Inspirations for James Bond explained

A number of real-life inspirations have been suggested for James Bond, the fictional character created in 1953 by British author, journalist and former Naval Intelligence officer Ian Fleming (1908–1964); Bond appeared in twelve novels and nine short stories by Fleming, as well as a number of continuation novels and twenty-six films, with seven actors playing the role of Bond.

Although the stories and characters were fictional, a number of elements had a real-life background, taken from people whom Fleming knew or events he was aware of. These included the spy's name, which Fleming took from the American ornithologist James Bond, and the code number—007—which referred to the breaking of a First World War German diplomatic code. Some aspects of Bond's character and tastes replicate those of Fleming himself.

An inspiration for the James Bond spy novels may have come from the writings of William Le Queux, who wrote related novels between 1891 and 1931; inspiration for the James Bond films, on the other hand, may have come from the early silent films of German director Fritz Lang, including the 1922 film Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, and the 1928 film Spione.

Origins of the name

On the morning of 17 February 1952, Ian Fleming started writing what would become his first book, Casino Royale, at his Goldeneye estate in Jamaica. He typed out 2,000 words in the morning, directly from his own experiences and imagination and finished work on the manuscript in just over a month,[1] completing it on 18 March 1952. Fleming took the name for his character from that of the American ornithologist James Bond, a Caribbean bird expert and author of the definitive field guide Birds of the West Indies; Fleming, a keen birdwatcher himself, had a copy of Bond's guide and he later explained to the ornithologist's wife that "It struck me that this brief, unromantic, Anglo-Saxon and yet very masculine name was just what I needed, and so a second James Bond was born".

On another occasion, Fleming said: "I wanted the simplest, dullest, plainest-sounding name I could find, 'James Bond' was much better than something more interesting, like 'Peregrine Carruthers'. Exotic things would happen to and around him, but he would be a neutral figure—an anonymous, blunt instrument wielded by a government department."[2] After Fleming met the ornithologist and his wife, he described them as "a charming couple who are amused by the whole joke". The ornithologist was obliquely referred to in the film Die Another Day with Pierce Brosnan's Bond picking up a copy of Birds of the West Indies and posing as an ornithologist.[3] Footage of Bond and his wife meeting Fleming is shown in the 2022 documentary The Other Fellow, about the lives of real men named James Bond.[4]

Character inspirations

During the Second World War Fleming was the personal assistant to the director of the Naval Intelligence Division, Admiral John Godfrey. He reached the rank of commander—a rank he subsequently gave to his fictional creation—and was the planner for special operations unit 30th Assault Unit. Many of Bond's tastes and traits were Fleming's own, including sharing the same golf handicap, the taste for scrambled eggs and using the same brand of toiletries. Bond's tastes are also often taken from Fleming's, as was his behaviour,[5] with Bond's love of golf and gambling mirroring his creator's. Fleming used the experiences of his espionage career and other aspects of his life as inspiration when writing, including using names of school friends, acquaintances, relatives and lovers throughout his books.

Bond's cigarettes were also the same as Fleming's, who had been buying his custom-made by Morland since the 1930s; Fleming added the three gold bands on the filter during the war to mirror his naval Commander's rank. On average, Bond smokes sixty cigarettes a day, although he cut back to around twenty-five a day after his visit to a health farm in Thunderball. Fleming himself smoked up to eighty cigarettes a day.[6] Apart from imbuing Bond with his own tastes, Fleming based his fictional creation on a number of individuals he came across during his time in intelligence, admitting that Bond "was a compound of all the secret agents and commando types I met during the war".[7]

The Institute of National Remembrance revealed in 2020 that James Albert Bond (1928–2005), a British diplomat born in Bideford, Devon, had worked at the British Embassy in Warsaw with arrival of Warsaw on 18 February 1964 and left the territory of the Polish People's Republic on 21 January 1965. Released documents confirm that he conducted espionage activities. It is unclear whether Ian Fleming was aware of the existence of an actual spy named James Albert Bond.[8] [9] James Albert Bond had a son with his wife Janette Tacchi who is also called James, born in 1955.[10]

