Daily 007 Set of 12 for $77,000
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We haven’t checked lately, but we’re guessing Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez didn’t register at Bed Bath & Beyond. Luckily, though, we’ve stumbled on the perfect wedding gift — at least for the groom, who not only now owns the 007 franchise but also appears to be taking styling cues from Ernst Stavro Blofeld. For a mere $77,000, you can surprise the happy couple with a rare set of original, ink-drawn panels from the long-forgotten but quietly influential James Bond newspaper comic strip, which debuted in the British press in 1958 — four years before the tuxedoed superspy ever stepped onto a soundstage.
Benjamin Svetkey at The Hollywood Reporter details that John McLusky‘s original art of the first adaptations of Ian Fleming’s James Bond for London’s Daily Express from 1958 to 1966 is sold by McLusky’s son through A Gallery Artists Ltd.

Svetkey does correct a couple of misconceptions.
“My father had to come up with what James Bond looked like,” says Sean McLusky, son of the late illustrator John McLusky, who’s now selling his father’s artwork through the London-based A Gallery. “There were descriptions of Bond in Ian Fleming’s books, but no cover drawings or anything like that. He had no face. James Bond was not visible to the public. My father had to invent his face.”
Strictly speaking, that’s not entirely true. CBS viewers got an early peek at one version of Bond in 1954, when the network aired a live, hourlong adaptation of Casino Royale. But Barry Nelson — the clean-cut actor cast as “Jimmy” Bond in that heavily Americanized production — bore about as much resemblance to 007 as Howdy Doody.

… In fact, McLusky [the younger] suspects much of that first Bond film owes a debt to his dad. “I met with the archivist from EON Productions” — the longtime Bond producers, before Amazon acquired the franchise — “and I asked to see a storyboard for Dr. No,” he recalls. “She told me there were no storyboards for that film. That’s when I realized they must’ve used my dad’s drawings. You can match scenes from his panels to the camera angles in the movie.”
Again, technically speaking, not quite…
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