Sean Connery Net Worth

Sean Connery Net Worth is
$350 Million

Sean Connery Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

He’s starred in movies like Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, The Untouchables and is probably the most established performer to play James Bond. He is 6’2 and weighs 210 pounds. Thomas Sean Connery was produced on August 25, 1930 in Edinburgh, Scotland. Connery’s mom was a cleaning woman and his dad a factory worker and lorry driver. Connery grew rapidly as he asserts to get reached his full stature by age 12. He’d act as a milkman before joining the Royal Navy, before being dispatched due to an ulcer. He’d also dabble in bodybuilding and football before settling on a career in playing.

Connery’s looks, visiting stature and trust made waves. He’d get his big break when he was cast as a secret agent in the movie version of Ian Fleming’s Dr. No in 1962. Connery would continue to play Bond in the initial five movies in the franchise throughout the 1960s. It could become the most successful film franchise in history bringing in over $14 billion to date. Connery would reprise the character two more times in 1971 and 1983.

Even with the international acclaim and fortune that came along along with his Bond portrayal, Connery somehow managed never to be typecast and also would go on to have among the very successful and longest careers in movie history. He’s one son.

Sean Connery has enough net worth to purchase:
1. 1,738,223.5 Bond 50: Observing Five Decade of 007, 23 Phonograph Records ($172.59 each)
2. 281,568.5 Men’s Hugo Boss 3 Piece Light Weight Tweed Slender Fit Suit ($1,065.46 each)

