side of my ideal beauty (for his hair colour..) when I was a teen-ager and also used to watch the U.F.O. episodes. 

He was screen-tested 5 times for the James Bond role (even if I’m happiest he was definitely YOU   ) and, probably, you barely met, due to the apparently different locations you were at in The spy who loved me.  But it is also possible that you knew very well each other, being both “Children of ITC” for a while. Who knows? Only you! 

However my question is: have you ever felt sort of “rivalry” with him? Do you have any peculiar good or bad memory of him?    

I deeply thank you for your attention and rely on your legendary frankness.

Best regards,

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, November 19, 2011 1:59 pm

In the run-up to Universal Children’s Day on 20 November, UNICEF Ambassador Sir Roger Moore has made an appeal to all young people in Austria.

For more than 20 years the actor has been a dynamic supporter of the charity which protects the rights of children around the world and he now asks for the help of a younger generation. The new Junior Ambassador competition will give children up to the age of 18 the chance to get actively involved and creative with the charity UNICEF.

“Day after day, all over the world, the rights of children are abused. During my 20 years with UNICEF my mission was clear: Children must know their rights and we as adults have a responsibility to help them stand up for their rights,” explained Sir Roger Moore as he spoke of his commitment to the Junior Ambassador competition.


All entries will be judged by a team from UNICEF and the winner will be announced in June next year. The winner will be given the opportunity to work with UNICEF with every entrant receiving a certificate for their involvement with the charity and children’s rights.

For more information about the charity and to watch Sir Roger Moore’s video appeal visit: http://www.unicef.at/juniorbotschafter.html

To apply for the competition fill in the online form at: http://www.unicef.at/519.html

Posted by Marie-France Vienne, October 31, 2011 1:37 pm

Roger Moore is returning to television in an original movie “A Princess for Christmas” for the Hallmark Channel based in Studio City. It is set to premiere Dec. 2.

Co-starring with Roger  Moore is Katie McGrath (Merlin), Sam Heughan (Doctors), Travis Turner (Supernatural) and Leilah De Meza. A Princess for Christmas is a Motion Picture Corporation of America production with Brad Krevoy, Francisco J. Gonzalez and Reuben Liber executive producing. Michael Damian and Janeen Damian are producers and script co-writers.

“A Princess for Christmas” tells the story of a 20-something who becomes guardian to her young niece and nephew when her sister and brother-in-law are killed in an accident. Her brother-in-law’s father, Edward (Moore), is a duke who was absent from their lives and wants to reconnect with the children out of love for his late son.


Posted by Marie-France Vienne, October 1, 2011 1:33 pm

Sir Roger Moore has signed up to support a Birmingham-based musical aiming to raise money for four cancer charities. He has has autographed a portrait of himself by Sutton Coldfield artist Sue Verity which will be auctioned off next month. The auction is aiming to support the fund-raising musical Survive! which was staged at Birmingham’s New Alexandra Theatre on September 30. Sir Roger is the latest celebrity to support the show, following Hollywood actor Johnny Depp, whose signed portrait is currently being auctioned on Sue’s website.

The show’s producers Monica Price and Nigel Davey joined Sue in meeting the veteran actor in London where he gladly put his name to his portrait.

“When I spoke to Sir Roger Moore’s management about our stage show Survive! and the fact that it will be highlighting these great charities they were very willing to help,” said Nigel. “So having the artist Sue Verity paint his portrait and Sir Roger sign it was perfect. He was only in the UK for a couple of days so for him to take time out and meet us all was wonderful.” 



Survive! Seven Lives – One Journey tells the story of seven people diagnosed with different forms of cancer and has an all-star line-up including Hannah Waterman, Guy Henry, Les Dennis, Jean Boht, Emma Stephens and Sarah Manners. It is aiming to raise funds for Macmillan Cancer Support, the Eve Appeal, the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation and the Teenage Cancer Trust.

For more on the portrait auctions see www.sueverity.co.uk