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MI6 looks back at the life and works of James Bond
producer Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli...
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Biography - Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli
3rd January 2005
Albert R Broccoli was born in Queens into
an impoverished Italian-American farming family. His ancestors
invented broccoli by crossing cauliflower seeds with pea
seeds, but Albert's legacy would have a greater impact on
people's lives.
Few would have predicted that the boy who sold vegetables
in the streets of Manhattan would go on to sell more films,
videos and tickets than anyone else since the beginning
of cinema.
Right: Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli
(left) with Bond co-producer Harry Saltzman. |
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The name Cubby evolved from Cubby's visual similarity to a cartoon
character, Abie Kabibble. Cubby the teenager worked in a pharmacy
and then a coffin-maker, but a trip to his cousin in Los Angeles,
Pat de Cicco, gave Cubby the ambition of stardom. Pat was a film
agent, and introduced Cubby to the likes of Cary Grant. Cubby felt
film would be his destiny.

Above: Pictured on the construction
site of the "007 Stage" in 1977. |
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But for the time being day-to-day survival was more important, as Cubby struggled
to live off his wages as a beauty salesman. One night changed
everything. Cubby was walking the New York streets when
he was given a lift by his old friend, the millionaire racehorse
owner Bob Howard. Howard drove him to the racecourse, and
Albert Broccoli won enough money gambling to move to LA
There, Cubby became friends with the up-and-coming mogul,
Howard Hughes, and Cubby joined the crew on The Outlaw,
a production Hughes was financing.
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| After serving in the navy during the war,
Cubby returned to films. He teamed up with director Irving
Allen, and represented Lana Turner and Ava Gardner. Charles
K Feldman and Pat both encouraged Cubby towards producing,
and so he teamed up with Irving Allen to make three successful
films funded by the English government
But when Warwick Films broke up, it was back to square
one for Cubby. In 1957 he had read and loved Ian Fleming's
From Russia With Love, and eventually Cubby teamed up with
Harry Saltzman, who owned the film rights, to make the Bond
films. They only met by chance, after Wolf Mankowitz had
told Cubby about Harry's film rights.
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For 9 Bond films, Cubby and Harry Saltzman worked together, but
with the relationship strained Harry left, and Cubby went on alone,
continuing the franchise's unrivalled consistent success.
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Cubby's ability to draw marvelous talent
such as Ken Adam, Bob Simmons and Terence Young stood him
in good stead, but it was Cubby's wife, Dana, who first
spotted Sean Connery.
Cubby knew at once that he was the man, and it was Cubby's
brilliant reading of the cinema audiences that was so important.
He and Harry knew exactly what they, and the public, wanted
from the Bond films, and invariably they got it.
In 1982 Cubby's achievement was recognised when the Academy
awarded him the Irving G Thalberg Award. Cubby's commitment
to making films in Britain was another key reason for the
Bonds' success, and Pinewood Studio's huge sound stage is
now renamed the Albert R Broccoli 007 Stage.
Left: Broccoli outside the newly
rebuilt "007 Stage" in 1985.
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But even after Cubby quietly passed away on a summer evening in
June 1996, his legacy lives on. The titles of every Bond film will
open with 'Albert R Broccoli presents...'. And presenting films
that made people happy was what Cubby loved. But above all, Cubby
was a family man. His relationship with Dana was massively important
to him, and he has said that his whole career was driven by the
desire to lift his mother out of poverty.
| Cubby first met Dana when he was working
on a farm selling Christmas Trees, and fate brought them
together again 14 years later, when they were engaged within
five weeks.
If the world will remember Cubby for the Bond films, his
friends will remember him as an irrepressible optimist,
and a caring man who was adored by all who were lucky enough
to know him.
Right: Broccoli received his star on the
Hollywood "walk of fame" in 1990. |
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