Sean Connery Net Worth $300 Million


Full NameSean Connery
Net Worth$350 Million
Date Of BirthAugust 25, 1930
Place Of BirthFountainbridge, United Kingdom
Height6 ft 2 in (1.89 m)
Weight165 lbs (74.8427 kg)
ProfessionActor, Film Producer, Voice Actor
EducationTollcross Primary School
NationalityUnited Kingdom
SpouseMicheline Roquebrune (m. 1975), Diane Cilento (m. 1962–1973)
ChildrenJason Connery
ParentsEuphemia McLean, Joseph Connery
SiblingsNeil Connery
NicknamesThomas Sean Connery , Sir Sean Connery , Sir Thomas Sean Connery , Tommy , Shawn , Sir Thomas Sean Connery Kt. , Sir Sean Connery Kt. , Sir Thomas Sean Connery, KBE , Big Tam
AwardsAcademy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (1988), AFI Life Achievement Award (2006), Kennedy Center Honors (1999), Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award (1996), Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (1988), Tony Award for Best Play (1998)
NominationsBAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, VGX Award for Best Performance by a Human Male, National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor, Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama
Movies“No Road Back”, “Another Time, Another Place”, “Dr. No”, From Russia with Love (1963), Goldfinger (1964), “Marnie”, “The Hill”,“Murder on the Orient Express”, “The Untouchables”, “Adventure Story”, “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade”, “The Rock”, “Entrapmen...
TV ShowsAn Age of Kings, Armchair Theatre, Biography, Sailor of Fortune, Sunday Night Theatre
Star SignVirgo
#Trademark
1Pronounces 's' as "shh"
2Thick, dark eyebrows
3Grey beard or moustache (in later years)
4Often plays mentors in the latter half of his career
5Frequently plays tough, cunning heroes
6Best known for playing James Bond
7Powerful deep voice with Scottish accent
TitleSalary
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003)$17,000,000
Finding Forrester (2000)$15,000,000
Entrapment (1999)$20,000,000
Playing by Heart (1998)$60,000
The Rock (1996)$12,000,000
First Knight (1995)$9,000,000
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991)$1,900,000
Highlander II: The Quickening (1991)$3,500,000
The Hunt for Red October (1990)$4,000,000
Never Say Never Again (1983)$5,000,000 + 5% of the net US profits ($6,410,000 total)
Zardoz (1974)$200,000
Diamonds Are Forever (1971)$1,250,000 + 12.5% of the US gross ($6,725,000 total salary)
Shalako (1968)$1,000,000 + % of profits
You Only Live Twice (1967)$750,000 + 25% of the worldwide merchandising profits ($1,000,000 total salary)
Thunderball (1965)$600,000 + 25% of the worldwide merchandising profits ($750,000 total salary)
Goldfinger (1964)$500,000 + 5% of the US gross ($3,050,000 total salary)
From Russia with Love (1963)$250,000
Dr. No (1962)$20,000 original + $105,000 bonus share of the profits ($125,000 total salary)
#Quote
1[on being voted the Sexiest Man of the Century] Well what can I say, people have good taste. No, I'm only kidding. I really don't take things like that seriously.
2Show me a man who is content and I'll show you a lobotomy scar.
3(On George Lazenby) I have known George for many years and arrogance is not in his character. Alas I cannot say the same for Cubby Broccoli.
4I have no shortage of material or offers, it's just a case of what you select to do. But I think it's realistic that my chances of playing Romeo are now over.
5Let me straighten you out on this. The problem in interviews of this sort is to get across the fact, without breaking your arse, that one is NOT Bond, that one was functioning reasonably before Bond and that one is going to function reasonably after Bond. There are a lot of things I did before Bond - like playing the classics on stage - that don't seem to get publicized. So you see, this Bond image is a problem in a way and a bit of a bore, but one has to live with it. [David Zinman: Saturday Afternoon at the Bijou, 1973]
6[1973, on 'James Bond' producers Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli] They're not exactly enamoured of each other. Probably they're both sitting on $50 million and looking across the desk at each other and thinking, 'That bugger's got half of what should be all mine'.
7I enjoy the excitement of working on a well-crewed and exciting picture. It's like a microcosm of society that really works. Because nothing works anywhere else.
8I've honestly not been too aware of my age until I went to the doctor for a full check-up. He said I had the heart of a young man, "but you're not young, you're 40! [Evening Standard, 1971]
9Robin and Marian (1976) was supposed to be called "The Death of Robin Hood", but Americans don't like heroes who die or anything that might not smack of being a victory.
10[on his Marnie (1964) leading lady Tippi Hedren] She's underrated in a business where most actors are overrated.
11I've always been told I was either too tall or too short, too Scottish or too Irish, too young, too old.
12Timothy Dalton has Shakespearean training but he underestimated the role. The character has to be graceful and move well and have a certain measure of charm as well as be dangerous. Pierce Brosnan is a good actor - he added some new elements to it.
13I was going upstairs when I heard my own voice coming from one of the rooms. My grandchildren were watching Goldfinger (1964). So, I sat down with them and watched it for a bit. It was interesting. There was a certain elegance, a certain assurance to it that was quite comforting. There was a leisureliness that made you not want to rush to the next scene. Of course, I also saw things that could have been improved.
14The idea of the hair was the iron grew sort of crew cut but something kinda put me off that. I would have looked sort of like Ernest Hemingway with the beard and short hair and it would have looked American. So I went Rod Stewart but shorter. They had another wig but that made me look like Sting. I really couldn't deal with it. Well, I could deal with it. I changed it. - On The Hunt for Red October (1990).
15It would appear I'm an inspiration for older men. Do I think I'm sexy? I've been told I am. I know that I find certain people attractive and they find me attractive and are presumptuous enough to think that's sexy. I can't answer for all those fat guys out there in their sixties. Are they more virile? Well, it's years since I went to bed with a sixtyish balding man. Look, I'm dealing with maturity alright. I'm much more interest in keeping enthusiastic than anything else.
16It's funny, but the film buffs at UCLA are constantly dissecting Marnie (1964) these days to see how it was done. When it was first released, there was a lot of criticism of Alfred Hitchcock because he used a studio set for the dockside scene. But the backdrop looked just like the port of Bristol - if not Baltimore, where it's supposed to be at. I adored and enjoyed Hitchcock tremendously. He never lost his patience or composure on the set.
17I realised that a top-class footballer could be over the hill by the age of 30, and I was already 23. I decided to become an actor and it turned out to be one of my more intelligent moves.
18Perhaps I'm not a good actor, but I would be even worse at doing anything else.
19From the earliest days of cinema a fascination with Scottish historical themes fed the appetites of Hollywood. Macabre shockers, or what Robert Louis Stevenson called "regular crawlers", were especially popular. Not counting numerous shorts, five feature versions of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) were produced in Hollywood between 1912 and 1941, though none surpassed Fredric March's Oscar-winning performance and his menacing facial transformation in Rouben Mamoulian's production of 1931.
20Anyone contemplating a film career could do no better than read Alexander Mackendrick's book "On Film-making: An Introduction to the Craft of the Director."
21A silent gesture can convey more in a flash than a minute of spoken dialogue. Unlike most actors, who resist directors cutting their lines, I have spent my whole career filleting mine. There are few directors who have not seen my cuts as improvements. Steven Spielberg paid me the ultimate compliment on Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) by adopting nine out of ten of my ideas that traded dialogue for added visual interaction.
22[on A View to a Kill (1985)] Bond should be played by an actor 35, 33 years old. I'm too old. Roger's too old, too!
23I get asked the question so often, I thought it best to make an announcement. I thought long and hard about it and if anything could have pulled me out of retirement it would have been an Indiana Jones film. I love working with Steven [Steven Spielberg] and George [George Lucas], and it goes without saying that it is an honor to have Harrison [Harrison Ford] as my son. But in the end, retirement is just too damned much fun. I, do however, have one bit of advice for Junior: Demand that the critters be digital, the cliffs be low, and for goodness sake keep that whip by your side at all times in case you need to escape from the stunt coordinator! This is a remarkable cast, and I can only say, "Break a leg, everyone". I'll see you on May 22, 2008, at the theater!
24[on his knighthood being blocked by the Labour government for the second time in 1998] It's purely political. I have never made any secret of my association, affiliation with the Scottish National Party. I don't like the turn it's taken now when they drag up something, which is something from the past about my violence towards women which I have attempted to answer in so many ways. It might have been a stupid comment of mine to say to smack a woman or slap a woman, I think I said, and it was picked up much later by an unmentionable in America who really worked a flanker and presented a show as though I had actually admitted that it was okay to punch women. In fact, in the near future there will be some kind of revelation about quite a lot of that anyway, which I'm not going to go into now.
25[in 2004] The Scottish media all say, "Oh yeah, he's a tax exile". I have paid more tax than the government put together in that Parliament. I still pay full tax when I work in England and the same when I work in America.
26Whenever I've tangled with a beautiful spy, have you noticed what invariably happens? Even if I know the girl is a nasty and dangerous little snake, I've still had to kiss her first and kill her later.
27"The time came for me to retire because of my rather unfortunate last movie . . . The cost to me in terms of frustration and avoiding going to jail for murder cannot have continued.
28One of the things that strikes me is that no matter how difficult or underprivileged the situation you were living in as a child, it wasn't considered difficult. I don't think as children, you are aware of it. You have nothing to compare it to.
29It reads as though one had made great dramatic decisions, but in fact one didn't. I certainly had the drive from the beginning, but the targets and ambitions were much, much less.
30I am happy to say that I sued Allied Artists for cosmetic bookkeeping and they're bankrupt.
31Peter Mandelson, two times thrown out, is now representing Britain in Europe. In the olden times, they would have hung him up by his feet. The decisions in the UK are made by President Tony Blair and a couple of his cooks in the kitchen.
32Dealing with this financial stuff was too much for me. It was back to education and I had to learn to understand it all myself.
33I did smoke pot a few times but nothing else. I would never inject. I'm too fond of the drink. At times I can go two weeks or more without it, but then I'm quite enthusiastic to get back to the taste again.
34I never trashed a hotel room or did drugs. I understand if you get caught in a fight, but to take it out on a room that implies some psychiatric disorder. The way I was brought up made me think about the person who has to clean up afterwards.
35There's one major difference between James Bond and me. He is able to sort out problems!
36[on Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)] I am resting from acting - you might say I'm retired. It would take something really considerable to bring me back. Nothing has been discussed but I hear it's back on.
37[on being one of the biggest movie stars in the world] Well, that's only because of your price. And my current price? Well, ha, that's nobody's business but mine.
38It is said that a total ban on handguns, including .22s, would take away innocent pleasure from thousands of people. Is that more or less pleasure than watching your child grow up?
39[on turning down the role of Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)] Yeah, well, I never understood it. I read the book. I read the script. I saw the movie. I still don't understand it.
40I had no grand plan. Everyone talks about how they knew the Bond films were going to be a success, but it simply isn't true.
41[during his speech after receiving the AFI Life Achievement award] Though my feet are tired, my heart is not.
42[on why he resigned the role of James Bond while filming You Only Live Twice (1967)] One of the reasons I stopped doing it was because I got really fed up with the space stuff and special effects. I just found it getting more and more influential in the movies.
43[3/06] I have retired for good. It's been a bit rough since Christmas but I'm perfectly OK and I feel well. In fact, I'm working on a history book.
44[on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003)] It was a nightmare. The director should never have been given $185 million.
