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    • Honey Ryder
    • Sylvia Trench
    • Miss Taro
    • Tatiana Romanova
    • Zora
    • Vida
    • Pussy Galore
    • Jill Masterson
    • Tilly Masterson
    • Bonita

    Synopsis:

    Honey Ryderdazzled cinema audiences, stepping out of the Caribbean sea wearing a white bikini with a large hunting knife at her side. She proved to be immensely popular with fans and set the tone for all Bond girls to come.

    Synopsis:

    Sylvia Trenchintroduced herself in the opening scene of Dr. No as "Trench. Sylvia Trench", which Bond then mimicked with his now trademark "Bond. James Bond". Trench was Bond's girlfriend for the first two films, with a running joke that Bond was called away on a mission just as things were heating up.

    Synopsis:

    Miss Taro was a spy working for the villainous Dr. No. She got herself a job at government house in Kingston, Jamaica, so that she could steal secret files detailing Dr. No and Crab Key Island. She invited Bond to her house for dinner, where she laid a trap for his assassination. However, Bond smelled something was fishy and got his men to arrest Miss Taro so he could lay a trap for the assassin.

    Synopsis:

    Tatiana Romanova worked for the Soviet Embassy in Istanbul, and was coerced by the deadly Rosa Klebb into a mission to seduce James Bond and (unknowingly) lead him to his death. She helped Bond steal a Lektor decoding machine, and the pair escaped on the Orient Express train. After a failed assassination attempt by henchman Red Grant, Klebb tried to personally kill Bond, but Tatiana's loyalty to Bond won out.

    Synopsis:

    Head of Station in Istanbul, Kerim Bey, took Bond to a gypsy camp, where the two girls Vida and Zora were to fight to the death over a man. Zora was played by Martine Beswick, who would return 3 years later to play another Bond girl in Thunderball.

    Synopsis:

    Vida and Zora engaged in an intense cat fight, scratching, fighting and trying to strangle each other. The fight was broken up when an assassin attacked the camp to try and kill Kerim Bey. Bond saved the life of the camp's leader in the process, who in turn honoured Bond's request to end the fighting. Happy to have their leader alive, Vida and Zora warmed to Bond, who got to entertain them for the evening.

    Synopsis:

    The evocatively named Pussy Galore was an original Ian Fleming character from the novel. Ms. Galore ran a flying circus of female pilots, who were hired by Auric Goldfingerto fly over Fort Knox and gas the soldiers, so that Goldfinger could break in to the gold vault.

    Synopsis:

    Jill Masterson was the scantly dressed girl who used binoculars and an ear piece to help Auric Goldfinger cheat at cards. Bond caught her at the game, and together they blackmailed Goldfinger into losing his money. After enjoying a few bottles of Dom Perignon with Bond, Masterson was killed by Goldfinger's henchman Oddjob, in revenge for her betrayal. Bond awoke to find her covered from head to toe in gold paint.

    Synopsis:

    Tilly Masterson tried to assassinate Auric Goldfinger in revenge for the death of her sister Jill. With her poor marksmanship, she missed and almost shot Bond, who took a sharp interest in her. Bond caught up with Tilly again and foiled another of her attempts to kill Goldfinger. In the process, the two were chased by Goldfinger's hitmen, and Tilly was killed by Oddjob's steel rimmed hat.

    Synopsis:

    In the exciting pre-title sequence of Goldfinger, Bond foils the plots of a heroin baron and blows up his operations with plastic explosives. Before leaving, Bond takes care of some unfinished business, to have a bath with Bonita. The excursion turns out to be a trap, as Bonita seduces Bond so that a henchman can knock him unconscious. Bond sees the reflection in Bonita's eyes, and she gets knocked on the head while the henchman is electrocuted in the bath. "Shocking. Positively shocking" Bon...

    • Pola Ivanova. Played by: Fiona Fullerton. Appears in: A View to a Kill. Points to Fiona Fullerton for managing to deliver one of the goofiest lines in the entire Moore era (an accomplishment in and of itself) when Pola informs Bond that the hot tub bubbles tickle her…Tchaikovsky!
    • Caroline. Played by: Serena Gordon. Appears in: GoldenEye. Caroline, an MI6 psychological evaluator sent to check up on Bond, is yet another example of a Bond Girl who just isn’t given much to do.
    • Plenty O’Toole. Played by: Lana Wood. Appears in: Diamonds are Forever. Plenty O’Toole is commonly regarded as one of the worst Bond Girls, and though this is not without good reason—she is unabashedly opportunistic and more than a little annoying—we don’t think she’s the worst.
    • Log Cabin Girl, a.k.a. Martine Blanchaud. Played by: Sue Vanner. Appears in: The Spy Who Loved Me. Not even given a name in the film (Martine comes from the novelization), “Log Cabin Girl” is pretty blink-and-you’ll-miss-her.
  1. Oct 9, 2021 · In No Time to Die, Léa Seydoux makes Bond history by being the first classic Bond girl to have a significant part in more than one film when she reprises her role as Madeleine Swann....

    • Plenty O’Toole. In Diamonds Are Forever (1971), Plenty O’Toole, played by the captivating Lana Wood, is the embodiment of Las Vegas glamour and intrigue.
    • Tiffany Case. Tiffany Case is the leading Bond girl in Diamonds Are Forever (1971). Played by Jill St. John, Tiffany is deeply enmeshed in the world of diamond smuggling, operating within a chain that connects her with Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
    • Miss Caruso. Live and Let Die (1973) introduced audiences to the charming Miss Caruso, an agent of the Italian Secret Service, played by English actress Madeline Smith.
    • Solitaire. In Roger Moore‘s first Bond movie, Live and Let Die (1973), the mystique of Solitaire, played by the entrancing Jane Seymour, is both a blessing and a curse.
  2. Jan 21, 2023 · Since there have been James Bond movies, there have been so-called Bond girls. Here's the scoop on what happened to every Bond girl from the franchise.

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  4. Chiles' most recognized role is the sophisticated NASA astronaut, scientist, and "Bond girl", Dr. Holly Goodhead opposite Roger Moore's James Bond in Moonraker (1979). It is worth noting that Goodhead was different than any previous "Bond girl", in that she was dignified and not so much sexualized.

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