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Dana Broccoli - Dies age 82
Dana Broccoli who died on Sunday (29/02/04) aged 82, was the widow
of Albert "Cubby" Broccoli, the producer of the James
Bond films; during their 37-year marriage she was her husband's
unofficial adviser and muse, and became, after his death, the custodian
of the James Bond franchise.

Elegant and well-connected, Dana Broccoli was the perfect foil
to her husband who was the son of an Italian-American bricklayer;
but while the vast and affable Cubby - who liked to cook pasta for
his cast and crew - was noted for his geniality, it was the chic,
raven-haired Dana who had a more steely reputation. "I'm half
Irish and half Italian," she would explain. "I'm just
bloody-minded." Even her adoring husband described her as "formidable"
several times in his autobiography. "Dana," he wrote,
"takes no prisoners. She does not have the gift of forgiveness".

Cubby & Dana and the whole Broccoli family
In 1959 Broccoli was already a successful producer when he married
Dana Wilson, a divorcee, following a six-week courtship. A year
later Broccoli and the Canadian producer Harry Saltzman set up a
film company with the intention of putting Ian Fleming's James Bond
novels on the big screen. Broccoli was not the first film-maker
to approach Fleming, but, aided by his shrewd and glamorous wife,
the bear-like New Yorker struck up an unlikely friendship with Fleming,
an Old Etonian with a marked disdain for Hollywood. "I found
him a lovely man," Dana Broccoli recalled years later, "charming
and intelligent."
Moreover, it was Dana Broccoli who decided that an unknown beefcake
named Sean Connery was the right man to play Bond in Dr No (1962),
the first of the Bond films. Connery had come to Cubby Broccoli's
attention playing a burly farmhand in a Walt Disney film about leprechauns.

"One day," Dana Broccoli later recalled, "Cubby
called me and said: 'Could you come down and look at this Disney
leprechaun film, Darby O'Gill and the Little People, at the Goldwyn
Studios? I don't know if this Sean Connery guy has any sex appeal.'
I saw that face and the way he moved and talked, and I said: 'Cubby,
he's fabulous!' He was just perfect, he had star material right
there."
But she had little sympathy with Connery after he referred, in
1966, to "fat-slob producers living off the backs of lean actors",
and after Connery issued a law-suit in 1984 against Broccoli demanding
more royalties from the Bond films. Connery eventually abandoned
the dispute after settling for merchandising rights.
But, following Cubby Broccoli's death in 1996, Dana Broccoli was
surprised and disappointed when Connery did not appear at the memorial
service. "I don't have to understand Sean," she said in
2000, "and he doesn't need my understanding; he's doing very
well without my understanding."
She was born Dana Natol in New York on January 3 1922. Having decided
at an early age to become an actress, she attended Cecil Clovelly's
Academy of Dramatic Arts at Carnegie Hall in New York. There she
met her first husband, Lewis Wilson, who was the first actor to
play Batman. In 1942 she gave birth to a son, Michael, and three
years later the family moved to California where Dana Wilson and
her husband joined the Pasadena Playhouse.
After separating from Wilson, she moved to Beverly Hills where
she became a screenwriter; in 1959, at a party, she met Broccoli,
whose previous wife had died. Broccoli, had been born into an impoverished
family of Italian immigrants in Queens, and was a self-made man,
descended, apparently, from farmers who had invented broccoli by
crossing a cauliflower and a pea.
A keen gambler, he had had a sketchy career, working as a vegetable
packer and coffin polisher before getting a job as a tea boy at
Twentieth Century Fox. In 1947, while trying to earn some extra
dollars, he had got a job selling Christmas trees on a street corner
and was particularly struck by a beautiful young woman who had bought
one of the trees and for whom he had constructed a stand to hold
it. When he was finally introduced to Dana Wilson, 12 years later,
he realised that she was the same woman, and she too remembered
the incident. Both believed that fate had brought them together.
Following their wedding in Las Vegas (Cary Grant was the best man),
the couple returned to Cubby Broccoli's house in London. Dana adopted
Cubby's two children from his previous marriage and the following
year gave birth to a daughter, Barbara.
In 1967, Danjaq LLC, the film company set up by Cubby and Dana
Broccoli, produced Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, another of Fleming's
books; and in 2002 Dana Broccoli produced the successful stage version,
which is still running in the West End.
Dana Broccoli also published two novels, Scenario for Murder, and
Florinda. She adapted the latter for the musical, La Cava, which
was staged in London in 2000.
The Broccolis lived in London for many years until, in 1977, they
reluctantly sold their house in Mayfair and moved to Los Angeles
for tax reasons. Although the couple enjoyed the wealth acquired
through the Bond films (they had a large collection of paintings,
including a Renoir and a Picasso) they also raised hundreds of thousands
of pounds for charities, particularly the NSPCC, which benefited
greatly from the Broccolis' largesse.
In 1977 Dana Broccoli's son, Michael G Wilson, and daughter, Barbara
Broccoli, took over production of the Bond films, and after her
husband's death Dana Broccoli took over as chairman of the board.
"It was all family," she explained, "that was a large
part of our success; the big extended family . . . We still see
a lot of Timothy Dalton, and Roger [Moore] is always popping in.
Roger always liked the pasta and the backgammon."
Cubby Broccoli's death left her bereft but by no means bowed. "I
was very happy taking care of Cubby," she said recently, adding,
"I would never marry again. Cubby was irreplaceable. We went
through so much together, ups and downs, but it has been a fabulous
journey."
Dana Broccoli is survived by her two sons and two daughters.
Story from The Telegraph
www.telegraph.co.uk
3rd March, 2004
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