DatesNameNotes
 – 13 February 1969Cotton was an Australian who served the British Royal Naval Air Service. He was a close friend of Fleming during the Second World War. After having served as a pilot in the First World War, Cotton worked for MI6 photographing German factories, military installations and airfields from a camera hidden in a plane's fuselage. He would also openly take photographs of installations using people as cover for doing so—including Hitler's deputy, Hermann Göring. Cotton also flew the last civilian plane out of Berlin at the outbreak of the Second World War, taking pictures of the German navy as he did so.
 – 14 October 2003Naval intelligence officer and commando of the Second World War, Dalzel-Job was also an accomplished linguist, author, mariner, navigator, parachutist, diver and skier and knew Fleming through his service with 30AU. Like Bond, he had a rebellious streak when he disagreed with orders on points of principle. A modest man, when once asked about the connection with Bond he replied: "I have never read a Bond book or seen a Bond movie. They are not my style ... And I only loved one woman and I'm not a drinking man."
 – 23 June 2012A captain in the Royal Artillery and later officer of arms at the College of Arms, son of flying ace Duncan Grinnell-Milne. de La Lanne-Mirrlees was a talented linguist and socialite, educated at the English schools in Cairo and Paris. Fleming sought his advice while writing On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and later they jointly published Sable Basilisk about James Bond's genealogy and heraldry.[11]
 – 13 November 1990The MI6 head of station in Paris, Dunderdale would regularly dine at Maxim's; he drove an armour-plated Rolls-Royce and dressed in handmade suits and Cartier cufflinks. Dunderdale was a bon viveur who enjoyed attractive women and fast cars and was a friend of Fleming's during the Second World War. He also played a key role in the cracking of the Enigma code.
 – 5 July 1975Australian espionage journalist Phillip Knightley claimed a mix of Charles Howard 'Dick' Ellis, who he called ‘one of the most remarkable secret service agents in the history of espionage’, and Duško Popov were the inspiration for Bond. Of Ellis, Knightley said: ‘His adventures not only rival those of James Bond; he was James Bond.’ Both Ellis and Fleming worked at one time for Robert Vansittart.
 – 18 August 1971Ian Fleming's elder brother, and wartime expert of military intelligence and irregular warfare. He spent time behind enemy lines in Norway and Greece during the war. He also spent time in Delhi, organising deception plans to fool the Imperial Japanese Army.
 – 6 March 2004Glen was a former Arctic explorer who worked with Fleming in Naval Intelligence. Like Bond, Glen went to Fettes College and had Scottish antecedents. Glen distanced himself from the connection, saying "I don't think it's true for a moment; I'm far too gentle, too law-abiding."
 – 1 November 1995Hudson spent much of the Second World War behind enemy lines in Yugoslavia, initially with the British Secret Service and subsequently with the Special Operations Executive (SOE). Hudson survived assassination attempts and recruited a network of agents to blow up Axis shipping—blowing up an Italian ship single-handedly.
 – 15 June 1996During the Second World War Maclean was a British agent in Yugoslavia and friend (and biographer) of Josip Broz Tito, as well as a member of the Special Air Service, active in North Africa and Yugoslavia. Although a number of media sources at the time of his death suggested that he was a model for Bond, he denied the rumour, a view shared by Fleming's biographer, Andrew Lycett.
Michael MasonMason ran away from his wealthy family at an early age to go to Canada where he worked as a trapper and professional boxer. At the outbreak of war he worked in then-neutral Bucharest where he killed two German agents who were trying to assassinate him.
 – 3 September 1987Minshall was a fellow member of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and was known to Fleming through his work in naval intelligence. In 1940 he joined the SOE and waged guerrilla warfare against the Nazis in France and Yugoslavia.
 – 23 October 1986O'Brien-ffrench was a distinguished British secret intelligence officer, decorated army officer, skier, mountaineer, linguist, traveller and artist. He met Fleming in Austria in the 1930s while working for Claude Dansey's "Z" network gathering information on German troop movements. In 1918, Stewart Menzies recruited Conrad into MI6 who then undertook clandestine missions abroad.
 – 10 August 1981Popov was a Serbian triple agent of VOA (code named "Duško"), MI6 (code named "Tricycle") and the Abwehr (code named "Ivan"). Fleming knew Popov and followed him in Lisbon, Portugal as an escort appointed by the MI6, witnessing an event in the Estoril Casino where Popov bluffed by placing a bet of $40,000 ($ in dollars) in order to cause a rival to withdraw from a baccarat table: Fleming used this episode as the basis for Casino Royale.
 – 5 November 1925Reilly was an agent for Scotland Yard's Special Branch and the British Secret Service Bureau. In 1918, Reilly was employed by Sir Mansfield Smith-Cumming as an operative for MI1(c), an early designation for the MI6. Reilly's friend Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart knew Fleming for many years and told him of Reilly's espionage adventures; Fleming subsequently mentioned to a colleague at The Sunday Times that he had created Bond after hearing about Reilly.
 – 8 June 2006Sir Peter Smithers, who was known to Fleming, organised passage for British refugees from France as the Nazis advanced through France. Later, as a naval attaché, he worked in Washington on spreading disinformation about the Nazis. He spent part of the war working in Naval Intelligence; Fleming later named a character in Goldfinger after him.
 – 31 January 1989William Stephenson was an international spymaster, best known by his code name, Intrepid. A Canadian WWI soldier, ace fighter pilot, entrepreneur, inventor and international millionaire businessman, Stephenson, a Knight Bachelor, would by 1940 become the head of the British Security Coordination, an MI6 organisation based in New York, and an advisor to Churchill and Roosevelt.His WWI Military Cross and Distinguished Flying Cross citations note his daring and initiative in causing casualties and chaos behind enemy lines, and proficiency in providing military intelligence. Shot down late in 1918, he would become a prisoner of war but was able to escape internment. Among many later initiatives after establishing himself across many lines of international commerce in the 1920 and 30s, he provided firsthand information on German treaty violations and war preparations to Winston Churchill in the 1930s, and established and ran the Allies' Camp X spy training facility during WWII. He was instrumental in the development of important spycraft and tools.

