Fleming and Kennedy: Bond and JFK, 50 Years After Dallas
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This month marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, perhaps the most famous James Bond fan of all. Let's take some time to review the ties between Ian Fleming and the President.
The two met when Kennedy was running for President in 1960. The story is best told in John Pearson’s The Life of Ian Fleming (pages 321-23):
It was CIA dinner guest John Bross who told Dulles about those ideas. Fleming had no inkling that the CIA was devising similar schemes of its own, and had begun planning for an invasion of Cuba that very month. Those schemes would lead to the Bay of Pigs disaster. Perhaps taking a direct page from Fleming, the CIA later attempted to put powder in Castro’s shoes to make his beard fall out. Then it tried killing him with shellfish toxin, poisoned cigars, and poisoned wetsuits. It even tried to blow up Castro with an explosives-filled conch shell delivered via midget submarine. But the fundamental difference between the CIA and Fleming was that the CIA was genuinely serious. Fleming was hardly that committed, and had even made Bond express sympathy for Cuban rebels in “The Quantum of Solace.”
As a matter of fact, Fleming went on to directly criticize American policy toward Cuba. In Chapter 12 of The Man with the Golden Gun, Scaramanga says “As for Mister C, he seems to be going along all right. [Hurricane] Flora was a body-blow but, largely thanks to the Americans leaning on Cuba the way they do, he’s kept the country together. If the Americans once let up on their propaganda and needling and so forth, perhaps even make a friendly gesture or two, all the steam’ll go out of the little man.”
This is a pointed rebuke of the schemes of the CIA and American government. As Fleming would later tell Playboy, "many politicians seem to like my books, I think perhaps because politicians like solutions, with everything properly tied up at the end. Politicians always hope for neat solutions, you know, but so rarely can they find them.”
Fleming had no idea how momentous his meeting with Kennedy would become. As Pearson writes:
“From that moment the American boom really began" concludes Pearson. Andrew Lycett adds “after the Life magazine article, Signet [which acquired paperback rights in 1957] weighed in with a major advertising campaign, and by the end of the year Ian had become the biggest-selling thriller writer in the United States.” In a 1962 letter to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, Fleming wrote "I am delighted to take this opportunity to thank Kennedys everywhere for the electric effect their commendation has had on my sales in America." (http://www.hmss.com/articles/lillylib.html)
Fleming even thanked Kennedy through Bond. In Chapter 10 of The Spy Who Loved Me, James Bond and Vivienne Michel have the following conversation:
Like many people around the world, Fleming partook of the idealism that surrounded Kennedy’s presidency, and even made Bond a Kennedy fan, albeit a covert one. The Spy Who Loved Me was written in early 1961, around the time that the Life article came out, and one suspects that Fleming wrote this shout-out after reading Kennedy’s endorsement.
The President reappears in You Only Live Twice when the Soviets use an atom bomb test to attempt wrecking the Anglo-American alliance and stripping Britain of its nuclear weapons, since they assume America will not "risk a nuclear war involving her territory for the sake of a more or less valueless ally." But the scheme is foiled: "President Kennedy had come out with the strongest speech of his career, and had committed total reprisals from the United States in the event of single nuclear device being exploded by the Soviet Union in any country in the world outside Soviet territory" (ch.6).
Already famous for his oratory, Kennedy is enlisted by Fleming to deliver his "strongest" speech--and for the sake of Britain! The President becomes Britain's champion and savior. Furthermore, whereas Kennedy was merely mentioned in TSWLM, here he performs a fictional act of great importance, becoming a genuine part of Bond's world. Fleming evidently thought the world of Kennedy.
In turn, Henry Brandon told Fleming that “the entire Kennedy family is crazy about James Bond” (Lycett, 383). In the White House Kennedy would even sometimes ask Brandon for news of Fleming. “Kennedy,” said Brandon, “was fascinated by the line dividing Ian’s real life from the fantasy life that went into his books. He often asked me how such an intelligent, mature, urbane sort of man could have such an element of odd imagining in his make-up” (Pearson, 323).
