George Lazenby | |
Birth Name: | George Robert Lazenby |
Birth Date: | 1939 9, df=y |
Birth Place: | Goulburn, New South Wales, Australia |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1963–2024 |
Known For: | James Bond in On Her Majesty's Secret Service |
Children: | 6 (1 deceased) |
George Robert Lazenby (; born 5 September 1939)[1] is a retired Australian actor. He was the second actor to portray the fictional British secret agent James Bond in the Eon Productions film series, playing the character in On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969). Since he appeared in only one film, Lazenby's tenure as Bond is the shortest among the actors in the series.
Lazenby began his professional career as a model and had only acted in commercials when he was cast to replace the original Bond actor, Sean Connery.[2] He declined to return for subsequent Bond films and instead pursued roles in Universal Soldier (1971), Who Saw Her Die? (1972), The Shrine of Ultimate Bliss (1974), The Man from Hong Kong (1975), and The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977). After his career stalled in the late 1970s, he moved into business and invested in real estate.
Lazenby later appeared in roles that parodied James Bond. In 2017, a Hulu docudrama film, Becoming Bond, featured Lazenby recounting his life story and portrayal of Bond.
George Robert Lazenby was born on 5 September 1939 in Goulburn, New South Wales,[3] at Ovada Private Hospital, to railway worker George Edward Lazenby and Fosseys retail worker Sheila Joan Lazenby (née Bodel). He attended Goulburn Public School in his primary years and Goulburn High School until 1954. His sister Barbara was an accomplished dancer. When he was young, he spent 18 months in hospital after he underwent an operation that left him with only half a kidney.[4]
When Lazenby was about 14, he moved with his family from Goulburn to Queanbeyan, where his father ran a store. He served in the Australian Army, then afterwards worked as a car salesman and mechanic.[5] [6] [7]
Lazenby moved to London in 1963 to pursue a woman with whom he had fallen in love.[8] [9] He became a car salesman in Finchley, where he was spotted by a talent scout who persuaded him to become a model. He was soon earning £25,000 a year.[10] [11] He was widely known for appearing in an advertisement for Fry's chocolate bars.[12] In 1966, he was voted Top Model of the Year.[13]
In 1968, after Sean Connery had left the role of James Bond, producer Albert R. Broccoli met Lazenby for the first time while they were getting their hair cut at the same barbershop.[12] Broccoli later saw him in the Big Fry commercial and felt he could possibly portray Bond, on which basis he invited him to do a screen test.[14]
Lazenby dressed for the part by sporting several sartorial Bond elements, such as a Rolex Submariner wristwatch and a Savile Row suit, which had been ordered, but not collected, by Connery.[15]
Broccoli offered him an audition. During the audition, Lazenby accidentally punched a professional wrestler, who was acting as stunt coordinator, in the face, impressing Broccoli with his ability to display aggression.[14] [16] Director Peter R. Hunt felt that just because Lazenby starred in the movie, it did not make him an actor.[17]
In July 1969, after making On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Lazenby returned home to Queanbeyan to see his parents. He said he had 18 films to consider, but most of them were bad, adding that he had to "wait and see".[18] He also told the press, "I don't think I'm ready for anything like Hamlet yet but I'd love to play Ned Kelly."[19]
Lazenby was offered the chance to portray Bond on film again, in The Man with the Golden Gun.[20] However, prior to the release of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Lazenby decided to leave the role of Bond after his agent, Ronan O'Rahilly, convinced him that the secret agent would be archaic in the liberated 1970s. Lazenby also felt that he had received poor treatment on the film set.[21] Several of his co-stars felt that Lazenby had made a mistake, including Diana Rigg[22] [23] and Desmond Llewelyn.[24] [25] Lazenby acknowledged the worry but insisted that he had made the correct decision.[26]
At the time of the release of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Lazenby's performance received mixed reviews. Critics felt that while he was physically convincing, he delivered his lines poorly.[27] [28] In the years since the film was released, public perception has become more positive.[29] [30] [31] Broccoli publicly defended Lazenby's performance, saying that while he was not the best actor, he was still great for the role of Bond. He did admit that he found Lazenby's post-movie attitude annoying, feeling that he did not respect the character and was arrogant.[32]
Lazenby was considered to reprise the role of James Bond in Never Say Never Again. However, Sean Connery was chosen for the role instead.[33]
Lazenby has appeared as James Bond in various parodies and unofficial 007 roles, including the 1983 television film The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E., where his character is identified only by the initials J. B.,[34] and the 1996 video game Fox Hunt, parts of which were reedited into a feature film.[35] [36] Additionally, he appeared in an episode of The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents called "Diamonds Aren't Forever."[37] In 2012, Lazenby made a guest appearance on the Canadian sketch comedy series This Hour Has 22 Minutes, spoofing the 007 series in a skit called "Help, I've Skyfall
