KALEIDOSCOPE

Sean Connery - genuine movie star

Timur PANKOV

ALMATY, Aug 26 (THE GLOBE)

One of the most sought-after actors in Hollywood, Sean Connery has spun his unflappable charm and old-style star quality into one of the most enduringly and endearingly dashing screen presences in the history of celluloid. And though his films haven�t always performed at the box office, he has kept unceasingly busy throughout his four-decade-long screen career, transitioning effortlessly into mature roles, never losing any of the sex appeal and effortless virility that have made him a perennial favorite of women and men alike.

The eldest of two sons born to a truckdriver father and charwoman mother living in an Edinburgh, Scotland, tenement, Thomas Sean Connery started helping support the family by delivering milk at the age of 9. Steady education was a luxury he could scarcely afford, and he eventually left school at the age of 13, first taking jobs as a laborer, steel bender, and cement mixer, and then, at 15, enlisting in the British Royal Navy for what was to have been a 12-year stint. Severe stomach ulcers hastened his discharge within three years, at which point he returned to Edinburgh and set about making his living working variously as a bricklayer, lifeguard, and coffin polisher. Connery occupied his off-work hours by bodybuilding, a pastime that eventually paid off handsomely when he began earning a bit of extra money posing for art classes and swimwear photo shoots. His painstaking efforts to develop his physique culminated in a bid for the 1950 Mr. Universe title (he came in third place).

While in London competing in the Mr. Universe contest, Connery auditioned for and won a part as a singing sailor in the chorus of a year-long touring production of South Pacific. When asked how he wished to be billed for the musical, the unlettered, untried actor, who went by his boyhood diminutive of Tommy, settled on the marquee-worthy moniker Sean Connery. Though he had stumbled into acting on a whim (his real career aspiration at the time was to become a professional soccer player), subsequent intensive dancing, singing, and reading lessons prepared him adequately for a spate of repertory experience, which led in turn to respectable roles in British TV productions � he garnered particularly good reviews for his work in the BBC�s staging of the American telefilm Requiem for a Heavyweight. Though his strictly supporting efforts in feature films were less distinguished, Connery diligently worked his way up from bit parts to more substantial secondary roles, earning his first big-screen assignment of any note in the 1958 Lana Turner starrer Another Time, Another Place.

Connery might have merrily continued on as a minor player if he hadn�t beat out several name actors to originate the cinematic incarnation of novelist Ian Fleming�s glossy superspy James Bond in 1962�s Dr. No, the first feature in what would prove an indefatigable and immensely lucrative franchise in the decades to come. Producer Harry Saltzman awarded Connery the plum part of agent 007 on the basis of a single interview and after watching him walk down the street. (Incidentally, Connery has trained extensively in movement, and prepares for each role by working out how the character should move, which is perhaps why he is so dead-on in each of his widely differing roles.)

The former bodybuilder�s rugged, disarming interpretation of the dapper and daring agent with a license to kill brought him almost instant international fame, and he would go on to reprise the characterization with clockwork regularity throughout the decade, in Goldfinger (1964), From Russia, With Love (1964), Thunderball (1965), and You Only Live Twice (1967). Connery became so dangerously identified with the star-making role that his concurrent performances in non-Bond films, while uniformly creditable, were not enthusiastically endorsed by fans or critics. Grown weary of his confining employment as the martini-quaffing, lady-slaying alter ego, he agreed to perform his Bond duties one last time, in 1971�s Diamonds Are Forever, only after demanding, and receiving, a then-unprecedented salary of $1.25 million plus a percentage and vowing that he would �never again� play the part.

In the mid �90s, Connery divided his time between the middling medieval tales First Knight (1995) and Dragonheart (1996) and the more successful contemporary action dramas Just Cause (1995) and The Rock (1996). After a year�s absence from theaters, he returned with a vengeance in the 1998 feature-film version of the �60s cult TV classic The Avengers, in which he appeared in an atypical capacity as the villain to Ralph Fiennes� natty agent Jonathan Steed and Uma Thurman�s leather-clad amateur sleuth Emma Peel. In 1999, Connery starred in and produced Entrapment, a knotty love story-thriller, in which he played a cat burglar who teams up with a beautiful female thief (Catherine Zeta-Jones) for equal measures of bank-robbing and January-December-style romance. As for upcoming projects, he has signed a first-look, multi-year deal with Sony Pictures Entertainment under which he will produce and perhaps star in several films through his Fountainbridge Films production company. Also in various stages of development are sequels to some of Connery�s most popular outings � Time Bandits, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and The Rock � and it is even possible that he will make a return engagement as James Bond.

Just as his popularity shows no signs of abating, the still-sexy Connery, now in his late sixties, continues to work as tirelessly as ever, much to the financial benefit of the Scottish National Theater, which the venerable actor supports with generous contributions from his leading-man salaries. His extreme nationalism has manifested itself in other ways: In the early �70s, he founded the Scottish International Education Trust, an organization dedicated to helping young Scots obtain an education; and though he resides primarily in Marbella, Spain, he remains active in the movement for Scottish independence, and, more recently, has been vocal in petitioning the Scottish government to issue a ban on all handguns. As for his personal life, Connery has been married to French-Moroccan painter Micheline Roquebrune since 1975. He has a son, actor Jason Connery, from his first marriage to Australian-born actress Diane Cilento.


The week of XXth century

August 27, 1939 - The Heinkel HE-178, the world�s first jet-propelled airplane, makes its maiden flight in north Germany.

August 27, 1962 - The unmanned Mariner II spacecraft is launched by the U.S. on an exploratory mission to Venus. A successful mid-course correction is made and Mariner II passes within just over 20,000 miles of Venus, reporting an 800-degree Fahrenheit surface temperature.

August 28, 1988 - During an air show in West Germany, thirty-three people are killed and dozens injured when jets from an Italian Air Force exhibition team collide in mid-air, sending a disabled aircraft crashing down into the crowd.

August 29, 1915 or 1918 - Ingrid Bergman (Academy Award-winning actress: Gaslight [1944], Anastasia [1966], Murder on the Orient Express [1974]; Casablanca; Emmy Award-winner: The Turn of the Screw [1959-60], A Woman Called Golda [1981-82])

August 29, 1958 - Michael Jackson

August 30, 1918 - Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, leader of the Bolshevik revolution and first head of Soviet Russia, is shot and wounded by Fanya Kaplan after speaking at a factory in Moscow. Kaplan and her accomplice sister, Dora, are thought to be members of the Social Revolutionary Party, a political party in opposition to Lenin�s Bolshevik revolutionaries.

August 30, 1983 - Lt. Colonel Guion S. Bluford of the U.S. Air Force becomes the first African-American in space when the space shuttle Challenger lifts off on its third mission.


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