When the film of Dr. No was released shortly before the Cuban missile crisis, Kennedy arranged a screening at the White House (it would fascinating to hear what he thought of the film and Sean Connery). And it is said that From Russia With Love was the last film Kennedy watched before leaving for Dallas. The night before his assassination, both Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald were said to be reading Bond novels. There might be some truth to this: the FBI’s files on Oswald reveal that two Bond novels – Live and Let Die and The Spy Who Loved Me – were among Oswald’s possessions. (The page from the FBI’s file can be downloaded at http://www.spyculture.com/the-lee-harvey-oswald-ian-fleming-connection/.)
For Fleming the news of Kennedy’s death arrived three days into the Thunderball court case. It must have been a great blow for him, arriving on top of an already stressful ordeal. In Fleming's posthumously published Playboy interview (http://debrief.commanderbond.net/topic/8164-ian-fleming-interviews/#entry833263) he attempted to describe Bond’s appeal to Kennedy: “I think perhaps that Bond's sort of patriotic derring-do was in keeping with the President's own concept of endurance and courage and grace under pressure.”
Since his first meeting with the Kennedys, Fleming had maintained contact with the family, sending them inscribed copies of his books. In the spring of 1964 Bobby Kennedy poignantly thanked Fleming for a signed copy of You Only Live Twice--on a black-edged card he wrote “I wish someone else could read it also” (Pearson, 323).
Fleming went on to paid tribute to the fallen president in The Man With the Golden Gun, begun less than three months after Kennedy’s death. From Chapter 7:
It’s a fittingly hedonistic tribute. And, as Fleming words it, a tribute from one writer to another.
John F. Kennedy was the closest any American President came to being James Bond: a cool, collected, hard-drinking glamorous playboy. Sophisticated, witty, handsome, and dashing, Kennedy seemed like a dream-world President, a Chief Executive Bond. But like all dreams, Kennedy was not for real. Far less sophisticated than his image, his womanizing was far more sordid than Bond’s. And though he emulated 007, the results were fiascoes like the Bay of Pigs. His vigor and dynamism (an illusion produced by immense quantities of prescription drugs) disguised the fact that his Presidency was a legislative disappointment. Yet Kennedy’s candid wit and glamor persist. And he displayed truly Bondian qualities in the Cuban missile crisis. As the lone voice of sanity among his advisers, he showed the “endurance and courage and grace under pressure” that Fleming praised.
And without Kennedy, what would have happened to Bond? Fleming would not have become a bestseller in the US without Kennedy’s selection of From Russia With Love. That was instrumental in creating a receptive large audience for the first Bond film, Dr. No. Without that, the movie might have tanked and Bond would not have continued. Without the national interest created by Kennedy, United Artists might not have bankrolled Bond in the first place. It was American interest, backed by American money, that made the Bond films possible. Without Kennedy that interest might not have been enough.
So John F. Kennedy was not only the most famous Bond fan of all time—he may have been the most influential as well.
And yet he wouldn't have been a fan of the Bond books if it hadn't been for the secret heroine of our story, Marion “Oatsie” Leiter.
She had been an old friend of the Kennedys since her youth in South Carolina. Five years before Fleming met JFK, she introduced Kennedy to Bond by giving him a copy of Casino Royale to read while he recovered from back pain in Newport, Rhode Island (Lycett, 367). Oatsie and her husband Thomas Leiter got to know Ian Fleming in Jamaica in the early 50s, after befriending Ivar Bryce in Washington during the war, and Fleming paid tribute to the couple by giving Felix Leiter their surname.
According to an interview (http://blog.oup.com/2006/12/colonel_oates_t/) with her, “Fleming had promised Oatsie that he would name a character in one of his thrillers after her, but he died in 1964 before he could make it happen.” That interview was from 2006, when Mrs. Leiter had turned 87. If this remarkable woman is still alive, we all owe her a debt. Without her, Fleming would not have met JFK, who might not have been spurred on to list From Russia With Love. So perhaps Oatsie Leiter is the most influential Bond fan of them all. In any case, she was certainly a true friend of Ian Fleming.
The two met when Kennedy was running for President in 1960. The story is best told in John Pearson’s The Life of Ian Fleming (pages 321-23):
On the way back from Goldeneye [Fleming] accepted an invitation from the Sunday Times correspondent in Washington [D.C.], Henry Brandon, to stay for a couple of days with him. [...]
