Filming

Léa Seydoux Talks Making Bond Girl History In No Time to Die


It’s a fact easily forgotten that in 24 films released across six decades, no love interest has ever played a significant part in more than one James Bond movie. But in No Time to Die, the 25th instalment of the blockbuster franchise which will mark Daniel Craig’s final appearance as the brooding secret agent, Léa Seydoux will do just that when she reprises her role from 2015’s Spectre as the enigmatic psychologist Madeleine Swann.

The 36-year-old French actor is used to making history. In 2013, she and her co-star Adèle Exarchopoulos became the first performers to be awarded the Palme d’Or alongside their director Abdellatif Kechiche for the ravishing and controversial love story Blue is the Warmest Colour. By then, Seydoux had already received César Award nominations for French dramas such as La Belle Personne (2008) and Belle Épine (2010), and had enchanted viewers with her cameo in Inglourious Basterds (2009). Then she joined the ensemble cast of The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) as a sphinx-like maid, before signing on to play the soft-spoken but fiercely intelligent and capable Swann.

In Spectre, Bond meets Swann, the daughter of the recently deceased villain Mr White (Jesper Christensen), in the secluded Austrian clinic where she works. The pair are ambushed but escape, travelling to Tangier in search of clues and later to London where, following an explosive finale, they drive off into the sunset together. Cary Joji Fukunaga’s No Time to Die picks up their story in Italy as they consider their future together, until their enemies catch up with them and Bond begins to fear that she will betray him.

Read more: Who Will Be The Next James Bond?

Ahead of the film’s release in cinemas on 30 September, Seydoux talks to Vogue about its powerful female characters, the stunts that made her nervous and her next project, Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch.

Daniel Craig and Léa Seydoux as James Bond and Madeleine Swann in No Time to Die.

Nicole Dove

Spectre ended with James Bond and Madeleine Swann leaving London together. Did you know at that point that she’d be back for the next film?

“I hoped she would, but I really thought that was Daniel’s last Bond film so when they called me to say that he was coming back, I was surprised. And then, of course, they asked me to come back. I’m happy that, this time, I had the chance to develop the character a bit more. We get to know more about her background and her relationship with her mother. Because of that, we can better understand the relationship between Bond and Madeleine and why they’re so connected. They have a lot in common. They’re both damaged, they’re orphans and Madeleine’s father was an assassin so she knows about this world. They understand each other.”

Madeleine is also so central to the film. Were you surprised to find out that she would be only the first of Bond’s many love interests to appear significantly in two films?

“She’s the heartbeat of No Time to Die. We get to know her better so we are more attached to her. That was something new for this franchise because, in the past, the women in it were not as developed. With Naomie Harris, Lashana Lynch and Ana de Armas, there’s this panel of strong women in it and there’s diversity. That, in a sense, is also very new and it was necessary. Plus, they’re not just strong characters. They have real depth.”



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