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poster

Bob Simmons

Known ForActing
Birthday1922-03-31
Age65 years old at death
Date of Death† 1987-10-21
Place of BirthFulham, London, England

Biography

Bob Simmons (Fulham, London, England, 31 March 1923 – 21 October 1987) was an English actor and stunt man who worked in many British-made films, most notably the James Bond series. Simmons was a former Army Physical Training Instructor at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst who had initially planned to be an actor but thought a career in performing stunts would be more lucrative and interesting. Simmons first worked for Albert R. Broccoli and Irving Allen's Warwick Films on the film The Red Beret, which included future Bond film regulars director Terence Young, screenwriter Richard Maibaum and cameraman, later director of photography Ted Moore. Simmons later worked in many other Warwick Films and worked for Allen in his The Long Ships and Genghis Khan, where he had his eye injured when kicked by a horse. When Albert R. Broccoli began to produce the James Bond films, Simmons tested as an actor for the Bond role, but until his death in 1987, he became the stunt coordinator for every Bond film except From Russia with Love, which he joined later in the production, On Her Majesty's Secret Service and The Man with the Golden Gun. He appeared in the gun barrel sequence for Sean Connery in three James Bond films: Dr. No, From Russia with Love, and Goldfinger. Simmons is the only person to officially perform the scene, while not starring in the main role of James Bond. Simmons was also Connery's stunt double. Simmons also had a role as SPECTRE agent Jacques Bouvar in the pre-title sequence of the fourth film, Thunderball. Simmons developed a stunt technique involving trampolines, first used in You Only Live Twice, whereby stuntmen would bounce off a trampoline in concert with a triggered explosion so as to simulate being blown into the air. This was used in many other films, including by Simmons again in The Wild Geese, where Simmons also doubled for Richard Burton. Upon retirement, Simmons wrote an autobiography entitled Nobody Does It Better titled after the theme song for the 1977 Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me. He died on 21 October 1987.

Filmography

poster
1965
6.7
Adventure
Action

Thunderball

poster
1965
6.7
Adventure
Action

Thunderball

poster
1964
7.4
Adventure
Action

Goldfinger

poster
1962
7.0
Adventure
Action

Dr. No

poster
1963
7.1
Action
Thriller

From Russia with Love

poster
1981
6.5
Adventure
Action

For Your Eyes Only

poster
1979
6.2
Action
Adventure

Moonraker

poster
1977
6.8
Adventure
Action

The Spy Who Loved Me

poster
1961
7.3
War
Adventure

The Guns of Navarone

poster
1958
7.7
Drama
Action

A Night to Remember

poster
1983
5.0
Documentary
TV Movie

James Bond: The First 21 Years

poster
1962
5.8
Comedy
Adventure

The Road to Hong Kong

poster
1971
6.1
Drama
War

Murphy's War

poster
1976
4.4
Action
Thriller

The Next Man

poster
1953
6.3
Adventure
Drama

The Sword and the Rose

poster
1961
5.7
Adventure

Fury at Smugglers' Bay

poster
1953
5.8
Crime

The Flanagan Boy

poster
1976
5.0
Western

Montana Trap

poster
1958
6.2
Drama
War

Tank Force!

poster
1959
4.0
Crime

The Great Van Robbery

poster
1983
4.0
Documentary

James Bond in India

poster
1971
4.8
Documentary

Lesson #007: Close Quarters Combat

poster
1955
Crime

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