Regarding him, Fleming wrote in The Sunday Times of 21 October 1962, that Bond was: "a highly romanticized version of a true spy. The real thing, the man who became one of the great agents of the [Second World War] is William Stephenson." Elsewhere Fleming wrote of Stephenson that he "used to make the most powerful martinis in America and serve them in quart glasses".[12]

 – 26 February 1964Wing Commander Forest Yeo-Thomas was a British field agent code named "White Rabbit" for the SOE. His missions for the SOE involved him parachuting multiple times in enemy occupied France. In his memoirs, Fleming wrote of his fascination with the missions Thomas conducted behind enemy lines, such as having dinner with Nazis, the use of disguises, being captured and interrogated by the Gestapo before escaping, shooting an enemy agent, as well as having relationships with different women.
 – 5 July 1965Porfirio Rubirosa was a Dominican playboy, diplomat, soldier, polo player and race car driver. Known for his international lifestyle, jet-setting and success with women, one historian thinks he was a model for Bond, although there Fleming never met Rubirosa.[13]

Literary Inspirations

Besides real life individuals, James Bond was also inspired by one of Dennis Wheatley's characters; the secret agent Gregory Sallust,[14] based on Wheatley's late friend Gordon Eric Gordon-Tombe.[15] It is also said that the character of James Bond took inspiration from a collection of short stories about a gentlemanly and sophisticated spy by Somerset Maugham, using his own spying experience as a basis.[16]

Another inspiration for the James Bond spy novels may have come from the writings of William Le Queux, who wrote related novels between 1891 and 1931;[17] inspiration for the James Bond spy films, on the other hand, may have come from the early silent films of German director Fritz Lang, including the 1922 film Dr. Mabuse the Gambler,[18] and the 1928 film Spione.[19]

Inspiration for "007"

The 007 number assigned to James Bond may have been influenced by any number of sources. In the films and novels, the 00 prefix indicates Bond's discretionary "licence to kill", in executing his duties.

