RANDOM JOTTINGS


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"Before Buffy, before Charlie's Angels, before Purdy and Emma Peel there was Modesty Blaise".

It is now fifty, yes fifty years since the first Modesty Blaise book was published which is a lowering thought as I remember them when Peter O'Donnell was first published.

I read these as a teenager and, at the time, these were regarded as pretty daring with a heroine who slept quite freely with her current lover, who was skilled in marshal arts, could climb a mountain, pothole, deep sea dive and all this looking immaculate. She had made her money running the Organisation, a syndicate with Robin Hood tendencies (cannot have a heroine being a real villain now could we?) with her partner Wilie Garvin, and had Modretired on the proceeds. She now lived in a penthouse apartment in London furnished with the finest antiques, where she fenced to keep her figure in trim and, just as a hobby you understand, installed  a workshop where she cut and faceted priceless jewelry.  Modesty spoke several languages, wore designer clothes, attended the opera and was, in short, a paragon.  I always found her extremely annoying.  However, these books portrayed a strong, independent woman who took no prisoners and at this time, despite the fact that women were burning their bras and we were in the Swinging Sixties, characters like this were pretty thin on the ground so, for that reason alone, they were worth reading.

There was also a Modesty Blaise comic strip which appeared in the daily papers and an ill fated film was produced with Terence Stamp, then at the height of his Cockney Chic persona, well cast as Willie.  However, the entire project foundered on the casting of an Italian actress Monica Vitti, in the title role.  To say she was pretty dire is an understatement and the film sank without trace. However, I gather it has now gained iconic status and is to be cherished if you find it.
 
When I worked for Camden libraries so long ago I hesitate to even contemplate it, I had the delight of the pick of the new books as they arrived and  I always looked out for the O'Donnell books another favourite author, Madeleine Brent, whose adventure stories were spiced with a dash of romance and always in an exotic setting.  The heroines in all of these books is feisty and determined and brave and resourceful under pressure.   She usually faces disaster bravely and has to deal with pretty horrid situations, be it kidnapped and kept as a slave in the wilderness of the Hindu Kush; running away from an unhappy home and joining a circus as a trapeze artist; discovering that your father who has just died in an accident was an international and highly successful thief and that somebody thinks you know where his hidden cache is and tries to force you to tell them, or being married off as a young and naive bride and discovering you are married to a brutal husband and you run away to sea to escape after his murder.

Phew….

Madeleine Brent was shortlisted twice for the Romantic Novelist's Association of the Year award and actually won in 1978.   The novels were published in eleven countries and were best sellers.

Now I do not wish to claim hindsight or that I am perceptive or clever or eagle eyed or any of these things, but it is the plain truth that way back then I remember thinking how many qualities both Modesty Blaise and Brent's heroines shared.   Perhaps this is why I enjoyed both of them so much.

Years passed and it was not until the 1990's that I discovered by sheer chance that Madeleine Brent and Peter O'Donnell were one and the same person and suddenly it all became crystal clear. THAT was why I had spotted the similarity between these spunky heroines. And then Modesty Blaise and Madeleine Brent – same initials.  Missed that totally.

Doh…

If you have not discovered Modesty, either because she passed you by or, let's face it, because you were too young, then do get hold of these and help celebrate her half century.
Happy Birthday Modesty.
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6 responses to “Modesty Blaise – Fifty Years On”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    She was more Emma Peel. Yes the marketing at the time would have made her appear the usual useless Bond girl though they have changed with the times thank goodness.

  2. Susan D Avatar

    I was always under the impression that Modesty Blaise was just a sex kitten, Bond girl type of character. (horrible sexist marketing of the times, no doubt) so I never gave her a thought. Despite loving all the Madeleine Brent books. (It was about 2000 when I found out MB’s true identity.)
    So yeah, I think taking a peek at the reissued adventures is on the books.

  3. Elaine Avatar

    All the Modesty books have been reprinted recently. I read them with great enjoyment all over again

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Sadly, Patrick McNee who played Steed has just died. I used to love that series and never missed an episode. Modesty never quite matched up to Emma Peel as far as I was concerned

  5. Joanna Avatar
    Joanna

    I have a vague memory of Modesty Blaise, although I don’t think I ever read any of the books, probably because I didn’t have access to them. But your trip down memory lane reminded me of a TV series I loved when I was growing up in the 60’s here in the US that sounds very similar. It was called Honey West, and had Anne Francis as a sexy but very capable woman who takes over her father’s detective agency – and she had a pet ocelot! It only lasted one season, and was originally based on a series of pulp detective novels. Sounds like between Modesty, Emma Peel and Honey West change was definitely happening in pop culture.
    Now I’m off to see if I can score some DVD’s of Honey West on Amazon, and will also check out Modesty Blaise!

  6. Joan Kyler Avatar

    I feel so lucky to have been a teenager in the 1960s. I was going to grow up to be just like Modesty, Emma, and the other oh so capable and strong women, gorgeous, rich, and independent. Okay, so I missed the mark a bit. I haven’t read Modesty Blaise since then, but I periodically pull out my complete set of Diana Rigg as Emma Peel in the ‘Avengers’ and binge watch them.

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