British GQ - 04.2020

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an Fleming’s 007 first encounters
Bollinger in a typically Bondian
moment. Towards the end of
Diamonds Are Forever (1956)
he is aboard the RMS Queen
Elizabeth bound for London, with
the diamond smuggler Tiffany
Case. There’s a knock on his cabin
door and the steward enters with
a small tray.
“Bond slipped off the bed and went over and
examined the contents of the tray. He smiled to
himself. There was a quarter bottle of Bollinger,
a chafing dish containing four small slivers
of steak on toast canapés and a small bowl of
sauce. Beside this was a pencilled note that said,
‘This sauce Béarnaise has been created by Miss T
Case without my assistance,’ signed ‘The Chef’.”
This meeting with the great Champagne
house was to prove the start of an uncharac-
teristically enduring relationship. It came to the
fore on screen in Moonraker (1979, pictured)
when Bollinger became an official partner
for the franchise – and Bond leaves us in no
doubt as to his fondness. When he enters Holly
Goodhead’s hotel room, he spies a bottle on ice.
“Bollinger!” he exclaims. “If it’s ’69 you were
expecting me.” Thus, the franchise presented
enthusiasts with a more sophisticated alter-
native to ordering the spy’s Martini (is there a
more tragic look?).
To celebrate the 40th anniversary of this
partnership, which continues in next month’s
No Time To Die, Bollinger has released a limited
edition of 407 pieces: a pewter and wood
veneer case that references Moonraker’s space
shuttle, inside of which lies a magnum of
Bollinger 2007 plus a Saint-Louis crystal ice
bucket. Steak on toast canapés optional.

The cars, foes and gadgets might come and go, but
007 has one go-to that’s outlasted all the others

B ond’s

Toast

SERVE

(NOT SO SECRET)

Story by Charlie Burton

£4,500. CHAMPAGNE-BOLLINGER.COM

04-20DetailsBollinger_3491771.indd 76 11/02/2020 10:51

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