Bond's number - 007 - may have been assigned by Fleming in reference to one of British naval intelligence's key achievements of the First World War: the breaking of the German diplomatic code. One of the German documents cracked and read by the British was the Zimmermann Telegram, which was coded 0075, and which was one of the factors that led to the US entering the war. Subsequently, if material was graded 00 it meant it was highly classified and, as journalist Ben Macintyre has pointed out, "to anyone versed in intelligence history, 007 signified the highest achievement of British military intelligence".

It has also been noted that one of the agents of Elizabeth I, John Dee, would often sign off his letters to the queen with '007'. Dee often worked with spymaster Francis Walsingham, going undercover. Author Richard Deacon, an acquaintance of Ian Fleming, called Dee "James Bond of Tudor times" and it has been suggested that the '00' in Dee's signature code indicated a pair of eyes, indicating to the Queen that the letter was "for your eyes only".[20]

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ian Fleming. About Ian Fleming. Ian Fleming Publications. 7 September 2011.
  2. News: Fleming. Ian. "The Exclusive Bond" Mr. Fleming on his hero. The Manchester Guardian. 5 April 1958. 4.
  3. Steyn. Mark. Forever Bond. The Spectator. 30 November 2002. 131. Mark Steyn. 68. London.
  4. Web site: Silver . Stephen . 27 February 2023 . Philly's own James Bond was an ornithologist who lived in Chestnut Hill . 30 November 2023 . www.inquirer.com . en.
  5. News: Cook. William. Novel man. New Statesman. 28 June 2004. 40 . none.
  6. News: Burns. John F. Remembering Fleming, Ian Fleming. The New York Times. 22 November 2011. John F. Burns. 19 May 2008.
  7. News: Macintyre. Ben. Bond – the real Bond. Ben Macintyre. The Times. 36. 5 April 2008 . none.
  8. http://ipn.gov.pl/en/news/4634,007s-file-found-in-the-IPNs-Archive.html 007's file found in the IPN's Archive
  9. News: Britain sent the real James Bond to spy on Cold War Poland. 27 September 2020. The Sunday Times. 24 September 2020.
  10. News: James Bond, a man interested in 'women' and 'infiltrating bases', really did spy for Britain in the 1960s. The Telegraph. 23 September 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201002024021/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/23/james-bond-man-interested-women-infiltrating-bases-really-did/. 2 October 2020.
  11. Web site: Count Robin de la Lanne-Mirrlees . 26 June 2012 .
  12. Book: Room 3603. xi.
  13. Web site: James Bond Was Based On This Womanising, Martini-Swilling, Real Life Playboy. GQ Australia. 4 October 2016.
  14. News: Rosenberg. Tina. The Novelist Who Spied: How Dennis Wheatley Helped Defeat the Nazis. 24 December 2012. The Daily Beast. 8 August 2012. Tina Rosenberg.
  15. Web site: The Dennis Wheatley 'Museum' – Instant success as an author. 24 December 2012.
  16. Morgan, 1980, p. 206.
  17. Calavita . Marco . A Nod to the Xenophobic, Lying Inventor of Spy Fiction – Secret ciphers. Fast cars. A suave agent fond of cocktails and fancy cigarettes barely escaping death in exotic locales. Spy yarns' familiar trappings follow a blueprint laid out more than a century ago by this controversial writer. . 28 July 2012 . . 7 October 2021 .
  18. News: Hoberman . J. . An Evil Doctor Who Casts a Spell on Subjects and Viewers Alike – Don't think the silent 4½-hour "Dr. Mabuse the Gambler" is for you? It's shockingly contemporary, and can be binge-watched or seen in chapters. You have time. Give it a try. . 6 May 2020 . . 7 October 2021 .
  19. News: Bank . Douglas . Spies (aka, Spione) (Fritz Lang, 1928) . 27 October 2018 . OffScreen.com . 7 October 2021 .
  20. Web site: The Original 007? | University of Cambridge . 3 November 2008 .