Lazenby made another film a year after On Her Majesty's Secret Service – Universal Soldier (1971), which he helped write. He said the movie was "anti-guns and anti-Bond". Due to his reported poor treatment on the set of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, he sought out a director whom he would work with better and found Cy Endfield. Lazenby helped to fund the film.[39] [40] Lazenby admitted that after he left the role of Bond, he was unhireable. He landed few roles, to the point that his agent described him as "difficult".[41]
Lazenby next appeared in the 1972 Italian giallo film Who Saw Her Die? opposite Anita Strindberg, a performance for which he lost 35 pounds and received positive reviews.[42] He spent the next 15 months sailing around the world with Chrissie Townson; the trip ended when she became pregnant with their first child, prompting Lazenby to settle down and try to reactivate his career as an actor.[43]
In February 1973, he revealed that he had spent all of the money he had earned from playing Bond, had experienced two nervous breakdowns, and had become an alcoholic. He felt that if he had continued in the role, he would have gone crazy due to the mental stress that the role brings. He later said, "I burnt some bridges behind me, and it was fun, really. I'm sort of glad I did it and I know I won't have to do it again. I can look back and laugh because I didn't hurt anyone — except myself."[44]
Lazenby played a role in the BBC's Play for Today series in 1973, starring in Roger Smith's The Operation. He was meant to follow it with an Anglo-Italian western made in Turkey, followed by a film about rioting students in pre-Castro Cuba, but neither was made.[44]
In 1973, Lazenby said he was "flat broke" when he went to Hong Kong to meet Bruce Lee and producer Raymond Chow. They ended up offering him $10,000 ($ today) to appear in a film with Lee, which was going to be the Golden Harvest film Game of Death. However, the plan collapsed after Lee's sudden death. Lazenby was meant to meet Lee for dinner on the day Lee died.[45]
In the end, Lazenby shot three films for Golden Harvest: The Shrine of Ultimate Bliss,[46] The Man from Hong Kong (1975) (also known as The Dragon Flies),[47] [48] and A Queen's Ransom (1976).[49]
In the mid-1970s, Lazenby appeared in a number of television movies shot in his native Australia, and an episode of the local police drama series Matlock Police.[50] He also returned to modelling, appearing in a number of advertisements for Benson & Hedges cigarettes.[51] A few years later, in an interview with the Australian Women's Weekly, he stated that he did not really feel like an actor as he had had very few acting roles, but added that he would embrace being an actor if he was offered more jobs.[52]
In the late 1970s, Lazenby moved to Hollywood, California, where he started taking acting lessons and set about trying to obtain more acting work.[52]
In 1978, Broccoli described casting Lazenby as his biggest mistake, claiming that the actor couldn't deal with fame and labeling him as "very arrogant". He felt that Lazenby did not understand how a film set worked and did not mesh well with the rest of the cast and crew.[53] Sean Connery came to Lazenby's defence, saying that in the time that he knew Lazenby, he had not acted arrogant, instead applying that label to Broccoli.[54]
Lazenby went on to add:
It hasn't been easy, trying to climb back.... I admit I acted stupidly. It went to my head, everything that was happening to me. But remember, it was my first film.... Now what I've got to do is live down my past; convince people I'm not the same person who made a fool of himself all those years ago. I know I can do it. All I need is the chance.[41]
In 1978, he took out an advertisement in Variety, offering himself for acting work. He offered to work in any role for very little money, he later told a journalist for the Chicago Tribune. "People ask me if the Bond movie wasn't worth it if it got me into acting. It's true that it got me in, but it wasn't worth the ten years it cost me."[55] The following year, he had a substantial supporting role in Saint Jack (1979), directed by Peter Bogdanovich.[56] Filmink magazine called it "one of the best things – if not the best thing – Lazenby ever did outside of Bond."[57]
Lazenby was particularly keen to obtain a role in The Thorn Birds,[52] but that project was not made until a number of years later, and without Lazenby. He did manage to secure roles in Hawaii Five-O and Evening in Byzantium.[58] The latter was seen by Harry Saltzman, who offered Lazenby a leading role in a proposed science fiction film, The Micronauts. According to Lazenby, Saltzman had previously claimed that the pair would never work together again.[52]
Lazenby made a guest appearance on the television series Superboy, as Jor-El, in a two-part episode during the series' second season in 1990. He appeared with Sylvia Kristel in several new Emmanuelle films in 1993, many of which appeared on cable television.[59] In 1993, Lazenby had a part in the film Gettysburg as Confederate General Johnston Pettigrew.[60]
On 5 November 2013, comedian Jim Jefferies stated in an interview that Lazenby would be playing Jefferies's father in the then upcoming second season of his FX network sitcom Legit.[61] In 2019, Lazenby starred as Dr. Jason Love in an audiobook version of James Leasor's spy novel Passport to Oblivion.[62]
In 2024, Lazenby announced his retirement from acting and public appearances.[63]
Lazenby's single portrayal of the iconic Bond character, and his lack of standing as a favourite in the series, has resulted in his name being used as a metaphor for forgettable, non-iconic acting efforts in other entertainment franchises, and for entities that are largely ignored.
