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This article originally appeared on Den of Geek UK. This is the one where James Bond does Blaxploitation. It’s Roger Moore’s debut. The One with All the Voodoo. Live And Let Die is memorable ...
20 Things You Didn’t Know About Live And Let Die (1973) "Say live and let die" and explore the secrets behind Roger Moore's gem of a first James Bond film.
Jane Seymour wouldn’t think twice about suiting up as Solitaire again. The actress, who appeared as a Bond girl in the 1973 film "Live and Let Die" opposite Roger Moore, said she would be open ...
Jane Seymour is Solitaire, a Tarot-reading voodoo queen; while the villain is Yaphet Kotto, who plays his role with just the right air of detached amusement.
The meaning behind “Live and Let Die” by Paul McCartney and Wings can be summed up mostly by its status as a James Bond film theme song.
The MI6 agent pursues a voodoo-worshipping underworld drug czar who leads him from Harlem to New Orleans to the Caribbean. That has Bond dealing characters the likes of Mr. Big, Kananga and Solitaire.
Roger Moore took over the James Bond franchise as 'Live and Let Die' premiered on June 27, 1973.
Jane Seymour, who played the role of Solitaire in the James Bond movie Live And Let Die, is up for reprising her role. Read on!
James Bond’s 1973 outing, “Live and Let Die,” tops our list of 1970s and ’80s films made and set in New Orleans. It’s the first Bond movie to star Roger Moore as agent 007.
A fun, funky debut for the eternal Roger Moore. Early Seventies Live and Let Die? That would be blaxploitation. All major characters bar Bond and Solitaire (so the villains) are Afro-American, a ...
Live And Let Die was released in the early summer of 1973 to generally positive reviews and, I'll wager, an upsurge in the popularity of the name 'Solitaire' for newborn baby girls.
In this March 10, 2005 file photo, Geoffrey Holder poses at the French Institute Alliance Francaise' "La Nuit des Etoiles" dinner in New York, honoring French actress Catherine Deneuve.