When Fleming went to see his friend Mrs. Marion “Oatsie” Leiter on Sunday, March 13, she mentioned that she was dining with the Kennedys that evening. After lunch at her house she was driving Fleming through Georgetown in her white Chrysler when she spotted the Kennedys strolling along P Street. She stopped the car and asked them if she could bring a visitor to Washington to dinner with them that evening. As a matter of fact, he was with her right now.
“Who’s that?” asked Kennedy politely.
She introduced them. “Mr. Ian Fleming--Senator Kennedy.”
Kennedy studied Fleming for a moment and said as they shook hands, “James Bond? But of course, by all means--do please come.” [Fleming later embellished the story by having Kennedy say “THE Ian Fleming?”]
There were seven for dinner at the Kennedy’s house that evening, the guests being Mrs. Leiter and Ian Fleming, journalist Joseph Alsop, painter William Walton, and a man from the CIA, John Bross.
During dinner the talk largely concerned itself with the more arcane aspects of American politics and Fleming was attentive but subdued. But with coffee and the entrance of Castro into the conversation he intervened in his most engaging style.
[Andrew Lycett adds “When conversation came round to Cuba, Fleming “mentioned he had just completed a book (Thunderball) which dealt tangentially with this very subject” (page 367)]
Cuba was already high on the headache list of Washington politicians, and another of those what’s to-be-done conversations began to develop. Fleming laughed ironically and began to develop the theme that the United States was making altogether too much fuss about Castro – they were building him into a world figure, inflating him instead of deflating him. It would be perfectly simple to apply one or two ideas which would take all the steam out of the Cuban.
Kennedy studied the handsome Englishman, rather as puzzled admirals used to study him in the days of Room 39. Was he an oddball or something more? What ideas had mister Fleming in mind?”
“Ridicule, chiefly,” said Fleming. And with immense seriousness and confidence he developed a spoof proposal for giving Castro the James Bond treatment. There were, he said, three things which really mattered to the Cubans: money, religion, and sex. Therefore:
1. The United States should send planes to scatter Cuban money over Havana, accompanying it with leaflets showing that it came with compliments of the United States.
2. Using the Guantanamo base, the United States should conjure up some religious manifestation, say a cross of sorts, in the sky which induce the Cubans to look constantly skyward.
3. The United States should send planes over Cuba dropping pamphlets, with the compliments of the Soviet Union, to the effect that owing to American atom-bomb tests the atmosphere over the island had become radioactive; that radioactivity is held longest in beards; and that radioactivity makes men impotent. As a consequence the Cubans would shave off their beards, and without bearded Cubans there would be no revolution.
He kept his foot on the pedal on for ten minutes, and it was a great success. [...] He was impressed by the Senator’s concentration on him and then the “royal” dismissal as Kennedy turned to the other guests.
Early the next morning Fleming left Washington for New York, but the evening at the Kennedys’ was to have its own hilarious postscript. Half an hour after Fleming had left, Allen Dulles telephoned Henry Brandon. Already he had heard of the secret weapon for demolishing Castro and regretted that he wasn’t able to hear about Fleming’s ideas in person.
It was CIA dinner guest John Bross who told Dulles about those ideas. Fleming had no inkling that the CIA was devising similar schemes of its own, and had begun planning for an invasion of Cuba that very month. Those schemes would lead to the Bay of Pigs disaster. Perhaps taking a direct page from Fleming, the CIA later attempted to put powder in Castro’s shoes to make his beard fall out. Then it tried killing him with shellfish toxin, poisoned cigars, and poisoned wetsuits. It even tried to blow up Castro with an explosives-filled conch shell delivered via midget submarine. But the fundamental difference between the CIA and Fleming was that the CIA was genuinely serious. Fleming was hardly that committed, and had even made Bond express sympathy for Cuban rebels in “The Quantum of Solace.”
As a matter of fact, Fleming went on to directly criticize American policy toward Cuba. In Chapter 12 of The Man with the Golden Gun, Scaramanga says “As for Mister C, he seems to be going along all right. [Hurricane] Flora was a body-blow but, largely thanks to the Americans leaning on Cuba the way they do, he’s kept the country together. If the Americans once let up on their propaganda and needling and so forth, perhaps even make a friendly gesture or two, all the steam’ll go out of the little man.”