45What happened was that I had polyps on my vocal cords for about six years. I had them lasered off each time. But then I had a little twinge of a problem while I was doing Rising Sun (1993). I couldn't get the timbre of my voice right. I couldn't get the variation and enunciation as comfortable as I wanted. So I went back to the doctor and he suggested radiation. I went for six weeks and didn't have any side effects or problems. Then I made the announcement that I had done radiation treatment. The publicists said not to do it, that it would set off an explosion. But I thought, "If you do radiation and it's a success, why not speak about it?"
46I think the fact that one's hair disappeared early made it easier. I never had a "transition problem". I've always played older. I played Harrison Ford's father and Dustin Hoffman's father. And this year, I'm going to be 65. I'm hardly going to get into a weight program and do "Tarzan". I could have the best body sculpting in the world, but I'm never going to be James Bond again.
47I thought Pierce Brosnan was a good choice. I liked GoldenEye (1995). Timothy Dalton never got a handle on the role. He took it seriously in the wrong way. The person who plays Bond has to be dangerous. If there isn't a sense of threat, you can't be cool.
48[on Daniel Craig as the new James Bond] Craig's a great choice, really interesting - different. He's a good actor. It's a completely new departure.
49I said I never would [do an autobiography] and then I thought about it and I said, "I'm going to do it". Then I started. Yeah, and it cost me a stonking amount of money not to do it - because I'd already put the wheels in motion. He [Davies] started to run with the ball with all this stuff. I realized I was going to be spending the best part of my life, and probably the rest of my life, trying to correct these inaccuracies and I can't be bothered.
50I'm fed up with the idiots, the ever-widening gap between people who know how to make movies and those who green-light them. I don't say they're all idiots - I'm just saying there's a lot of them. It would almost need a Mafia-like offer I couldn't refuse to do another movie.
51[3/03, about the impending US invasion of Iraq] I don't know who could be in favor of it, but it can't be stopped. It is inevitable.
52I care about Bond and what happens to him. You cannot be connected with a character for this long and not have an interest. All the Bond films had their good points.
53[on whether he would ever escape being identified as James Bond] It's with me 'til I go in the box.
54I've never kept a record of anything. I gave away everything: all the posters, the memorabilia that would have been helpful - and financially rewarding.
55I have always hated that damn James Bond. I'd like to kill him.
56I'm an actor - it's not brain surgery. If I do my job right, people won't ask for their money back.
57[on turning down the role of Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings] I had never read [J.R.R. Tolkien], and I didn't understand the script when they sent it to me. Bobbits? Hobbits?
58Some age, others mature.
59I've honestly not been too aware of my age until I went to the doctor for a full check-up. He said I had the heart of a young man - "but you're not young, you're 40".
60More than anything else, I'd like to be an old man with a good face, like [Alfred Hitchcock] or [Pablo Picasso].
61I never disliked Bond, as some have thought. Creating a character like that does take a certain craft. It's simply natural to seek other roles.
62I was called Sean long before I was an actor, I had an Irish buddy when I was 12 named Seamus -- pronounced Shay-mus. So they nicknamed us Seamus and Shawn and it stuck.
#Fact
1Regards the character he played in The Man Who Would Be King (1975), as his favourite movie role.
2Was voted #8 in an online poll for Channel 4's 100 Greatest Movie Stars in 2003 (UK).
3Has been close friends with Sir Michael Caine and Sir Roger Moore for decades.
4Tippi Hedren, his leading lady from Marnie (1964), devoted a full page of photographs on him in her memoir "Tippi" (2016). She wrote that she was stunned that her director Alfred Hitchcock had cast the sexiest man alive to play opposite her, since she was supposed to play a frigid woman in the film. She asked Hitchcock how she can play such a role, when the iciest of women would melt in Sean's presence. He told her "It's called acting, my dear." He did order Sean not to touch her, just as he had ordered Rod Taylor not to touch her during The Birds (1963). Many people have asked her whether she had an affair with Sean after seeing their amazing onscreen chemistry, and she said she didn't, because she was too dedicated to acting. In 2006, she met with Sean when he was awarded the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award. He kissed her on the cheek sweetly and mentioned how he wasn't allowed to do that on the set of Marnie (1964). Their friendship lasted more than 50 years.
5He appeared in four films with Denholm Elliott: Robin and Marian (1976), A Bridge Too Far (1977), Cuba (1979) and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989).
6He appeared in five films directed by Sidney Lumet: The Hill (1965), The Anderson Tapes (1971), The Offence (1973), Murder on the Orient Express (1974) and Family Business (1989).
7Along with Wolfgang Preiss, he is one of only two actors to appear in both films based on books by Cornelius Ryan: The Longest Day (1962) and A Bridge Too Far (1977).
8The role of Mufasa in The Lion King (1994) was written with him in mind.
9Was offered the role of Dr Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs (1991), but turned it down because he thought it was too violent.
10Was considered to appear in a surprise cameo in the 007 film Skyfall (2012). Director Sam Mendes and producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli almost approached him but decided it would be too distracting for the audience. The role was went to Albert Finney, who had been considered for roles in 007 movies with Connery himself.
11He played Major General R.E. Urquhart in A Bridge Too Far (1977). The real Urquhart served as a military consultant on the film. Although he had been friends with David Niven since 1920, Urquhart had no interest in films. As such, he had no idea who Connery was or why his daughters were so excited that he was playing him in the film.
12He has two roles in common with his son Jason Connery: (1) Sean played the title character in Macbeth (1961) while Jason played him in Macbeth (1997) and (2) Sean played Robin Hood in Robin and Marian (1976) while Jason played him in Robin Hood (1984).
13In Italy, fans called him 'Mr. Kisskiss Bangbang'.
14He was offered the role of Professor Waldman in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994) but he turned it down. His Time Bandits (1981) co-star John Cleese was eventually cast.
15Was almost killed filming the helicopter chase scene in From Russia with Love (1963) when the inexperienced helicopter pilot flew in too close and almost decapitated him.
16Son Jason Connery almost signed the Bollywood film Namastey London (2007). He was to play a major role but Producer Vipul Shah and Jason could not come to agreement terms.
17Although he was 60 years old when he played Richard the Lionheart in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991), the King was only 41 when he was killed on April 6, 1199.
18In the 1960 television adaptation of Colombe, Connery's character Julien believes his brother Paul (Richard Pasco) is having an affair with his wife Colombe (Dorothy Tutin), and kisses Pasco on the mouth to find out what makes him such a good kisser. Even though, this was a non-sexual kiss, it is still believed to be one of the first male-on-male kisses on television.
19Time Bandits (1981) originally called for Connery to return during the climax as King Agamemnon leading a group of Greek soldiers in the fight against Evil and being killed, but the scene could not be worked around Connery's schedule. A compromise was devised to provide closure in the film between Connery and the boy hero Kevin played by Craig Warnock.
20Before he was cast as James Bond in Dr. No (1962), Cary Grant, David Niven, Patrick McGoohan, Laurence Harvey, Richard Todd, Trevor Howard, Rex Harrison, James Mason, Steve Reeves, Richard Johnson, William Franklyn, Stanley Baker, Ian Hendry, Richard Burton, Rod Taylor and George Baker were considered for the role.
21He was the visual inspiration for the original illustrations of the super-villain Vartox (created in 1974), one of the Superman's foes. Connery was 44 years old at the time. Vartox was modeled after Connery's appearance in Zardoz (1974).
22He played Robert Shaw's adversary in both From Russia with Love (1963) and Robin and Marian (1976).
23He played Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez in Highlander (1986) and Highlander II: The Quickening (1991). Other than James Bond, this is the only character that he has played in more than one film.
24Although he played Dustin Hoffman's father in Family Business (1989), he is only seven years his senior.
25Along with Robert Rietty, he is one of only two actors to appear in both Thunderball (1965) and the remake Never Say Never Again (1983).
26He and his wife are living in the Bahamas. [May 2008]
27California [May 2009]
28Will release his autobiography, "Being a Scot", on his birthday of August 25, 2008 in his hometown of Edinburgh, Scotland. [June 2008]
29His father was of half Irish and half Scottish descent, and his mother was of Scottish ancestry.
30Connery and Albert R. Broccoli were on bad terms after he left the series. He declined to attend Broccoli's funeral.
31Variety Club of Great Britain Special Award in 1963 for his portrayal of James Bond in Dr No and From Russia With Love.
32Variety Club of Great Britain film Actor Award for 1965 for his performances in The Hill and Goldfinger.
33Once worked as a bricklayer.
34Is one of four Scottish actors to have received an Academy Award nomination. The others in chronological order are Deborah Kerr, Mary Ure and Tom Conti. As of 2011 he is the only one to have won an Academy Award (for his performance in The Untouchables (1987)).
35Of the six actors who have played James Bond, he is the only one who, like Bond, served in the Royal Navy.
36He was awarded made a Knight Bachelor in the 2000 Queen's Millennium New Years Honours List for his services to the Film Industry.
37If Never Say Never Again (1983) can be included as an official 007 installment, then Connery ties with Roger Moore for the most portrayals of James Bond - a total of 7 each. Otherwise Moore holds the record.
38Hinted in an interview that he may return to live in Scotland for the first time in more than fifty years. He reaffirmed his belief that the country can achieve full independence within his lifetime. (February 2008).
39With the death of Kieron Moore on July 15, 2007, he is the last surviving cast member of Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959).
40Turned down Patrick McGoohan's role as King Edward I in Braveheart (1995) because he was filming Just Cause (1995).
41Received a Bafta Scotland Lifetime Achievement Award at the Cineworld complex in Edinburgh, Scotland. (25 August 2006).
42Injured his shoulder in a fall while playing golf. (June 2008).
43Said his favorite memory from A Bridge Too Far (1977) was working with Dirk Bogarde, whom he had long admired.
44Turned down Richard Chamberlain's role in Shogun (1980) because he would not act on television.
45Measured at exactly 6' 2.4" back in his body-building days, he is still the tallest actor to have played James Bond to date, George Lazenby and Timothy Dalton both being exactly 6' 2".
46The extraordinary success of Goldfinger (1964), which was released in December 1964, and of 1965's Thunderball (1965) propelled Connery to the top of Quigley Publications' annual Top Ten Money Making Stars poll in 1965. He remains the only British male star to be the #1 box office star in America.
47Has named his personal favorite of his movies and performances as The Offence (1973).
48He brought future James Bond, Roger Moore to a press screening in Paris for Diamonds Are Forever (1971).
49December 2002: Voted "The Male Celebrity With The Sexiest Voice" in a survey carried out by a mobile phone company. Kylie Minogue topped the female category.
50Received a lifetime achievement award at the opening night of the Festa del Cinema, Rome's inaugural film festival. Connery was presented with the Marco Aurelio award in recognition of "his numerous cinematic endeavours over the years". (13 October 2006).
51His father Joseph Connery died of throat cancer at the age of sixty-nine in August 1972.
52He has two roles in common with Pierce Brosnan: (1) Connery played James Bond in Dr. No (1962), From Russia with Love (1963), Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967), Diamonds Are Forever (1971) and Never Say Never Again (1983) while Brosnan played him in GoldenEye (1995), Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), The World Is Not Enough (1999) and Die Another Day (2002) and (2) Connery played King Arthur in First Knight (1995) while Brosnan played him in in Quest for Camelot (1998).
53He has never appeared in a "Skiing" James Bond picture. Though Goldfinger came close as it has sequences set in the lower Swiss mountains, all the ski, snow and ice Bond films belong to the other James Bond actors: George Lazenby (On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)); Roger Moore(The Spy Who Loved Me (1977); For Your Eyes Only (1981); A View to a Kill (1985)); Timothy Dalton (The Living Daylights (1987)); Pierce Brosnan (The World Is Not Enough (1999); Die Another Day (2002).
54Is the first (and as of 2006 the only) actor that played "James Bond" to win an Oscar.
55Presented with the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award by his Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) co-star Harrison Ford, who told him, "John Wayne gave us the old West. James Stewart gave us our town. You gave us the world." (8 June 2006)