In his review of Batman & Robin, widely regarded as the weakest and least successful film in the Batman film franchise, Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle said that George Clooney "should go down in history as the George Lazenby of the series".[64] Actor Paul McGann has described himself as "the George Lazenby of Doctor Who".[65] McGann's only starring television role as the Eighth Doctor was in the 1996 television movie.[66] [67]
In 2009, Sondre Lerche released a song called "Like Lazenby" on his album Heartbeat Radio, in which he laments squandered opportunities and wishes for a "second try". Lerche had received a videotape of the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service as a child; he sent away for a free copy of the movie, only to find he had joined a James Bond film club. He got into trouble when his mother was contacted to pay for the membership. Years later, watching the movie again on DVD (with Lazenby's interviews), he found it to be "a perfect metaphor for life's disappointments".[68]
The title of Matthew Bauer's 2022 documentary The Other Fellow, about the lives of real men named James Bond, is inspired by Lazenby's line in the beginning of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, "This never happened to the other fellow", a reference to Sean Connery. Bauer told Filmink that he chose the title because "these are the situations that our characters face – continuously being in the shadow of this movie icon."[69]
While working as a car salesman at the age of 21, Lazenby fathered a daughter, Jennifer, with Maureen Powell, who was then an Australian army sergeant and a physical education and fitness instructor at Royal Military College, Duntroon.[70]
In 1973, Lazenby married his girlfriend of three years, Christina Ross "Chrissie" Townson (later Matser), an heiress of the Gannett family.[43] They subsequently had two children, daughter Melanie Andrea Lazenby, born on 13 September 1973, and son Zachary "Zack" Lazenby, born on 9 November 1974, at Woden Valley Hospital (now Canberra Hospital) in Garran, Canberra, ACT.[71] Zachary was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour when he was 11 and died at age 19 in 1994. The two divorced shortly after, in 1995. Melanie is a real estate broker in New York, working for Douglas Elliman.[72] [73]
In 2002, Lazenby married former tennis player Pam Shriver and they had three children,[74] [75] including son George Junior Lazenby, born on 12 July 2004.[76] The family lived in Brentwood, California. In August 2008, it was reported that Shriver had filed for divorce from Lazenby, citing "irreconcilable differences".[77] Their divorce was finalised in May 2011.[78]
In late 2023, Lazenby was injured in a fall and he was briefly hospitalised.[79] [80] On 18 December, he returned home.[81] In August 2024, Lazenby appeared weak when strolling with walker frame assisted by his family in Santa Monica, California.[82]
Film | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Refs | |
1969 | On Her Majesty's Secret Service | James Bond | [83] | ||
1971 | Universal Soldier | Ryker | Writer and executive producer | ||
1972 | Who Saw Her Die? | Franco Serpieri | |||
1974 | Stoner | Joshua Stoner | Released in the United States as The Ultimate Bliss | ||
1975 | The Man from Hong Kong | Jack Wilton | Released in the United States as The Dragon Flies | ||
1976 | A Queen's Ransom | George | |||
1977 | The Kentucky Fried Movie | The Architect | Segment: "That's Armageddon" | [84] | |
1978 | Death Dimension | Capt. Gallagher | Aka Black Eliminator, Freeze Bomb | ||
1979 | Saint Jack | Senator | |||
1981 | Last Harem | Prince Almalarik | |||
1986 | Never Too Young to Die | Drew Stargrove | [85] | ||
1987 | Hell Hunters | Heinrich | |||
1992 | Eyes of the Beholder | Jack Wyman | |||
1993 | Gettysburg | J. Johnston Pettigrew | |||
The Evil Inside Me | Grandinetti | ||||
1994 | Twin Sitters | Leland Stromm | |||
1996 | Fox Hunt | Chauncey | [86] | ||
1998 | Star of Jaipur | John Steele | |||
1999 | Gut Feeling | ||||
2000 | Four Dogs Playing Poker | Carlo | |||
2002 | Spider's Web | Leland De Winter | |||
2003 | Winter Break | Campbell Grady | Alternate title: Sheer Bliss | ||
