If you haven't heard already .... The following was lifted from the
Seattle Times, who nicked it from the L.A. Times, then passed along to me, 
then forwarded to the list. Sorry about the length of the post, but I can't 
find the actual link, and I thought some may find it interesting as I did...
Doug

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Desmond Llewelyn, best known as "Q," the faithful and canny supplier of
trick cars, reverse-firing guns, exploding toothpaste and other
spy-baiting toys through 17 of the 19 James Bond films, died yesterday of
injuries suffered in a car crash. He was 85.

Mr. Llewelyn was returning home from autographing books about his life in
the town of Firle in East Sussex south of London when his car slammed
head-on into another auto. Sussex police said the actor died of massive
multiple internal injuries after he was airlifted to a hospital. Three
people in the other car were said to be in stable condition, and no cause
was given for the accident. Mr. Llewelyn was driving alone.

Even as the actor portraying the suave British secret agent changed from
Sean Connery to George Lazenby to Roger Moore to Timothy Dalton to the
current Pierce Brosnan, Mr. Llewelyn endured. His most recent Bond caper,
"The World is Not Enough," is in theaters. Aging wisely in the current
film, Mr. Llewelyn is shown trying to train an apprentice - the comic John
Cleese - for the day he ultimately might retire.

But in real life, the actor had no intention to ease out of the franchise
that brought him his greatest fame, cinematic status and, at long last,
modest wealth. "I will play Q as long as God lets me. I have no
inclination to stop," he told a Scottish newspaper shortly before the
opening of the current film, which has Cleese, designated "R," moving into
the gadget department. Less than a month ago, Mr. Llewelyn told CBS News
he hoped to be on board for the 20th Bond installment scheduled for
release in 2002.

Meanwhile, in existing footage, Mr. Llewelyn continues to devise new
miracle gadgets for Bond, ever hopeful his prize material may survive the
mayhem-prone agent's deployment. In the 1997 "Tomorrow Never Dies," Mr.
Llewelyn's first line to Brosnan as Bond was a cautionary, "Now pay
attention, 007." His last of the film, after Bond's usual field day of
explosive action, was: "Oh, grow up, 007."

On board from the second Bond film, "From Russia with Love" in 1963, Mr.
Llewelyn resisted the director's instruction that he use a Welsh accent,
even though he was born in South Wales, the son of a Welsh coal mining
engineer. "My interpretation of the character was that of a toffee-nosed
English," Mr. Llewelyn said. "At the risk of losing the part and with
silent apologies to my native land, I launched into Q's lines using the
worst Welsh accent, followed by the same in English." The actor's version
won out.

Mr. Llewelyn missed only the first Bond film, "Dr. No" in 1962 and the
1973 "Live and Let Die," Moore's first outing as 007.

The Q character, formally named Major Boothroyd, was nicknamed "Q" for
Quartermaster, a position in the British army that specializes in sciences
for the military. No such character existed in the Ian Fleming novels
creating James Bond, although the written Bond did receive equipment from
Q Branch.

Ironically, Mr. Llewelyn said that absent the Bond cinematic magic, he was
"allergic to gadgets" and couldn't even manipulate a hotel key card
correctly.

Mr. Llewelyn spent his entire career as a character actor in supporting
roles and achieved fame only in his 50s as Q. His first film was the 1939
"Ask a Policeman."

When World War II intervened, Mr. Llewelyn joined the Royal Welsh
Fusiliers of the British army. He was captured in France and was a German
prisoner of war for five years.

He is survived by his wife of 61 years, Pamela; two sons, Ivor and Justin,
and two grandchildren.

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