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Jill St. John (born Jill Arlyn Oppenheim; August 19, 1940) is an American retired actress. She is best known for playing Tiffany Case , the first American Bond girl of the James Bond film franchise , in 1971's Diamonds Are Forever .
At the age of 21, Reventlow was given the choice between becoming an American, Danish or British citizen. He chose American citizenship, saying, "I thought it over for a full 20 seconds." [6] On March 24, 1960, Reventlow married actress Jill St. John at the Mark Hopkins Hotel in San Francisco. [7] They separated in October 1962. [8] St.
Female lead Jill St John was under contract to Universal at the time. It was her sixth picture that year after Fame is the Name of the Game, How I Spent My Summer Vacation, The Liquidator, Eight on a Lam, and Banning. She took fencing lessons for the role. [5] Filming ended in December. [6]
A new 2012 version was shown on the Sky Movies 007 channel in the UK to include Quantum of Solace and Skyfall. Emmy award –winning singer and songwriter Faith Rivera performed a rendition of " Nobody Does It Better " over the closing credits of the documentary.
Linden Ashby as Lance Reventlow. Robert Holman as Lance at ages 5–7; Jonathan Brandis as Lance at age 11; Debbie Barker as Jill St. John; Brenda Blethyn as Tiki Tocquet; Nigel Le Vaillant as David Herbert; Miriam Margolyes as Elsa Maxwell; Carolyn Seymour as Dorothy Cadwell Taylor Dentice di Frasso; Tracy Brooks Swope as Peggy; Special ...
The Liquidator is a 1965 British thriller film directed by Jack Cardiff and starring Rod Taylor, Trevor Howard, and Jill St. John. [3] It was based on The Liquidator (1964), the first of a series of Boysie Oakes novels by John Gardner.
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Joey Bishop, John Byner, Jill St. John, Tiny Tim, John Wayne, Flip Wilson, April 29, 1968 Season 2 (1968–69)
Foreign Exchange is a 1970 American action thriller drama spy television film originally aired on ABC and directed by Roy Ward Baker. [1] [2] Its teleplay, written by Jimmy Sangster, was based on his own 1968 novel of the same name. [3]