56He pulled out of an interview for the Edinburgh Festival of Politics in August 2006 after George Reid, the presiding officer of the Scottish Parliament, vowed to ask him why he once told a magazine that some women want a "smack". Sir Sean, the Scottish National Party's most famous supporter, said it was "unacceptable" and it would have compromised the interview.
57Turned down the role of Simon Gruber in Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995) due to the diabolical nature of the character. Director John McTiernan, who directed Connery in The Hunt for Red October (1990) and Medicine Man (1992), said he was the very first choice for that role.
58Turned down the role of John Hammond in Jurassic Park (1993). Coincidentally, his Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) co-star, Harrison Ford, was offered the role of Dr. Alan Grant. Not to mention, it would've reunited both of them with director Steven Spielberg.
59Of his career choices in the '90s (pretty much his last decade in film), The Rock (1996) and Entrapment (1999) are the films he liked the most. On the other hand, The Avengers (1998) was a film he regretted doing at all.
60Was the original voice of Tack the Cobbler, the hero of Richard Williams's animated cult masterpiece The Princess and the Cobbler (1993). In the original version (from the work print and the resulting "Recobbled" fan-restoration), Tack was mute until the very end, when he spoke in Sean Connery's voice.
61His performance as James Bond in the 007 films is ranked #5 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
62Started smoking when he was nine years old.
63In 1999 he called on the Scottish parliament to ban all handguns in the country.
64Presented with the Marrakech International Film Festival Award in Morocco by his friend and Just Cause (1995) co-star Laurence Fishburne. (8 December 2004)
65Announced his retirement in an interview in New York City during the Tartan Week 2006 celebrations. "I have retired for good," he said.
66Was delighted to be honored with the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award, which he will receive on June 8 2006 in Los Angeles, as he was honored despite his reputation as a harsh critic of the movie industry. "It means a tremendous amount, especially because of some of the things I have said about Hollywood."
67Underwent surgery at a New York hospital to remove a tumour from his kidney in January 2006. Connery's brother Neil said, "As far as I'm led to believe the tumour was benign. He seems to be quite upbeat about it."
68Was seriously considered for the role of King Philip of Macedonia in Oliver Stone's Alexander (2004).
69He was presented with a lifetime achievement award at the European Film Awards in Berlin, presented to him by Jean-Jacques Annaud, who directed Connery in The Name of the Rose (1986). (3 December 2005)
70His original idol was Welsh actor Stanley Baker because he played believable tough guys in quality British movies which he produced himself.
71The Edinburgh Filmhouse rejected a proposal to rename itself "The Sean Connery Filmhouse" in November 2005 following complaints over Connery's status as a tax exile.
72His accent was the model for the voice of Stratos in the 2002 remake of He-Man & The Masters of the Universe.
73Marnie (1964) co-star Tippi Hedren named one of her house cats after him.
74Was once stopped for speeding by an officer named Sergeant James Bond.
75Terry Gilliam did not intend to cast him as King Agamemnon in Time Bandits (1981), he simply wrote in the screenplay that when Agamemnon took off his helmet he looked "exactly like Sean Connery." To Gilliam's surprise, the script found its way into Connery's hands and Connery subsequently expressed interest in doing the film.
76Was the original choice to play Sybock in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989), but he was busy with Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989). The words in the film "Sha Ka Ree" are a play on his name.
77Panama's President Mireya Moscoso presented him with a Manuel Amador Guerrero award, named after the country's first president. She said he was given the award for his "talent and versatility." Sir Sean was on a trip to Panama to visit various humanitarian programs conducted by the government. (10 March 2003)
78Pulled out of a seven-figure deal for a planned autobiography for the second time, in March 2005. The actor signed a deal in 2004 with ghostwriter Hunter Davies to produce an account of his life from Edinburgh milkman to international film superstar. Six months prior to his hook-up with Davies, Connery also canceled a similar deal with Scottish writer Meg Henderson, who said later: "He isn't the man I thought he was."
79Was a good friend of Sir Michael Caine and the late Richard Harris.
80He pulled out of a film in September 2004, sparking rumors that he was going to retire. However three months later in an interview with "The Scotsman" newspaper from his home in the Bahamas, he said he is taking a year out to write his autobiography (something he had previously vowed never to do), and hopes to make another film.
81In 1998, he received a Tony Award for co-producing the play "Art" by Yasmina Reza.
82Turned down the title role in the original The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), which he later admitted was a huge mistake on his part.
83Played James Bond in Thunderball (1965). 18 years later, he reprised the role in the film's remake, Never Say Never Again (1983). He is the only Bond actor to appear in both EON and non EON productions of Bond.
84Had cataracts removed from both eyes in 2003.
85Premiere Magazine ranked him as #36 on a list of the Greatest Movie Stars of All Time in their Stars in Our Constellation feature (2005).
86Harry Saltzman and Albert R. Broccoli, the original producers of the James Bond films, cast him because they liked how he was a big, tough-looking man who nonetheless moved gracefully ("like a cat").
87Voted Best British Actor of all time in a poll for Sky TV [Feb 2005].
88Had a difficult time getting work after he abandoned the James Bond role a second time after Diamonds Are Forever (1971) for which he received a record salary. Director John Boorman thus was able to hire him very cheaply for his low-budget production of Zardoz (1974).
89Connery received excellent notices for his starring role in Macbeth (1961) and longed to make a film of "The Scottish Play." His plans for a film in the early 1970s were terminated by the production of Roman Polanski's Macbeth (1971).
90He and his son, actor Jason Connery, have both played Robin Hood. Sean played an aging Robin Hood opposite Audrey Hepburn in Robin and Marian (1976). Jason played Robin Hood, AKA: Robert of Huntingdon, in the television series Robin Hood (1984). Jason also played Ian Fleming in the television movie The Secret Life of Ian Fleming (1990). Fleming was the author of the James Bond novels that made Sean famous in 1962.
91He was voted the 24th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
92Won the role of James Bond after producer Albert R. Broccoli attended a screening of Sean in Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959). He was particularly impressed with the fistfight Sean has with a village bully at the climax of the film. Cubby later had his wife, writer Dana Broccoli, see the film and she confirmed his sex appeal.
93Turned down the role of the Architect in The Matrix Reloaded (2003) and The Matrix Revolutions (2003).
94Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, originally did not like him being cast as Bond for Dr. No (1962) because he felt that he was too "unrefined". The actor whom Fleming embodied Bond in Fleming's mind was Cary Grant. Fleming later changed his mind and admitted he was ideally cast in the role.
95According to a poll, conducted by British film magazine Empire, he created the worst accent in the history of cinema in the movie The Untouchables (1987).
96Whilst filming Playing by Heart (1998) he loved playing and even made a friendship with three and a half year old Piper Maru Anderson; daughter of an actress Gillian Anderson who played Meredith (a daughter of Sean's character).
97Has played four kings: 'King' Daniel Dravot in The Man Who Would Be King (1975), King Agamemnon in Time Bandits (1981), King Richard in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991) and King Arthur in First Knight (1995).
98His favorite Bond film is From Russia with Love (1963).
99Parodied on Saturday Night Live (1975) by Darrell Hammond, most famously as a bumbling contestant on the TV game show Jeopardy! (1984).
100Declared in March 2003 that he would not return home until Scotland is an independent country. He believes this can still happen during his lifetime.
101Turned down the role of Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings series (The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002), and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)) because he didn't want to film down in New Zealand for 18 months, and could not understand the novels.
102Received the honorary degree of DLitt from St Andrews University in 1988.
103Actress Mia Sara is his ex-daughter-in-law.
104He ranked first among the Male British movie actors in the Orange Film Survey of 10,000 voters.
105Caused an uproar in a December 1987 interview with Barbara Walters in which he said it was OK to hit a woman if she deserved it or needed it to keep her in line. He had said similar things in a November 1965 interview with Playboy magazine.
106Was paid a huge sum to return as James Bond for Diamonds Are Forever (1971), setting a record. It was donated to his Scottish charity.
107Received the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh in 1991.
108During his time as a milkman, Connery delivered to Fettes School in Edinburgh - the same school which James Bond attended in Ian Fleming's novels following his expulsion from Eton.
109After his service with the Merchant Navy, he worked as a nude model for Edinburgh art students.
110He joined the Merchant Navy as a teenager but stomach ulcers forced him to leave. He received a disability pension for a period after this.
111Gert Günther Hoffmann was his German voice for years and even though his voice was very low it fitted the charismatic and charming part of Connery perfectly. 'Gert Gunther Hoffmann' died in 1997. The following dubber's deep voice was incredibly equal to Connery's real one...Manfred Wagner died after dubbing two Sean Connery films, First Knight (1995) and The Rock (1996).
112Grandson, Dashiell Connery (Dashiell Quinn Connery), born. [1997]
113Chosen by Empire magazine as one of the 100 Sexiest Stars in film history (#7). [1995]
114Noted to be one of James Bond's favorite actors in the novel "Scorpius." Connery previously played James Bond in seven films.
115He was made a Knight Bachelor in the 2000 Queen's Millennium Honors List for his services to Film Drama. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in an hour-long investiture ceremony at Edinburgh's Holyrood Palace in Scotland on July 5, 2000 accompanied by his wife, Micheline, and brother, Neil, were by his side.
116He has his own film production company (Fountainbridge Films). Fountainbridge is an area of Edinburgh where he was born.
117Used to live in Marbella, Spain, near a golf course where he played daily when not filming. He left following disagreements with the local press, and now resides in the Bahamas where he plays golf much less frequently.
118Recipient of 22nd Annual Kennedy Center Honors for lifetime contribution to arts and culture, presented by President Bill Clinton in Washington, D.C. on December 5, 1999.
119Said in an interview that during the filming of Never Say Never Again (1983), he was taking martial arts lessons and in the process angered the instructor who in turn broke his wrist. Connery stayed with the wrist broken for a number of years thinking it was only a minor pain... the instructor was Steven Seagal.
120Voted 'Sexiest Man of the Century' by People Magazine. [1999]
121Major contributor to the Scottish National Party (SNP). This was stopped for a while when the ruling Labour government said people living outside of the United Kingdom would not be allowed to donate money to British political parties.
122Formerly worked as a milk delivery man.
123Older brother of Neil Connery.
124Formerly worked as a coffin polisher.
125Donated his salary from Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991) to charity.
126Had radiation therapy for an undisclosed throat ailment in 1993. In a February 1995 interview with Entertainment Weekly, Connery said the treatment had been to remove benign tumors from his vocal chords after he found himself losing his voice while filming Rising Sun (1993).
127Took dancing lessons for 11 years. His teacher was the Swedish dancer Yat Malmgren.
128He has two small tattoos on his right arm. One says "Scotland forever", the other "Mum and Dad." He got them when he enlisted in the Royal Navy at the age of 16.
129Wore a toupee in all the James Bond movies. He started losing his hair at the age of 17, and began wearing a hairpiece in films in 1958. Privately and in most of his post-Bond movies he did not wear a toupee.
130Father of Jason Connery.
131He was voted People magazine's "Sexiest Man Alive" in 1989.
132In 1953, he entered the Mr. Universe contest, finishing third in the tall man's division.
133Ranked #14 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list. [October 1997]
134Was offered the role of Robert Elliott by Brian De Palma in Dressed to Kill (1980) and was enthusiastic about it, but declined on account of previously acquired commitments.

