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Film and Career
Moving to London with his family at an
early age, Irish-born actor Pierce Brosnan made ends meet as a
commercial illustrator and cab driver before turning to acting
full-time. After training at the London Drama Centre, Brosnan made his
West End stage bow in 1976, and appeared in his first film, The Long
Good Friday, four years later. However, at the last moment, the canceled
Remington Steele was renewed, and Brosnan was contractually obligated to
remain with the program, forcing him to relinquish the James Bond role
to Timothy Dalton. Insult was later added to injury when it became
evident that the renewal of Steele was something of a subterfuge by its
producers to keep Brosnan on their leash. This professional setback was
further compounded by personal tragedy seven years later when Brosnan's
actress wife Cassandra Harris died after a long illness. but also cemented his status as a capable
leading man in a variety of roles, ranging from the title character in
Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1996) to a stuffy, love-struck professor
who meets a ludicrous fate in Mars Attacks! (1996) to a courageous
vulcanologist trying to save a town threatened by a reawakened volcano
in Dante's Peak (1997). Brosnan played Bond for the second time in
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), essaying the role with great success. And the world isn't the only thing Bond saved. While, the next half-decade found Brosnan stumbling with disappointments like The Tailor of Panama and The Laws of Attraction, his turns as the world's suavest spy never failed to strike gold at the box-office. After 2002's Die Another Day, Brosnan announced that 2005 would see him play the hero for the fifth and final time in 2005. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide |
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