This is a pointed rebuke of the schemes of the CIA and American government. As Fleming would later tell Playboy, "many politicians seem to like my books, I think perhaps because politicians like solutions, with everything properly tied up at the end. Politicians always hope for neat solutions, you know, but so rarely can they find them.”
Fleming had no idea how momentous his meeting with Kennedy would become. As Pearson writes:
On March 17 [1961] James Bond had received the biggest boost of his career. In an article in Life magazine on the reading habits of President Kennedy [...] Hugh Sidey gave an authorized list of ten favorite books of the President. It was an impressive affair, as it was presumably intended to be. Lord David Cecil’s biography of Lord Melbourne headed it. Buchan’s Montrose and Churchill’s Marlborough followed. And just beating M. de Stendahl’s The Red and the Black to ninth place was From Russia With Love by Ian Fleming.
[...] Arthur Schlesinger has hinted that it was little more than part of a publicity build-up of the new President, and it seems possible that when the presidential press secretary was compiling the list he slipped in From Russia With Love at ninth place to show that the President could be an egghead yet remain human.
Nevertheless, both the Kennedys had undoubtedly read and enjoyed the early Bond books. According to Allen Dulles it was Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy herself who introduced him to From Russia With Love with the words, “Here is a book you should have, Mr. Director.” [Page 323.]
“From that moment the American boom really began" concludes Pearson. Andrew Lycett adds “after the Life magazine article, Signet [which acquired paperback rights in 1957] weighed in with a major advertising campaign, and by the end of the year Ian had become the biggest-selling thriller writer in the United States.” In a 1962 letter to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, Fleming wrote "I am delighted to take this opportunity to thank Kennedys everywhere for the electric effect their commendation has had on my sales in America." (http://www.hmss.com/articles/lillylib.html)
Fleming even thanked Kennedy through Bond. In Chapter 10 of The Spy Who Loved Me, James Bond and Vivienne Michel have the following conversation:
"It’s nothing but a complicated game, really. But then so’s international politics, diplomacy--all the trappings of nationalism and the power complex that goes on between countries. Nobody will stop playing the game. It’s like the hunting instinct."
"Yes, I see. It all seems idiotic to my generation. Like playing that old game 'Attaque', really. We need some more Jack Kennedys. It’s all these old people about. They ought to hand the world over to younger people who haven't got the idea of war stuck in their subconscious. As if it were the only solution. Like beating children. It's much the same thing. It's all out of date--Stone Age stuff."
He smiled. "As a matter of fact I agree, but don't spread your ideas too widely or I'll find myself out of a job."
Like many people around the world, Fleming partook of the idealism that surrounded Kennedy’s presidency, and even made Bond a Kennedy fan, albeit a covert one. The Spy Who Loved Me was written in early 1961, around the time that the Life article came out, and one suspects that Fleming wrote this shout-out after reading Kennedy’s endorsement.
The President reappears in You Only Live Twice when the Soviets use an atom bomb test to attempt wrecking the Anglo-American alliance and stripping Britain of its nuclear weapons, since they assume America will not "risk a nuclear war involving her territory for the sake of a more or less valueless ally." But the scheme is foiled: "President Kennedy had come out with the strongest speech of his career, and had committed total reprisals from the United States in the event of single nuclear device being exploded by the Soviet Union in any country in the world outside Soviet territory" (ch.6).
Already famous for his oratory, Kennedy is enlisted by Fleming to deliver his "strongest" speech--and for the sake of Britain! The President becomes Britain's champion and savior. Furthermore, whereas Kennedy was merely mentioned in TSWLM, here he performs a fictional act of great importance, becoming a genuine part of Bond's world. Fleming evidently thought the world of Kennedy.
In turn, Henry Brandon told Fleming that “the entire Kennedy family is crazy about James Bond” (Lycett, 383). In the White House Kennedy would even sometimes ask Brandon for news of Fleming. “Kennedy,” said Brandon, “was fascinated by the line dividing Ian’s real life from the fantasy life that went into his books. He often asked me how such an intelligent, mature, urbane sort of man could have such an element of odd imagining in his make-up” (Pearson, 323).
