- Kevin McClory
infobox actor
name = Kevin McClory
caption = Kevin McClory in 1959
birthdate = birth date|1926|06|08
birthplace =Dublin ,Ireland
deathdate = death date and age|2006|11|20|1926|06|08
deathplace =
occupation =screenwriter ,film producer ,film director
yearsactive =Kevin O'Donovan McClory (
8 June 1926 -20 November 2006 ) was an Irishscreenwriter , producer, and director. McClory was best known for the 1983James Bond film "Never Say Never Again ", which was the result of a long legal battle between McClory andIan Fleming (laterUnited Artists /MGM ) over the writing credits and later the film rights to "Thunderball".Biography
McClory was born in
Dublin . His grandmother, Alice McClory, was related to theBrontë family. His parents were actors in Ireland. He suffered fromdyslexia , and served in the British Merchant Navy in theSecond World War . His ship wastorpedo ed on21 February 1943 , and he spent 14 days in a lifeboat drifting in theNorth Atlantic before being rescued off the coast of Ireland.1950s
He started his film career as a film boom operator and
location manager where he worked on "The Cockleshell Heroes " forWarwick Films . He was an assistant toJohn Huston on films including "The African Queen " (1951) and "Moulin Rouge" (1952). He was an Assistant Director on Huston's version of "Moby-Dick " (1956), and Assistant Producer and Assistant Director onMike Todd 's "Around the World in 80 Days" (also 1956). He later wrote, produced and directed the 1957 film "The Boy and the Bridge ", with financial assistance fromIvar Bryce .1960s
Bryce was a close friend of
Ian Fleming . In 1958, McClory, Bryce, Fleming andJack Whittingham collaborated on a number of drafts for a possiblefilm ortelevision series featuring Fleming's secret agent,James Bond . After "The Boy and the Bridge" crashed at the box office, Fleming grew cooler on the project with McClory. Without permission, Fleming novelised the draft screenplay as his ninth novel, "Thunderball" in 1961, which initially did not give either McClory or Whittingham credit. The two sued, and the case opened to the High Court inLondon on20 November 1963 . After 9 days, the case was settled. Fleming paid McClory damages of £35,000 and his court costs of £52,000, and future versions of the novel were credited as "based on a screen treatment by Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham, and Ian Fleming" - in that order. Due to the lawsuit, "Thunderball" was pushed back as the first official Bond film inHarry Saltzman 's andAlbert R. Broccoli 's series. Broccoli and Saltzman's production companyEON Productions later made a deal with McClory for "Thunderball" to be made into a film in 1965, consequently allowing McClory sole producing credit for the adaptation. McClory additionally retained the rights to remake the film after ten years had elapsed.1970s and 1980s
In 1976, McClory announced he was to produce an original James Bond film to be titled either "Warhead", "Warhead 8", or "James Bond of the Secret Service", but the project immediately ran into more legal problems with the Broccoli family and was ultimately abandoned. The project was taken over by American producer
Jack Schwartzman who, with the backing ofWarner Bros. , was able to get "Thunderball" remade as "Never Say Never Again " in 1983, with McClory credited asexecutive producer . The film starredSean Connery as agent 007 in a highly-publicized return to the role after a 12 year absence.1990s and 2000s
McClory subsequently continued to try to make other adaptations of "Thunderball", including most famously a project called "Warhead 2000 A.D." that was to be made by Sony with
Timothy Dalton in the lead role. Once again, McClory's hold on the "Thunderball" film rights came into question and the project was eventually scrapped in 1999 after Sony settled out of court withMGM /UA, ceding any rights to making a James Bond film. Ironically, in 2004 Sony acquired 20% of MGM; however, the production and final say over everything involving the film version of James Bond is controlled byEON Productions ,Albert R. Broccoli 's production company and its parent companyDanjaq, LLC .Prior to Sony's settlement with MGM in 1999, they filed a lawsuit against MGM claiming McClory was the co-author of the cinematic 007 and was owed fees from Danjaq and MGM for all past films. This lawsuit was thrown out in 2000 on the ground that McClory had waited too long to bring his claims. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals later affirmed this decision in 2001.
Personal
McClory was married twice. He died on
November 20 ,2006 (coincidentally, a mere six days after the release of the 21st James Bond film, "Casino Royale"). He was survived by two sons and two daughters.ee also
*The controversy over "Thunderball
*The Battle for Bond External links
*imdb name|id=0565886 |name=Kevin McClory
*http://www.universalexports.net/00Sony.shtml
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article2054582.ece Obituary] , "The Independent ",7 December 2006
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2504967,00.html Obituary] , "The Times ",15 December 2006
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