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sir Billi2012Sir Billi (voice, as Sir Sean Connery)
From Russia with Love2005Video GameJames Bond (voice, as Sir Sean Connery)
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen2003Allan Quatermain
Freedom: A History of Us2003TV Series documentaryJohn Muir
Finding Forrester2000William Forrester
Entrapment1999Robert MacDougal
Playing by Heart1998Paul
The Avengers1998Sir August de Wynter
The Rock1996John Patrick Mason
DragonHeart1996Draco (voice)
First Knight1995King Arthur
Just Cause1995Paul Armstrong
A Good Man in Africa1994Dr. Alex Murray
Rising Sun1993Capt. John Connor
Medicine Man1992Dr. Robert Campbell
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves1991King Richard (uncredited)
Highlander II: The Quickening1991Juan Sánchez Villa-Lobos Ramírez
The Russia House1990Barley
The Hunt for Red October1990Marko Ramius
Family Business1989Jessie
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade1989Professor Henry Jones
Memories of Me1988Sean Connery as Lt. Col. Alan Caldwell (uncredited)
The Presidio1988Lt. Col. Alan Caldwell
The Untouchables1987Jim Malone
The Name of the Rose1986William of Baskerville
Highlander1986Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez
Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight1984The Green Knight
Never Say Never Again1983James Bond
Five Days One Summer1982Douglas Meredith
Wrong Is Right1982Patrick Hale
Time Bandits1981King Agamemnon / Fireman
Outland1981Marshall William T. O'Niel
Cuba1979Major Robert Dapes
Meteor1979Paul Bradley
The Great Train Robbery1979Pierce
A Bridge Too Far1977Major General Urquhart
The Next Man1976Khalil Abdul-Muhsen
Robin and Marian1976Robin Hood
Circasia1976ShortClown
The Man Who Would Be King1975Daniel Dravot
The Wind and the Lion1975Raisuli
The Terrorists1975Col. Nils Tahlvik
Murder on the Orient Express1974Col. Arbuthnot
Zardoz1974Zed
The Offence1973Detective Sergeant Johnson
Diamonds Are Forever1971James Bond
The Anderson Tapes1971Anderson
The Molly Maguires1970Jack Kehoe
The Red Tent1969Roald Amundsen
ITV Saturday Night Theatre1969TV SeriesMacNeil
Male of the Species1969TV MovieMacNeil
Shalako1968Shalako
You Only Live Twice1967James Bond
A Fine Madness1966Samson Shillitoe
Un monde nouveau1966Sean Connery (uncredited)
Thunderball1965James Bond
The Hill1965Joe Roberts
Goldfinger1964James Bond
Marnie1964Mark Rutland
Woman of Straw1964Anthony 'Tony' Richmond
From Russia with Love1963James Bond
Dr. No1962James Bond
The Longest Day1962Pvt. Flanagan
Anna Karenina1961TV MovieCount Alexis Vronsky
Operation Snafu1961Pedlar Pascoe
The Frightened City1961Paddy Damion
Adventure Story1961TV MovieAlexander, King of Macedon
Macbeth1961TV MovieMacbeth
ITV Play of the Week1956-1960TV SeriesConnolly / John Proctor / Rick Martell / ...
Without the Grail1960TV MovieInnes Corrie
An Age of Kings1960TV SeriesHarry Percy, surnamed Hotspur
Riders to the Sea1960TV ShortBartley
BBC Sunday-Night Play1960TV Mini-SeriesJulien
Tarzan's Greatest Adventure1959O'Bannion
Darby O'Gill and the Little People1959Michael McBride
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color1959TV SeriesMichael MacBride
Armchair Theatre1958TV Series
Women in Love1958TV MovieJohnnie in 'The Return'
Another Time, Another Place1958Mark Trevor
ITV Television Playhouse1957TV SeriesMat Burke
Time Lock1957Welder #1
Action of the Tiger1957Mike
Anna Christie1957TV MovieMat Burke
Hell Drivers1957Johnny Kates
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre1957TV SeriesMountain McClintock
Blood Money1957TV MovieHarlan 'Mountain' McClintock
No Road Back1957Spike
The Jack Benny Program1957TV SeriesPorter
Sailor of Fortune1956TV SeriesAchmed
The Condemned1956TV Movie
Dixon of Dock Green1956TV SeriesJoe Brasted
Simon1954ShortPoliceman
Let's Make Up1954Undetermined Role (uncredited)

