This Article is From Oct 16, 2012

Roger Moore nearly died on the sets of The Spy Who Loved Me

Roger Moore nearly died on the sets of The Spy Who Loved Me

Highlights

  • Former James Bond star Roger Moore says he almost died when a stunt went wrong while he was shooing for 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me.
  • The 85-year-old says he was filming a fight scene with co-star Curt Jurgens when he made a choreography change and was thrown across the room by a special effects blast, reported the New York Post.
  • Roger Moore was taken to hospital with several open-wounds and it took him days to recover.
  • "There's a sequence in The Spy Who Loved Me where I nearly came a cropper (died). The audience knows that the villain, Karl Stromberg, played by Curt Jurgens, is going to shoot a missile under a table at Bond. They (the producers) had me standing behind a chair which had a steel back to it that so that, when the explosion took place, I would be wound-free. I, like a stupid idiot, suggested there would be more suspense if Bond was sitting. Nobody mentioned that the seat of the chair was not reinforced. The special effects man was a little over-anxious and let off the explosion just before I got up from it (the chair). I was blown out of the chair and had smouldering holes in my back," he said.
  • The spy film series is celebrating 50 golden years on silver screen.
New York: Former James Bond star Roger Moore says he almost died when a stunt went wrong while he was shooing for 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me.

The 85-year-old says he was filming a fight scene with co-star Curt Jurgens when he made a choreography change and was thrown across the room by a special effects blast, reported the New York Post.

Roger Moore was taken to hospital with several open-wounds and it took him days to recover.

"There's a sequence in The Spy Who Loved Me where I nearly came a cropper (died). The audience knows that the villain, Karl Stromberg, played by Curt Jurgens, is going to shoot a missile under a table at Bond. They (the producers) had me standing behind a chair which had a steel back to it that so that, when the explosion took place, I would be wound-free. I, like a stupid idiot, suggested there would be more suspense if Bond was sitting. Nobody mentioned that the seat of the chair was not reinforced. The special effects man was a little over-anxious and let off the explosion just before Igot up from it (the chair). I was blown out of the chair and had smouldering holes in my back," he said.

The spy film series is celebrating 50 golden years on silver screen.
.