Post by ©DURANMANIA Board Team on Jan 5, 2005 18:55:18 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]Pierce Brosnan interview 'Best Life magazine'[/glow]
In his first major interview since setting down the martini glass, Pierce Brosnan talks candidly about how the tragedies of his past have steeled him for the professional challenges of his future - reports the official Pierce Brosnan website.
Pierce Brosnan rises from a hospital bed. An unkempt beard covers his face; his exposed torso is riddled with cuts and bruises. In this scene from the most recent Bond film, Die Another Day, 007 finds himself in a medical facility, healing after 14 months of torture at the hands of the North Koreans. Adding insult to the injuries, Bond’s boss, “M”, waltzes into the recovery room and cans him. “Double O status rescinded,” she informs him curtly. A harsh dismissal, but more dignified than the insult Brosnan received in real life.
Beginning with GoldenEye in 1995, the 51-year-old actor helped resuscitate MGM's storied, and then troubled, franchise, burnishing it into a multibillion-dollar asset. Yet this fall, the actor's own Double O status was rescinded. With Brosnan's four-picture Bond contract fulfilled, the series producers chose to move on, without
even the courtesy of a final phone call. As Brosnan's close friend and business partner, Beau St. Clair, puts it: "It's all been a blur. I wish the producers would talk about it. I have no way of knowing what happened."
Brosnan is sitting on the deck of his Malibu beachfront home, clad in a loose-fitting blue linen shirt, white linen pants, Tevas, and olive tinted shades. Gazing out at the Pacific and the sand where his wife and their two young children play, he could be any loyal corporate soldier cut loose in favor of some yet-to-be-determined kid who's, like, way stoked to have his job. This being Hollywood, though, it's not as if Brosnan can duck off to a golf course, for the trade papers replay the slight each time they speculate about which dandy - Jude Law, Orlando Bloom, Hugh Jackman - might be strapping on the Walther PPK when the next Bond starts filming.
"I wish I could give you a reason why I'm no longer that character." Brosnan says. To his credit, he knew the Bond annuity would end and is embracing the change as an opportunity to redefine himself. "I'm number five," Brosnan says, noting the fact that he was the fifth actor to play the charismatic ace of Her Majesty's Secret Service. Then, in the next breath, he shouts a line from The Prisoner, an old British TV favorite of his. "I am not a number! I am a free man!" He makes this proclamation with a mix of theatrical bravado and self-deprecating charm. But make no mistake, this guy, who survived a tragic childhood and found himself a 38-year-old widower with three kids, is ready for this next life passage.
"Come on," Brosnan says, getting up from his seat on the porch. "Let's go for a little spin." In his front driveway, among his 3-year-old's Big Wheel and 7-year-old's scooters, is one of the most beautiful toys a big boy could dream of owning: a bullet-gray 2002 Aston Martin Vanquish. It has a 6.0-liter, V-12 engine that gets to 60 MPH in less than 4.8 seconds and 100 mph in under 10. It also comes with a price tag well north of $200,000. It's the car his James Bond drove in Die Another Day. The carmaker approached him to do some PR. In return, he asked for the car and got it.
Within minutes, on this bright, breezy Friday morning, Brosnan is driving us south on the Pacific Coast Highway. The engine growls, aching for the pedal to be pushed. A honking car struggles to pull even with us so that a passenger-dude can lean from the window and shout, "Great car, man!" Glimpsing Brosnan, the admirer's eyes widen, and he gives the actor two thumbs up.
You probably first spotted Brosnan appearing equally stylish and smooth on Remington Steele, the 1980s TV series. He played a sharp pretty boy hired by a female detective to be her front man.
Steele, not unlike the movie version of Bond, was a tall, dark, dashing enigma. If you had to guess at Steele's biography, you'd probably go with a son of English privilege. Brosnan's life couldn't be farther from such fiction.
He was born in working class County Meath, Ireland, and his father, Tom, abandoned him and his mom, May, just before his first birthday. "My mother was the prettiest woman in the town. He was a bit older than her. They made me. And he split," he recalls. Now seated at Geoffrey's - a sun-drenched restaurant overlooking the ocean in Malibu - and waiting for lunch to be served, Brosnan takes a long pull on a bottle of Corona as he casts his memory back.
His mother promptly took off to England, where she pursued a nursing degree, leaving Brosnan's grandparents to look after him until they passed away. After that, 4-year-old Brosnan lived with relatives until he joined his mom in England at the age of 11. "I had to have some balls to be Irish Catholic in South London. Most of that time I spent fighting."