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sir Billi2012executive producer - as Sir Sean Connery
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen2003executive producer
Finding Forrester2000producer
Entrapment1999producer
The Rock1996executive producer
Just Cause1995executive producer
Rising Sun1993executive producer
Medicine Man1992executive producer
The Offence1973co-executive producer
The Bowler and the Bunnet1967Documentary producer

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
In My Life2017performer: "In My Life"
The Age of Believing: The Disney Live Action Classics2008TV Movie documentary performer: "Pretty Irish Girl" - uncredited
The Rock1996performer: "San Francisco Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your Hair" - uncredited
Dr. No1962performer: "Under the Mango Tree" - uncredited
Darby O'Gill and the Little People1959performer: "Pretty Irish Girl"

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Bowler and the Bunnet1967Documentary

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Memories of Me1988special thanks

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Dream Factory1975DocumentaryHimself
Treffpunkte1975TV Series documentaryHimself
Call It Magic1975Documentary shortHimself
The Making of 'The Wind and the Lion'1975Documentary shortHimself (uncredited)
España campo de golf1972Documentary shortHimself
Film Night1971TV SeriesHimself
Cinema1969TV Series documentaryHimself
Now and Then1967TV Series documentary shortHimself (1967)
The Bowler and the Bunnet1967DocumentaryHimself
The Heart of Show Business1967TV MovieHimself - Performer
Whicker's World1967TV SeriesHimself
The Castles of Scotland1967Documentary shortHimself - Narrator (voice)
The Sammy Davis, Jr. Show1966TV SeriesHimself - Guest Host
Flashes Festival1965Documentary shortHimself
What's My Line?1965TV SeriesHimself - Mystery Guest
Pariser Journal1965TV Series documentaryHimself
The Sun... the Sand... the Hill.1965Documentary shortHimself
Variety Club Awards1964TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Guns of James Bond1964Documentary shortHimself / Host / James Bond
Juke Box Jury1962-1963TV SeriesHimself - Panellist
Close Up2012DocumentaryHimself
Ever to Excel2012DocumentaryHimself
Sean Is Back2009Video documentary short
The Big Gamble2009Video documentary short
Franco Cristaldi e il suo cinema Paradiso2009Documentary
Sex Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll: The 60s Revealed2008TV Series documentaryHimself
The South Bank Show2008TV Series documentaryHimself
Infinite Space: The Architecture of John Lautner2008DocumentaryHimself
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Al Pacino2007TV MovieHimself
Nice People2007TV SeriesHimself
Modern Greeks: C.P. Cavafy2007TV Movie documentaryNarrator - reciting 'Ithaka' (voice)
Sean Connery from the Set of 'Goldfinger'2006Video shortHimself
Bill Suitor: The Rocket Man Movies2006Video documentary shortHimself / James Bond
Ken Adam's Production Films: Thunderball2006Video documentary shortHimself
Ken Adam's Production Films: You Only Live Twice2006Video documentary shortHimself
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Sean Connery2006TV SpecialHimself
Animated Storyboard Sequence: The Boat Chase2006VideoHimself
Sean Connery 1971: The BBC Interview2006VideoHimself
Breakfast2005TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Corazón de...2005TV SeriesHimself
The 2005 European Film Awards2005TV SpecialHimself - Winner European Film Academy Lifetime Achievement Award
This Game of Golf: The Life and Golfing Times of Henry Cotton2005Video documentaryHimself - Commentator
20h10 pétantes2005TV SeriesHimself
Making 'Murder on the Orient Express'2004Video documentaryHimself
La semaine du cinéma2004TV SeriesHimself
The 76th Annual Academy Awards2004TV SpecialHimself - Opening Announcer
Assembling the League2003Video documentaryHimself / Allan Quatermain
Indiana Jones: Making the Trilogy2003Video documentaryHimself
Intimate Portrait2003TV Series documentaryHimself
Parkinson2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno1995-2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 75th Annual Academy Awards2003TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Best Actress in a Supporting Role / Past Winner
James Bond: A BAFTA Tribute2002TV Movie documentaryHimself
Best Ever Bond2002TV Movie documentaryHimself
Sean Connery, an Intimate Portrait2002DocumentaryHimself
Secrets of Superstar Fitness2002TV SeriesHimself
Leute heute2002TV Series documentaryHimself
Gran premio internazionale della TV2002TV SeriesHimself - Winner
Behind the Scenes: Finding Forrester2001Video documentaryHimself
Jackie Stewart: The Flying Scot2001DocumentaryHimself
Inside 'From Russia with Love'2000Video documentary shortHimself
Late Show with David Letterman1993-2000TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The BBC and the BAFTA Tribute to Michael Caine2000TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Rosie O'Donnell Show2000TV SeriesHimself - Guest
HBO First Look1999-2000TV Series documentary shortHimself
Inside 'Dr. No'2000Video documentary shortHimself
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts1999TV SpecialHimself - Honoree
The 1999 European Film Awards1999TV SpecialHimself (taped)
Mondän!1999TV Series documentaryHimself
Heroes of Comedy1999TV Series documentaryHimself
The James Bond Story1999TV Movie documentaryHimself - Interviewee / James Bond
The 56th Annual Golden Globe Awards1999TV Special documentaryHimself - Presenter
Showbiz Today1999TV SeriesHimself
Billy Connolly: Erect for 30 Years1999Video documentaryHimself
30 Years of Billy Connolly1998TV Mini-SeriesHimself
Junket Whore1998DocumentaryHimself
The 52nd Annual Tony Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Winner
The 50th British Academy Film Awards1998TV SpecialHimself: Winner: Honorary Award
The 70th Annual Academy Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Best Picture / Past Winner (uncredited)
The 1998 Annual ShoWest Awards1998TV SpecialHimself
Sean Connery Close Up1997Video documentaryHimself
Scene by Scene1997TV SeriesHimself
The Rock Premiere on Alcatraz1996Video shortHimself
The Evening Standard Drama Awards1996TV SpecialHimself
Mundo VIP1996TV SeriesHimself
The 53rd Annual Golden Globe Awards1996TV SpecialHimself - Cecil B. DeMille Award Recipient
Crook & Chase1996TV SeriesHimself
Happy Birthday Shirley1996TV MovieHimself - Pre-recorded footage (uncredited)
Behind the Scenes with 'Thunderball'1995Video documentaryHimself
In Search of James Bond with Jonathan Ross1995TV Movie documentaryHimself / James Bond
Behind the Scenes with 'Goldfinger'1995Video documentary shortHimself
Highlanders1995TV Series documentaryHimself - Narrator (voice)
Superstars of Action1993TV SeriesHimself
30 Years of James Bond1992TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson1975-1992TV SeriesHimself / Himself - Guest / Daniel Dravot from film THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING
Omnibus1970-1991TV Series documentaryHimself
Where Eagles Fly: Scottish Fantasia1991TV Movie documentaryHimself - Narrator (voice)
Sinatra 75: The Best Is Yet to Come1990TV Special documentaryHimself
Wogan1990TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 61st Annual Academy Awards1989TV SpecialHimself - Presenter
Premiere: Inside the Summer Blockbusters1989TV Movie documentaryHimself
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Jack Lemmon1988TV Special documentaryHimself (uncredited)
The 60th Annual Academy Awards1988TV SpecialHimself - Winner: Best Actor in a Supporting Role & Presenter: Best Visual Effects
Aspel & Company1987-1988TV SeriesHimself - Guest
La rosa dei nomi1987TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Men: The Making of 'Untouchables'1987Video documentary shortHimself
The Dame Edna Experience1987TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Last Resort with Jonathan Ross1987TV SeriesHimself
Biography1987TV Series documentaryHimself
La nuit des Césars1987TV Series documentaryHimself - Le président des Césars
Good Morning Britain1987TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Die Abtei des Verbrechens: Umberto Ecos 'Der Name der Rose' wird verfilmt1986TV Movie documentaryHimself
Apropos Film1983TV Series documentaryHimself
G'olé!1983DocumentaryCommentary (voice)
Sean Connery's Edinburgh1983Documentary shortHimself
The Mike Douglas Show1976-1979TV SeriesHimself - Guest / Himself - Co-Host
Dinah!1975-1979TV SeriesHimself - Guest
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Alfred Hitchcock1979TV Movie documentaryHimself
Revista de cine1977TV SeriesHimself
A New Look at the Legend of Robin Hood and Maid Marian1976Documentary shortRobin Hood

