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Novelist and former British naval intelligence officer Ian Fleming |
James Bond’s attitude toward
women has been much criticized, but it wasn’t fictional. It precisely matched his
creator’s.
Even the melodramatic tragedy
characteristic of 007’s relationships with women was prefigured in Ian
Fleming’s real life.
Alan Schneider, a U.S. naval
intelligence officer who knew Fleming during World War II, noted that women,
whether English aristocrats or American officers, all got the same backhanded
treatment from Fleming.
“He got bored with them fast and
could be brutal about it,” Schneider said. “He had absolutely no jealousy. He
explained to me that women were not worth that much emotion. But with it all,
he had an abiding and continual interest in sex without any sense of shame or
guilt.”
Fleming told Schneider that
“…women were like pets, like dogs. Men were the only real human beings, the
only ones he could be friends with.”
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Muriel Wright in Austria in the 1930s |
“The unreality of this pose was brought home to Ian rather
brutally in mid-March 1944 when his faithful Muriel (Wright) was killed in an
air raid,” wrote biographer Andrew Lycett.
“All such casualties are, by
definition, unlucky, but she was particularly so, because the structure of her
new flat at 9 Eton Terrace Mews was left intact. She died instantly when a
piece of masonry flew in through a window and struck her full on the head.
Because there was no obvious damage, no one thought to look for the injured or
dead; it was only after her chow, Pushkin, was seen whimpering outside that a
search was made.
“As her only known contact, Ian
was called to identify her body, still in a nightdress. Afterwards he walked
round to the Dorchester and made his way to Esmond and Ann’s (Rothermere’s)
room. Without saying a word he poured himself a large glass of whisky, and
remained silent. He was immediately consumed with grief and guilt at the
cavalier way he had treated her. It only made matters worse to know she had
just been put on her motor bike to collect 200 of his special order cigarettes
from Morlands. He was immediately very sentimental about Muriel, refusing to return
to restaurants they had once visited together.
“Dunstan Curtis, an old Etonian
in his intelligence assault unit, commented cynically, ‘The trouble with Ian is
that you have to get yourself killed before he feels anything.’”
The final irony is that the
fictional womanizer James Bond was born, not of Fleming’s rakish bachelor days,
but of his first marriage — at 43, to his pregnant mistress. Finding the
prospect nerve-wracking, Fleming distracted himself by writing his first novel.
In 1952, his bride-to-be, the aforementioned
Ann Charteris O’Neill Rothermere, recorded in her diary, “This morning Ian
started to type a book. Very good thing.”
That very good thing was “Casino
Royale.”
Source: “Ian Fleming” by Andrew
Lycett