2014 | A Winter Rose | Henry | |||
2015 | Hunter | General Bullmount | |||
2016 | Dance Angels | Captain Hugo | |||
2017 | Death Game | General Bullmount | |||
Becoming Bond | Himself | Docudrama | [87] | ||
2019 | Passport to Oblivion | Dr Jason Love | |||
2021 | In the Blink of An Eye | G | |||
2024 | Mundije | US President | Post-Production | [88] | |
Z Dead End | Agent Smart | Filming | [89] |
Television | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Refs | |
1973 | Play for Today | David Adler | Episode: "The Operation" | ||
1974 | Matlock Police | David Parkes | Episode: "In the Name of the Queen" | ||
1976 | Is There Anybody There? | John Hersey | TV film | ||
1978 | Evening in Byzantium | Roger Tory | Miniseries | ||
The Newman Shame | John Brandy | TV film | |||
1979 | Hawaii Five-O | John Cossett | Episode: "The Year of the Horse" | [90] | |
B.J. and the Bear | Burglar / Paul Desmond | 2 episodes | |||
1982 | General Hospital | Reginald Durban | 5 episodes | ||
1983 | Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E. | J.B. | TV film | ||
1984 | Hotel | Emmett Saunders | Episode: "Tomorrows" | ||
The Master | Mallory | Episode: "Hostages" | |||
Rituals | Logan Williams | 9 episodes | |||
1985 | Cover Up | Simon Locke | Episode: "Jack of Spades" | ||
1987 | The Grand Knockout Tournament | Himself | TV special | ||
1989 | Freddy's Nightmares | Dr Clark | Episode: "The End of the World" | ||
Alfred Hitchcock Presents | James Grant | Episode: "Diamonds Aren't Forever" | |||
1990 | Superboy | Jor-El | 2 episodes | [91] | |
1993 | Emmanuelle Forever | Mario | TV film | [92] | |
Emmanuelle's Revenge | |||||
Emmanuelle in Venice | |||||
Emmanuelle's Love | |||||
Emmanuelle's Magic | |||||
Emmanuelle's Perfume | |||||
Emmanuelle's Secret | |||||
1994 | Chi'Ru Master | Episode: "Return of the Shadow Assassin" | |||
1998 | Team Knight Rider | Nigel Davies | Episode: "The Return of Megaman" | ||
1999 | Baywatch | Commander McCabe | Episode: "The Big Blue" | ||
1999–2000 | The Pretender | Major Charles | 4 episodes | ||
Batman Beyond | Mr. Walker/King | Voice, 3 episodes | |||
2012 | This Hour Has 22 Minutes | Bond | Episode #20.9 | ||
2014 | Legit | Jack Jefferies | 2 episodes |
Film | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Refs |
1970 | Omnibus | Himself | Documentary Episode: "Ian Fleming Creator of the James Bond Myth" | |
1973 | Life and Legend of Bruce Lee | Himself | Documentary | |
1974 | The Last Days of Bruce Lee | Himself | Documentary | |
Kung Fu Killers | Himself | Documentary | ||
Heisse Ware aus Hongkong | Himself | Documentary | ||
1975 | Celebrity Squares | Panellist | Game show 2 episodes | |
1984 | Bruce Lee, The Legend | Himself | Archive footage | |
1993 | Death by Misadventure: The Mysterious Life of Bruce Lee | Himself | Documentary | |
1995 | In Search of James Bond with Jonathan Ross | Himself | Documentary | |
1997 | The Secrets of 007: The James Bond Files | Himself | ||
1999 | The James Bond Story | Himself | Documentary | |
2000 | Himself | Documentary | ||
2002 | E! True Hollywood Story | Himself | Documentary Episode: "The Bond Girls" | |
Premiere Bond: Die Another Day | Himself | Documentary | ||
In Other Times | Himself | Documentary | ||
Best Ever Bond | Himself | Documentary | ||
2006 | Press Day in Portugal | Himself | Documentary | |
2007 | Where Are They Now | Himself | Episode: "Hey Dad" | |
On Her Majesty's Secret Service: George Lazenby – In His Own Words | Himself | Documentary | ||
Casting on "Her Majesty's Secret Service" | Himself | Documentary | ||
2008 | Himself | Documentary | ||
2009 | Whatever Happened To? | Himself | Episode: "Undercover Agents" | |
2012 | Everything or Nothing | Himself | Documentary | |
The Path of the Dragon | Himself | Documentary | ||
2017 | And the Winner Isn't | Himself | Documentary | |
2018 | A Very Bond Farewell with George Lazenby | Himself | Documentary | |
2019 | Real Men | Himself | Documentary | |
2021 | OHMSS50: The Concert | Himself | Video | |
2021 | OHMSS50: Video Report | Himself | Video documentary | |
This Never Happened to the Other Fella | Himself | Documentary Post-production |
Cy Endfield directed the Big Fry commercial.[101]