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The EE British Academy Film Awards2017TV Special
National Endowment for the Arts: United States of Arts2017TV Series documentary shortHimself
Wajda by Wajda2016TV Movie documentaryHimself
Extra2016TV SeriesHimself
The One Show2016TV SeriesHimself
Inside Spectre with Richard Wilkins2015TV Movie documentaryHimself
Timeshift2009-2015TV Series documentaryHimself
The Shadow of 'Spectre'2015Video documentary shortJames Bond
Sean Connery: In His Own Words2015TV Movie documentaryHimself
Talking Pictures2015TV Series documentaryHimself
Le Fossoyeur de Films2015TV Mini-Series documentary
Wogan: The Best Of2015TV SeriesHimself
The O'Reilly Factor2008-2014TV SeriesJames Bond / Himself / Various Roles (segment "American Movie Icon")
Carson on TCM2014TV Series documentaryHimself
Spanish Western2014DocumentaryHimself
Edición Especial Coleccionista2011-2012TV SeriesJames Bond / Mark Rutland
Top Gear2012TV SeriesJames Bond
Everything or Nothing2012DocumentaryHimself
Being Bond: Celebrating Five Decades of Bond 0072012Video documentary shortHimself / James Bond
World of Bond2012Video documentary shortJames Bond
Österreich-Bild2012TV Series documentaryHimself
Shakespeare Uncovered2012TV Mini-Series documentaryMacbeth
America's Book of Secrets2012TV Series documentaryJames Bond
Wags of '662011TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Many Faces of...2011TV Series documentaryHimself / Daniel Dravot
Moguls & Movie Stars: A History of Hollywood2010TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Gilles Jacob: CIitizen Cannes2010TV Movie documentaryHimself
Casper och den förbjudna filmen2009TV Movie documentaryHimself
Memòries de la tele2009TV SeriesHimself
Hollywood sul Tevere2009DocumentaryHimself
Revealed2009TV Series documentaryJames Bond
20 to 12006-2009TV Series documentaryHimself / James Bond
The Age of Believing: The Disney Live Action Classics2008TV Movie documentaryMichael McBride
Oscar, que empiece el espectáculo2008TV Movie documentaryHimself (uncredited)
Agatha Christie: A Woman of Mystery2007Video documentaryCol. Arbuthnot (in 'Murder on the Orient Express')
Cannes, 60 ans d'histoires2007TV Movie documentaryHimself
Ein Leben wie im Flug2007TV MovieHimself
5 News2007TV SeriesHimself - RNIB Promotion
ITV Evening News2007TV SeriesHimself - RNIB Appeal
London Tonight2007TV SeriesHimself - RNIB Promotion
Wetten, dass..?2006TV SeriesJames Bond
World of Robin Hood2006TV Movie documentaryRobin Hood (uncredited)
On Tour with the Aston Martin DB52006Video documentary shortHimself
Premiere Bond: Opening Nights2006Video documentary shortHimself
Thunderball Boat Show Promo2006Video shortJames Bond
The 60s: The Beatles Decade2006TV Series documentaryHimself
I Love the '70s: Volume 22006TV SeriesHimself
Corazón de...2006TV SeriesHimself
Lesson #007: Close Quarters Combat2006VideoHimself
Ciclo Agatha Christie2005TV Series documentaryHimself
Sexes2005TV SeriesJames Bond
Tvist2005TV SeriesRobin Hood
Getaway2005TV SeriesJames Bond
Greatest TV Comedy Moments2005TV Movie documentaryHimself (uncredited)
8 Out of 10 Cats2005TV SeriesHimself
The Untouchables: Production Stories2004Video documentary shortHimself
The Untouchables: The Script, the Cast2004Video documentary shortHimself
Unsere Besten2004TV Series
Le nom de la rose2004Video documentaryWilliam of Baskerville (uncredited)
101 Biggest Celebrity Oops2004TV Special documentaryHimself - #65: Things They Shouldn't Say
30 veces 312003TV Movie documentaryHimself
Celebrities Uncensored2003TV SeriesHimself
Queen: Greatest Video Hits 22003Video documentaryJuan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez (segment "Princes of the Universe")
Brits Go to Hollywood2003TV SeriesHimself
The Light and Magic of 'Indiana Jones'2003Video documentary shortHimself
Sex at 24 Frames Per Second2003Video documentaryHimself
The Name of the Rose: Photo Video Journey with Jean-Jacques Annaud2003Video documentary shortHimself
60 Minutes2003TV Series documentaryHimself - Actor
Happy Anniversary Mr. Bond2002TV Movie documentaryHimself / James Bond
Andere Tijden2002TV Series documentaryJames Bond
Premiere Bond: Die Another Day2002TV Movie documentaryJames Bond (uncredited)
Bond Girls Are Forever2002TV Movie documentaryJames Bond (uncredited)
Introducing ... James Bond2002Video documentary shortJames Bond
Cubby Broccoli: The Man Behind Bond2000TV Short documentaryJames Bond (uncredited)
Double-O Stunts2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
Harry Saltzman: Showman2000Video documentary short
Inside 'Diamonds Are Forever'2000Video documentary shortHimself
Inside 'Octopussy'2000Video documentary shortHimself
Inside 'The Living Daylights'2000Video documentary shortHimself
Inside 'The Man with the Golden Gun'2000Video documentary shortJames Bond
Inside 'You Only Live Twice'2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
Inside Q's Lab2000Video documentary shortJames Bond
Ken Adam: Designing Bond2000Video documentary shortHimself / James Bond
Silhouettes: The James Bond Titles2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
The Bond Sound: The Music of 0072000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
The Men Behind the Mayhem: The Special Effects of James Bond2000Video documentary shortHimself
Omnibus2000TV Series documentaryJames Bond
The Trouble with Marnie2000TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Directors2000TV Series documentaryKing Agamemnon
Terence Young: Bond Vivant2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
Now Pay Attention 007: A Tribute to Actor Desmond Llewelyn2000TV Movie documentaryJames Bond (uncredited)
Inside 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service'2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
Tribute to Desmond Llewelyn2000Video documentary shortJames Bond (uncredited)
Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 11999TV Movie documentaryHimself (uncredited)
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: A Look Inside1999TV Movie documentaryProf. Henry Jones
Inside 'Live and Let Die'1999Video documentary shortHimself
And the Word Was Bond1999TV Movie documentaryHimself
Bravo Profiles1999TV Series documentaryHimself
Antes de ser famosos1998TV Movie documentaryHimself
Wild On...1997TV SeriesHimself
Nobody Does It Better: The Music of James Bond1997TV Movie documentaryJames Bond
The Secrets of 007: The James Bond Files1997TV Movie documentaryJames Bond
The Making of 'Dragonheart'1997Video documentaryDraco
James Bond 007: Yesterday and Today1996Video documentary shortHimself
Inside 'Thunderball'1995Video documentary shortJames Bond
Three Decades of James Bond 0071995Video documentary shortHimself
Kicking & Screaming1995TV Series documentaryHimself
The World of James Bond1995TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Goldfinger Phenomenon1995Video documentary shortHimself
100 Years at the Movies1994TV Short documentaryHimself
Audrey Hepburn Remembered1993TV Movie documentaryRobin Hood
Comic Relief: The Invasion of the Comic Tomatoes1993TV SpecialHimself on 'Wogan'
Fame in the Twentieth Century1993TV Series documentaryHimself (uncredited)
Tribulation 99: Alien Anomalies Under America1992James Bond (uncredited)
Wogan1991TV SeriesHimself
The Many Faces of Bond1989Video documentaryHimself (uncredited)
John Huston: The Man, the Movies, the Maverick1988DocumentaryHimself (uncredited)
The World's Greatest Stunts: A Tribute to Hollywood Stuntmen1988TV Movie documentary
Happy Anniversary 007: 25 Years of James Bond1987TV Movie documentaryHimself
James Bond 007: Coming Attractions1984TV Movie documentaryHimself
Bonds Are Forever1983Video documentaryJames Bond / Himself
The Lion Roars Again1975Documentary shortHimself, clip from 'The Wind and the Lion' (uncredited)
Welcome to Japan, Mr. Bond1967TV MovieJames Bond
Telescope1965TV Series documentaryHimself
The Incredible World of James Bond1965TV Movie documentaryHimself
Take Thirty1965TV SeriesHimself
The Ed Sullivan Show1965TV SeriesActor
Goldfinger Original Promotional Featurette1964Video shortJames Bond
Dr. No Featurette1963Documentary shortJames Bond

