-- card: 11297 from stack: in -- bmap block id: 12191 -- flags: 0000 -- background id: 11579 -- name: CONNERY -- part 2 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0000 -- rect: left=296 top=31 right=249 bottom=503 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 0 / 0 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: New Button ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp lock screen play "Connery Bond" set cursor to none unlock screen end mouseUp -- part 3 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0003 -- rect: left=469 top=315 right=337 bottom=499 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 16560 / 16560 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: New Button ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp visual effect iris open go to next card end mouseUp -- part 4 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0003 -- rect: left=311 top=315 right=337 bottom=341 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 15420 / 15420 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: New Button ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseUp visual effect iris close go to previous card end mouseUp -- part contents for background part 5 ----- text ----- Sean Connery - Before James Bond, Sean Connery was a little-known actor at the start of his career. He had had some starring roles but suffered from continual miscasting. By the time he left the Bond series, after Diamonds Are Forever, he was both a household name and an actor of international repute. Born in Edinburgh in 1929, the son of a truck driver, Connery worked at a variety of odd jobs - from bricklayer to milkman - before he landed a part in the chorus of the British stage production of South Pacific which began his career in show business. With his leisurely smile, dead-pan wit, and impassive manner, Connery epitomized the early Bond to such an extent that it seemed impossible to replace him. Worried about typecasting, however, he left the Bond series in 1971 and continues a highly successful career on the screen. Sean Connery, when he left the James Bond films, took with him the rights to the story, Thunderball. He of course could not use the title of the film, or book, but when he chose to make his own Bond film used the story of Thunderball and created, "Never Say Never Again".