When the film of Dr. No was released shortly before the Cuban missile crisis, Kennedy arranged a screening at the White House (it would fascinating to hear what he thought of the film and Sean Connery). And it is said that From Russia With Love was the last film Kennedy watched before leaving for Dallas. The night before his assassination, both Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald were said to be reading Bond novels. There might be some truth to this: the FBI’s files on Oswald reveal that two Bond novels – Live and Let Die and The Spy Who Loved Me – were among Oswald’s possessions. (The page from the FBI’s file can be downloaded at http://www.spyculture.com/the-lee-harvey-oswald-ian-fleming-connection/.)
For Fleming the news of Kennedy’s death arrived three days into the Thunderball court case. It must have been a great blow for him, arriving on top of an already stressful ordeal. In Fleming's posthumously published Playboy interview (http://debrief.commanderbond.net/topic/8164-ian-fleming-interviews/#entry833263) he attempted to describe Bond’s appeal to Kennedy: “I think perhaps that Bond's sort of patriotic derring-do was in keeping with the President's own concept of endurance and courage and grace under pressure.”
Since his first meeting with the Kennedys, Fleming had maintained contact with the family, sending them inscribed copies of his books. In the spring of 1964 Bobby Kennedy poignantly thanked Fleming for a signed copy of You Only Live Twice--on a black-edged card he wrote “I wish someone else could read it also” (Pearson, 323).
Fleming went on to paid tribute to the fallen president in The Man With the Golden Gun, begun less than three months after Kennedy’s death. From Chapter 7:
James Bond put ice in the glass and three fingers of the bourbon and swilled it round the glass to cool it and break it down with the ice. He pulled a chair up to the window, put a low table beside it, took Profiles in Courage by Jack Kennedy out of his suitcase, happened to open it at Edmund G. Ross ('I looked down into my open grave'), then went and sat down, letting the scented air, a compound of sea and trees, breathe over his body.
It’s a fittingly hedonistic tribute. And, as Fleming words it, a tribute from one writer to another.
John F. Kennedy was the closest any American President came to being James Bond: a cool, collected, hard-drinking glamorous playboy. Sophisticated, witty, handsome, and dashing, Kennedy seemed like a dream-world President, a Chief Executive Bond. But like all dreams, Kennedy was not for real. Far less sophisticated than his image, his womanizing was far more sordid than Bond’s. And though he emulated 007, the results were fiascoes like the Bay of Pigs. His vigor and dynamism (an illusion produced by immense quantities of prescription drugs) disguised the fact that his Presidency was a legislative disappointment. Yet Kennedy’s candid wit and glamor persist. And he displayed truly Bondian qualities in the Cuban missile crisis. As the lone voice of sanity among his advisers, he showed the “endurance and courage and grace under pressure” that Fleming praised.
And without Kennedy, what would have happened to Bond? Fleming would not have become a bestseller in the US without Kennedy’s selection of From Russia With Love. That was instrumental in creating a receptive large audience for the first Bond film, Dr. No. Without that, the movie might have tanked and Bond would not have continued. Without the national interest created by Kennedy, United Artists might not have bankrolled Bond in the first place. It was American interest, backed by American money, that made the Bond films possible. Without Kennedy that interest might not have been enough.
So John F. Kennedy was not only the most famous Bond fan of all time—he may have been the most influential as well.
And yet he wouldn't have been a fan of the Bond books if it hadn't been for the secret heroine of our story, Marion “Oatsie” Leiter.
She had been an old friend of the Kennedys since her youth in South Carolina. Five years before Fleming met JFK, she introduced Kennedy to Bond by giving him a copy of Casino Royale to read while he recovered from back pain in Newport, Rhode Island (Lycett, 367). Oatsie and her husband Thomas Leiter got to know Ian Fleming in Jamaica in the early 50s, after befriending Ivar Bryce in Washington during the war, and Fleming paid tribute to the couple by giving Felix Leiter their surname.
According to an interview (http://blog.oup.com/2006/12/colonel_oates_t/) with her, “Fleming had promised Oatsie that he would name a character in one of his thrillers after her, but he died in 1964 before he could make it happen.” That interview was from 2006, when Mrs. Leiter had turned 87. If this remarkable woman is still alive, we all owe her a debt. Without her, Fleming would not have met JFK, who might not have been spurred on to list From Russia With Love. So perhaps Oatsie Leiter is the most influential Bond fan of them all. In any case, she was certainly a true friend of Ian Fleming.