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2011CinEuphoriaCinEuphoria AwardsCareer - Honorary Award
2006Life Achievement AwardAmerican Film Institute, USA
2006Golden Marc'Aurelio Acting AwardRome Film Fest
2005Lifetime Achievement AwardEuropean Film Awards
2002Special Prize for Outstanding Contribution to World CinemaKarlovy Vary International Film Festival
2002TelegattoTelegatto, ItalySpecial award Cinema on TV (Premio speciale cinema in TV)
2001Christopher AwardChristopher AwardsFeature FilmsFinding Forrester (2000)
2001Lifetime Achievement AwardPalm Springs International Film Festival
1999Audience AwardEuropean Film AwardsBest European ActorEntrapment (1999)
1999Lifetime Achievement AwardShoWest Convention, USA
1998Academy FellowshipBAFTA Awards
1997Blockbuster Entertainment AwardBlockbuster Entertainment AwardsFavorite Supporting Actor - Action/AdventureThe Rock (1996)
1997Gala TributeFilm Society of Lincoln Center
1997MTV Movie AwardMTV Movie AwardsBest On-Screen DuoThe Rock (1996)
1997OFTA Film AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceDragonHeart (1996)
1996Cecil B. DeMille AwardGolden Globes, USA
1995Lifetime Achievement AwardAcademy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA
1993Career Achievement AwardNational Board of Review, USA
1992American Cinematheque AwardAmerican Cinematheque Gala Tribute
1989Jupiter AwardJupiter AwardBest International ActorIndiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
1988OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Untouchables (1987)
1988Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion PictureThe Untouchables (1987)
1988BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest ActorDer Name der Rose (1986)
1988ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsActor of the YearThe Untouchables (1987)
1987Film Award in GoldGerman Film AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role (Beste darstellerische Leistung - Männliche Hauptrolle)Der Name der Rose (1986)
1987KCFCC AwardKansas City Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Supporting ActorThe Untouchables (1987)
1987NBR AwardNational Board of Review, USABest Supporting ActorThe Untouchables (1987)
1987Commander of the Order of Arts and LettersOrder of Arts and Letters, France
1986Jupiter AwardJupiter AwardBest International ActorDer Name der Rose (1986)
1985BambiBambi AwardsFilm - International
1984Man of the YearHasty Pudding Theatricals, USA
1982Special AwardShoWest Convention, USAWorldwide Star of the Year
1977Special DavidDavid di Donatello AwardsFor his contributions as actor.
1972Henrietta AwardGolden Globes, USAWorld Film Favorite - MaleTogether with Charles Bronson
1966Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsAction PerformanceThunderball (1965)
1965Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsAction PerformanceGoldfinger (1964)
1964Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsTop Male New Face

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2007Gold Derby AwardGold Derby AwardsLife Achievement (Performer)
2001DFWFCA AwardDallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association AwardsBest ActorFinding Forrester (2000)
2001Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture, DramaFinding Forrester (2000)
2000Blockbuster Entertainment AwardBlockbuster Entertainment AwardsFavorite Actor - ActionEntrapment (1999)
2000Razzie AwardRazzie AwardsWorst Screen CoupleEntrapment (1999)
1999Razzie AwardRazzie AwardsWorst Supporting ActorThe Avengers (1998)
1999Stinker AwardThe Stinkers Bad Movie AwardsWorst On-Screen CoupleEntrapment (1999)
1998Stinker AwardThe Stinkers Bad Movie AwardsWorst Supporting ActorThe Avengers (1998)
1991BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest ActorThe Hunt for Red October (1990)
1990Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion PictureIndiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
1990BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest Actor in a Supporting RoleIndiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
1988BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Untouchables (1987)
1987Silver RibbonItalian National Syndicate of Film JournalistsBest Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero)Der Name der Rose (1986)
1982Saturn AwardAcademy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USABest ActorOutland (1981)
1982People's Choice AwardPeople's Choice Awards, USAFavorite Motion Picture Actor
1981People's Choice AwardPeople's Choice Awards, USAFavorite Motion Picture Actor
1969Henrietta AwardGolden Globes, USAWorld Film Favorite - Male
1968Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsMale Star11th place.
1967Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsMale Star8th place.
1966Henrietta AwardGolden Globes, USAWorld Film Favorite - Male
1966Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsMale Star7th place.

2nd Place Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1988NSFC AwardNational Society of Film Critics Awards, USABest Supporting ActorThe Untouchables (1987)
1987LAFCA AwardLos Angeles Film Critics Association AwardsBest Supporting ActorThe Untouchables (1987)
1987NYFCC AwardNew York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Supporting ActorThe Untouchables (1987)
1966Bravo Otto GermanyBravo OttoBest Actor (Schauspieler)

3rd Place Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1967Bravo Otto GermanyBravo OttoBest Actor (Schauspieler)
1965Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsMale Star
1964Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsTop Action PerformanceDr. No (1962)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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