Lot 78
 

The Marc Wolff Collection: James Bond: Bond 18: Tomorrow Never Dies, Eon Productions / United Artists,1997 –

Original Production Script, Working Draft by Bruce Feirstein, David Campbell Wilson and Nicholas Meyer, dated 10 December, 1996, production code number 38 in brown marker pen and M. Wolff ownership in black ink top right of front page, brad bound, 121-pages on white sheets, many of which are highlighted in fluorescent orange marker pen, with Marc Woolf’s black ink annotations on reverse of page-5, and the film title handwritten in black marker pen across the spine in Marc’s hand, 21 x 30cm.

Provenance: The Collection of Marc Wolff, Award winning Aerial Unit Director/Stunt Pilot.

Marc Wolff has worked with Directors including, Stephen Spielberg, Ridley Scott, George Lucas, Stanley Kubrick, Mike Nichols, Kenneth Branagh, Danny Boyle, Ron Howard, Brian De Palma, J.J. Abrams, Oliver Stone, Steven Soderbergh, Wolfgang Petersen, Sam Mendes, Taylor Hackford, Mike Leigh, Michael Apted, Alejandro Inarritu, Mike Newell, Bryan Singer, Roger Spottiswoode, Tony Scott, Robert Zemeckis, Doug Liman, Christopher McQuarrie, Jan De Bont, Zack Snyder, Edward Zwick, Justin Lin, Jon Favreau, Matthew Vaughn, Guy Richie, David Yates, Dexter Fletcher and Martin Campbell, to name a few.

In 1990, Marc was the first person to fly a hot air balloon in Red Square, Moscow for Disney’s film, The Time Keeper, and during the 2012 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony, he flew the helicopter for the section flying along the River Thames, the pre-recorded sequence known as ‘Happy and Glorious’, flying straight through Tower Bridge, and piloted the helicopter the late Queen Elzabeth II appeared to parachute from above the Olympic Stadium.

Marc Wolff’s awards include, the BSC Award for 'Technical Excellence and Contribution to the Art of Aerial Cinematography', The International Moving Image Society Award for 'Services to the International Film Industry ‘, and the 1993 Award for Best Stunt for his work as aerial coordinator and stunt pilot in the film Cliffhanger, when his team transferred stunt man, Simon Crane, from the back of a DC9 airliner to the door of a Lockheed Jetstar business jet. The stunt performed near Durango, Colorado in November 1992 was a year in planning and cost one million dollars to rehearse and shoot.

Sold for £100


Condition Report

Some curling to corners of pages from use on the production, with light marks to front and last page, otherwise internally clean and overall good condition.

 

The Marc Wolff Collection: James Bond: Bond 18: Tomorrow Never Dies, Eon Productions / United Artists,1997 –

Original Production Script, Working Draft by Bruce Feirstein, David Campbell Wilson and Nicholas Meyer, dated 10 December, 1996, production code number 38 in brown marker pen and M. Wolff ownership in black ink top right of front page, brad bound, 121-pages on white sheets, many of which are highlighted in fluorescent orange marker pen, with Marc Woolf’s black ink annotations on reverse of page-5, and the film title handwritten in black marker pen across the spine in Marc’s hand, 21 x 30cm.

Provenance: The Collection of Marc Wolff, Award winning Aerial Unit Director/Stunt Pilot.

Marc Wolff has worked with Directors including, Stephen Spielberg, Ridley Scott, George Lucas, Stanley Kubrick, Mike Nichols, Kenneth Branagh, Danny Boyle, Ron Howard, Brian De Palma, J.J. Abrams, Oliver Stone, Steven Soderbergh, Wolfgang Petersen, Sam Mendes, Taylor Hackford, Mike Leigh, Michael Apted, Alejandro Inarritu, Mike Newell, Bryan Singer, Roger Spottiswoode, Tony Scott, Robert Zemeckis, Doug Liman, Christopher McQuarrie, Jan De Bont, Zack Snyder, Edward Zwick, Justin Lin, Jon Favreau, Matthew Vaughn, Guy Richie, David Yates, Dexter Fletcher and Martin Campbell, to name a few.

In 1990, Marc was the first person to fly a hot air balloon in Red Square, Moscow for Disney’s film, The Time Keeper, and during the 2012 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony, he flew the helicopter for the section flying along the River Thames, the pre-recorded sequence known as ‘Happy and Glorious’, flying straight through Tower Bridge, and piloted the helicopter the late Queen Elzabeth II appeared to parachute from above the Olympic Stadium.

Marc Wolff’s awards include, the BSC Award for 'Technical Excellence and Contribution to the Art of Aerial Cinematography', The International Moving Image Society Award for 'Services to the International Film Industry ‘, and the 1993 Award for Best Stunt for his work as aerial coordinator and stunt pilot in the film Cliffhanger, when his team transferred stunt man, Simon Crane, from the back of a DC9 airliner to the door of a Lockheed Jetstar business jet. The stunt performed near Durango, Colorado in November 1992 was a year in planning and cost one million dollars to rehearse and shoot.