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Val Guest

Read through the most famous quotes from Val Guest




And he said that he wrote the Bond character based on the character of David Niven. That's how he saw Bond.


— Val Guest


#bond #character #david #how #said

And then she finally said yes. And we have been married, I want you to know, for 51 years.


— Val Guest


#finally #i #i want you #know #married

At those times I got into... I suppose you call it a rut. I used to do comedy, comedy, comedy and I suddenly thought I ought to break away from this somehow.


— Val Guest


#break #call #comedy #got #i

I don't know how we had about eighteen international stars in it, all playing James Bond.


— Val Guest


#bond #eighteen #had #how #i

I had a terrible job letting me do anything that wasn't comedy.


— Val Guest


#comedy #had #i #job #letting

I used to write bits and pieces of comedy material for various comics that were at the Windmill... as well as my film job, I was under contract, I was allowed to do that and everything.


— Val Guest


#bits #bits and pieces #comedy #comics #contract

I wrote Murder at the Windmill. And it was accepted and we made it and it was the first film I made with Danny Angel, well the only film I actually made... I made a lot of it at the Windmill itself.


— Val Guest


#actually #angel #danny #film #first

No, we didn't shoot... in the ones that I did there were hardly any sex... there were suggestions of sex scenes but we never actually shot a sex scene as such.


— Val Guest


#any #did #hardly #i #never

Oh, yes, we were on location with Another Man's Poison, which I wrote for Bette Davis.


— Val Guest


#bette #bette davis #davis #i #location

We worked solidly for a long time together. George Marriott Edgar and myself.


— Val Guest


#george #long #long time #myself #solidly






About Val Guest






Did you know about Val Guest?

The film was a remake of an earlier picture called Ask a Policeman released in 1939 which Guest himself had co-written. He married the actress Yolande Donlan in 1954. He went on to direct produce and script a huge number of films over the following forty years with perhaps his best known work being on the first two Hammer Films Quatermass science-fiction adaptations in the 1950s: The Quatermass Xperiment (1955) and Quatermass 2 (1957).

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