Teresa “Tracy” Di Vicenzo (Diana Rigg) is the only woman ever to marry James Bond. Her first husband, an Italian count died in a car crash, an event that has fed her fatalistic approach to life.
He's been married twice, one time as part of his cover as a Japanese fisherman to Kissy Suzuki in You Only Live Twice. His only true marriage was to Contessa Teresa di Vicenzo (Tracy) in On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Do secret agents fight like they do in movies?
Bond had sexual relations with a total of 58 different women. Twenty-two percent of the women had consumed alcohol. In none of the films was any type of contraception mentioned or used. A total of 28% women did not survive the film.
Vesper Lynd is a fictional character featured in Ian Fleming's 1953 James Bond novel Casino Royale. She was portrayed by Ursula Andress in the 1967 James Bond parody, which is only slightly based on the novel, and by Eva Green in the 2006 film adaptation. Novel: MVD.
Bond and Madeleine Swann bring us on an emotional rollercoaster. "You have all the time in the world," he says. "She does have your eyes," she responds, confirming that Mathilde is his daughter.
James Bond Does Have a True Love
In the 1969 film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Bond meets Teresa Di Vicenzo (played by Diana Rigg) when he prevents her from committing suicide and then covers her casino debts.
Madeleine is the daughter of SPECTRE agent, Mr. White and his wife. In 1998, Lyutsifer Safin came to the White house in Nittedal, Norway to kill Mr. White; who had murdered his entire family on orders from SPECTRE leader Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
As the former 007 reflects at Vesper's tomb, he retrieves a piece of paper from his pocket. Bond had written the words "I miss you," which he then sets on fire and tosses in front of Vesper's tomb. This significant moment not only confirms that Vesper was Bond's greatest love.
Taking place right after Spectre, the couple's idyllic vacation to Matera, Italy is about letting the past go. But before long, SPECTRE is wreaking havoc, causing James to question whether Madeleine can be trusted. Which prevents her from breaking the big news she was about to reveal: she's pregnant with their child.
Dr. Madeleine Swann is a fictional French psychiatrist originally affiliated to the Austrian Hoffler Klinik organization. She is also the daughter of the mysterious SPECTRE member Mr. White and the lover of Secret Intelligence Service (SIS/MI6) operative James Bond, becoming the mother of his only child.
Ursula Andress
Key Data: The Bond girl that tops most lists is by far the hottest. From the very first Bond adventure, the template was set. Ursula Andress was the standard by which all followers had to be measured, and, in terms of pure beauty and sexiness, her Honey Ryder is still the sweetest Bond girl ever.
Many consider Vesper as the ultimate love for James, as these two were most definitely in love – something that's remarkable for Bond. However, it was easily destructive due to the fact that she was a double agent for Quantum and her betrayal of Bond led to her death.
Madeleine Swann is a character in the James Bond films Spectre (2015) and No Time to Die (2021), played by actress Léa Seydoux. She is the only film character to have a child with Bond.
However, despite his many screen conquests, James Bond has never sired any children in the franchise—which cannot be said for his novel canon counterpart. The original character does have a child in the novel continuity, but this is an element of James Bond's backstory that the movies are unlikely to ever touch on.
No Time to Die final international trailer (MGM)
Towards the end of the story, James Bond discovers that he fathered a child with Madeleine Swann (Léa Seydoux), named Mathilde (Lisa-Dorah Sonnet), but after being poisoned by terrorist nemesis Safin (Rami Malek), he makes a drastic decision.
Because throughout the films, Vesper's presence indicates his capacity to love and the lengths he's willing to go through to make someone else happy. If he could've saved her, if only he understood all of it. Because even as M explains it, his love for her is so achingly strong that it doesn't matter.
In 1962, Ursula Andress became the first Bond girl ever thanks to her role as Honey Ryder opposite Sean Connery in Dr. No.
Faced with the easy kill of Madeleine Swann under the ice, something makes Safin decide to save her. His later monologues imply that something connected them from that point onward and in his chat with James he reveals that they're the same. That they both love Madeleine.
There was a 17 year age gap between James Bond and Madeleine Swann, his love interest, this didn't work. The touchy-feely script was miserable and tedious.
An especially strange No Time To Die line about mosquitoes might secretly confirm the theory that Madeleine Swann is Blofeld's daughter.
He blames Madeleine for the death of his family, even though she is not her father. In fact, he seems to be acting more like Madeleine's father (a cold, calculated contract killer; wonder why she's attracted to Bond so much) than her, suggesting a kind of inter-family transference of inherited sin.