....continues
In his first major interview since setting down the martini glass, Pierce Brosnan talks candidly about how the tragedies of his past have steeled him for the professional challenges of his future - reports the official Pierce Brosnan website.
Pierce Brosnan rises from a hospital bed. An unkempt beard covers his face; his exposed torso is riddled with cuts and bruises. In this scene from the most recent Bond film, Die Another Day, 007 finds himself in a medical facility, healing after 14 months of torture at the hands of the North Koreans. Adding insult to the injuries, Bond’s boss, “M”, waltzes into the recovery room and cans him. “Double O status rescinded,” she informs him curtly. A harsh dismissal, but more dignified than the insult Brosnan received in real life.
Beginning with GoldenEye in 1995, the 51-year-old actor helped resuscitate MGM's storied, and then troubled, franchise, burnishing it into a multibillion-dollar asset. Yet this fall, the actor's own Double O status was rescinded. With Brosnan's four-picture Bond contract fulfilled, the series producers chose to move on, without
even the courtesy of a final phone call. As Brosnan's close friend and business partner, Beau St. Clair, puts it: "It's all been a blur. I wish the producers would talk about it. I have no way of knowing what happened."
Brosnan is sitting on the deck of his Malibu beachfront home, clad in a loose-fitting blue linen shirt, white linen pants, Tevas, and olive tinted shades. Gazing out at the Pacific and the sand where his wife and their two young children play, he could be any loyal corporate soldier cut loose in favor of some yet-to-be-determined kid who's, like, way stoked to have his job. This being Hollywood, though, it's not as if Brosnan can duck off to a golf course, for the trade papers replay the slight each time they speculate about which dandy - Jude Law, Orlando Bloom, Hugh Jackman - might be strapping on the Walther PPK when the next Bond starts filming.
"I wish I could give you a reason why I'm no longer that character." Brosnan says. To his credit, he knew the Bond annuity would end and is embracing the change as an opportunity to redefine himself. "I'm number five," Brosnan says, noting the fact that he was the fifth actor to play the charismatic ace of Her Majesty's Secret Service. Then, in the next breath, he shouts a line from The Prisoner, an old British TV favorite of his. "I am not a number! I am a free man!" He makes this proclamation with a mix of theatrical bravado and self-deprecating charm. But make no mistake, this guy, who survived a tragic childhood and found himself a 38-year-old widower with three kids, is ready for this next life passage.
"Come on," Brosnan says, getting up from his seat on the porch. "Let's go for a little spin." In his front driveway, among his 3-year-old's Big Wheel and 7-year-old's scooters, is one of the most beautiful toys a big boy could dream of owning: a bullet-gray 2002 Aston Martin Vanquish. It has a 6.0-liter, V-12 engine that gets to 60 MPH in less than 4.8 seconds and 100 mph in under 10. It also comes with a price tag well north of $200,000. It's the car his James Bond drove in Die Another Day. The carmaker approached him to do some PR. In return, he asked for the car and got it.
Within minutes, on this bright, breezy Friday morning, Brosnan is driving us south on the Pacific Coast Highway. The engine growls, aching for the pedal to be pushed. A honking car struggles to pull even with us so that a passenger-dude can lean from the window and shout, "Great car, man!" Glimpsing Brosnan, the admirer's eyes widen, and he gives the actor two thumbs up.
You probably first spotted Brosnan appearing equally stylish and smooth on Remington Steele, the 1980s TV series. He played a sharp pretty boy hired by a female detective to be her front man.
Steele, not unlike the movie version of Bond, was a tall, dark, dashing enigma. If you had to guess at Steele's biography, you'd probably go with a son of English privilege. Brosnan's life couldn't be farther from such fiction.
He was born in working class County Meath, Ireland, and his father, Tom, abandoned him and his mom, May, just before his first birthday. "My mother was the prettiest woman in the town. He was a bit older than her. They made me. And he split," he recalls. Now seated at Geoffrey's - a sun-drenched restaurant overlooking the ocean in Malibu - and waiting for lunch to be served, Brosnan takes a long pull on a bottle of Corona as he casts his memory back.
His mother promptly took off to England, where she pursued a nursing degree, leaving Brosnan's grandparents to look after him until they passed away. After that, 4-year-old Brosnan lived with relatives until he joined his mom in England at the age of 11. "I had to have some balls to be Irish Catholic in South London. Most of that time I spent fighting."
....continues