Jump to content

May Day (James Bond)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
May Day
James Bond character
Grace Jones as May Day
First appearanceA View to a Kill (1985)
Portrayed byGrace Jones
In-universe information
GenderFemale
AffiliationZorin Industries
ClassificationBond girl / Henchwoman

May Day is a character in the James Bond film A View to a Kill, played by actress Grace Jones. Jones received a Best Supporting Actress nomination at the 1985 Saturn Awards for her performance.

In the film

May Day works as a bodyguard for Max Zorin, and is also his lover. She kills Achille Aubergine (escaping from Bond by jumping from the Eiffel Tower), Godfrey Tibbett and Chuck Lee. She has sexual intercourse with James Bond during the film, dominating him by being on top.[1][2][3]

When she fights Bond at the end of the film, however, May Day realizes Zorin has left her to die in his mine, and says, "And I thought that creep loved me!"[2] She then helps Bond move a bomb clear of the mine with a handcar. She willingly drives it out of the mine, where it detonates, killing her.

Casting

Grace Jones was suggested for the role by former Bond girl Barbara Bach.[4] Lisa Funnell notes that May Day was "privileged in the film's promotion, standing back-to-back with Bond in movie posters that asked, "Has James Bond finally met his match?""[5]

B. J. Worth was the stunt double in the Eiffel Tower scene.[6]

Film poster for A View to a Kill depicting James Bond and May Day.

Analysis

Commentators have extensively discussed May Day's position as a black woman, especially in regards to her strength. James Chapman argues that May Day is a "highly problematic character within the terms of the Bond series: as a dominant woman (and, moreover, a dominant black woman) she represents a challenge to Bond's masculinity which is never properly resolved." Chapman concludes that "in terms of the sexist code of the Bond films, May Day is simply too problematic to be allowed to live."[2] Kristen Shaw argues that

May Day is represented as a monstrous female: she is unapologetically violent, has superhuman strength, and seduces Bond by jumping on top of him and taking control. Although she switches allegiances at the conclusion of the film, helping Bond and sacrificing her life in the process, she remains coded as animalistic, non-human, and deviant. These black women are reduced to stereotypes; both are hyper-sexualized and represented as duplicitous and violent.[3]

Travis L. Wagner notes that May Day is "presented as being physically strong and sexually alluring." He argues that "May Day can be read as a distinct postcolonial subaltern Other". Wagner goes on to suggest that

As a subaltern, May Day decidedly lacks a voice for most of the film, often resorting to brutish, violent feats of strength to express her thoughts, all the while reinforcing the colonial rhetoric of the Other as a beast. For May Day, physical actions trump verbal expressions, and this is most notable in her sexual encounter with Bond, where she silently disrobes and jumps into bed with him.[7]

Charles Burnetts sees May Day as a "fluffer" character: a member of a group of women in the Bond films whom Bond seduces earlier in the movie but who disappear by the end and serve only to keep the male "agent" aroused until the arrival of the primary sexual object, the Bond girl. Burnetts suggests that May Day

Embodies aspects of both the “animalistic sexuality” of a colonizing white male fantasy... and a hyper-masculinity that threatens to destabilize Bond’s sexual politics. I argue that May Day serves as a high-watermark for the fluffer character, and, true to her name, as a kind of emergency distress signal with respect to the Bond film's racial and gender politics.[8]

A number of commentators compare May Day to Stacey Sutton, who is the main Bond girl in the film: Paul Simpson argues that Sutton is "consistently overshadowed by Grace Jones' May Day,"[9] Chapman suggests that May Day is a "far more memorable character" than Sutton,"[2] while Lisa Funnell says that May Day outshines the rest of cast.[5] Burnetts argues that May Day represents

An ideal of athleticism, aggression, and strength that dominates not only her childlike employer/lover Max Zorin, but Bond himself throughout the film. May Day also narratively and spatially upstages her conventionally beautiful and white Bond Girl counterpart Stacey Sutton, only to be made scarce and then finally removed like other fluffer characters in the film’s latter half. As if to register her resistance to the fluffer mantle imposed on her by the film's eventual privileging of Sutton, May Day dominates the first half of the film in narrative, sexual, and spatial terms. In at least two sequences, Bond’s surveillance of Sutton is disrupted by the entrance of May Day into his field of vision, motioning for him to turn away and mind his own business. Bond’s classical (white) male gaze, trained voyeuristically again on a "woman as image", is disrupted here by May Day, a woman of color, who turns the gaze upon Bond himself. Such gender instabilities inevitably extend to the bedroom, where Bond is uncharacteristically dominated by her, a submissiveness on his part that the film struggles to contain.[10]

Screen Rant rates May Day as the bravest of all the Bond girls.[11]

References

  1. ^ Burnetts, Charles (2015). "Bond's Bit On The Side: Race, Exoticism and the Bond "Fluffer" Character". For His Eyes Only: The Women of James Bond. Columbia University Press. p. 65. ISBN 9780231850926. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Chapman, James (2000). Licence to Thrill: A Cultural History of the James Bond Films. Columbia University Press. p. 227. ISBN 9780231120487. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  3. ^ a b Shaw, Kristen (2015). "The Politics Of Representation: Disciplining and Domesticating Miss Moneypenny in Skyfall". For His Eyes Only: The Women of James Bond. Columbia University Press. p. 75. ISBN 9780231850926. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  4. ^ Field, Matthew; Chowdhury, Ajay (2015). Some Kind of Hero: The Remarkable Story of the James Bond Films. The History Press. p. 354. ISBN 9780750966504. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  5. ^ a b Funnell, Lisa (2011). "Negotiating Shifts in Feminism: The "Bad" Girls of James Bond". Women on Screen: Feminism and Femininity in Visual Culture. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 205. ISBN 9780230301979. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  6. ^ Gilmore, Brad (2022). Bond, James Bond: Exploring the Shaken and Stirred History of Ian Fleming's 007. Mango Publishing. p. 111. ISBN 9781642505467. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  7. ^ Wagner, Travis L. (2015). ""The Old Ways Are Best": The Colonization of Women of Color in Bond Films". For His Eyes Only: The Women of James Bond. New York City: Columbia University Press. p. 56. ISBN 9780231850926. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  8. ^ Burnetts, "Bond's Bit On The Side," p. 61.
  9. ^ Simpson, Paul (2020). Bond vs. Bond. Race Point Publishing. p. 104. ISBN 9781631066962. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  10. ^ Burnetts, "Bond's Bit On The Side," p. 64.
  11. ^ Etemesi, Philip (28 January 2022). "James Bond: The 10 Best Bond Girls, Ranked By Bravery". Screen Rant. Retrieved 24 August 2022.