
What is Moneypenny's first name?
#1
Posted 21 June 2005 - 01:30 AM
#2
Posted 21 June 2005 - 01:37 AM
If it is her 'real' name, then I would image it would be her surname.
I know there's an answer to this, but I'm far too old and tired to be able to find it.

Cheers,
Ian
#3
Posted 21 June 2005 - 02:35 AM
#4
Posted 21 June 2005 - 02:36 AM

#5
Posted 21 June 2005 - 02:38 AM

"named after her father perhaps!".

#6
Posted 21 June 2005 - 02:49 AM

#8
Posted 21 June 2005 - 02:53 AM
#9
Posted 21 June 2005 - 03:37 AM
#10
Posted 21 June 2005 - 09:19 AM
#11
Posted 21 June 2005 - 10:05 AM
#12
Posted 21 June 2005 - 11:08 PM
Works with the surname and sounds like a sexual command.
#13
Posted 21 June 2005 - 11:19 PM
#15
Posted 22 June 2005 - 12:18 AM
#16
Posted 22 June 2005 - 04:14 AM
But of course, it's not "Penny" but rather "'Penny" which is short for Moneypenny.
#17
Posted 22 June 2005 - 09:18 AM
The closest to a first name she ever got was being called "Penny" a couple of times by Bond - in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and by Connery's Bond, but I can't remember which movie.
But of course, it's not "Penny" but rather "'Penny" which is short for Moneypenny.
It's in a few of the novels a too. Can't remember which ones though.
#18
Posted 22 June 2005 - 09:35 AM

#19
Posted 22 June 2005 - 09:46 AM

#22
Posted 22 June 2005 - 06:06 PM
Todd
#23
Posted 24 June 2005 - 02:08 AM
1. Bond has called her 'Penny' on many occasions. She never calls him by his last name and always refers to him as 'James,' so I think that in return, Bond calls her by her first name as well, which is 'Penny.'
2. ***Spoiler Ahead***This is kind of like the movie 'Closer,' when Alice reveals to Larry (Clive Owen) that her real name is Jane, but he didn't believe her, and got mad at her when she told him. It turns out that this was her real name after all, and small hints had been dropped throughout the movie. This is kind of what's happening with the whole Moneypenny situation. She's been called Penny many times, but we as the audience don't believe that this is her real name, because her last name in MoneyPENNY. I think that her name is intended to be Penny, but it's never officially revealed just to toy with the audience.
3. In OP, Moneypenny got an assisstant named PENELOPE Smallbone. I don't think that it was just a coincidence that Penelope Smallbone was a younger version of Miss Moneypenny in every way. The name Penelope Smallbone could have easily been changed to something else. Also, her character could have served as another character in a movie filled with women. I don't think that they chose the character to be Moneypenny's secretary for no reason at all.
Based on all of this evidence, my educated guess is that Moneypenny's name is indeed Penny/Penelope, but it's just a wink at the audience whenever Bond calls her 'Penny,' hinting at the fact that that's her actual name.
#25
Posted 24 June 2005 - 05:50 AM
Supposedly, the character of Moneypenny was based on an actual secretary named Vera Atkins. Maybe Moneypenny's first name is Vera...
Does anyone know if Ian Fleming got the names of his characters from actual people? (I know the whole story with Goldfinger.) If the names were inspired by actual people, then Moneypenny's first name may lie with someone who was close to him or who he associated with.
#26
Posted 24 June 2005 - 08:34 AM
I've always been of the opinion that, if she ever was given a first name, it should be "Constance," in deference to her devotion to 007. Nice allegorical punch to it.
And it leaves us with Connie, which reminds me of the far less attractive but perhaps ultimately more intelligent MI5 secretary Miss Connie Sachs (thank you, John le Carre).
What kind of a nickname is Moneypenny? Who would make something like that up? Do they even have penny's in the UK? And if so, did they have them 50 years ago when Fleming made up the name?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that at one point in England's history, there was a coin that was referred to as a "penny", if only in the vernacular.
I imagine that Moneypenny, like Q and M, is some kind of code name. It all depends on what category you put Penny in: is she the immortal unchangeable like Bond and Felix, meant to be, nudge nudge wink wink, really the same person? Or is she variable like Q and M? We may never know. I guess it's a matter of personal taste, really.
#27
Posted 24 June 2005 - 12:39 PM
Supposedly, the character of Moneypenny was based on an actual secretary named Vera Atkins.
I've heard that so many times, but the way you put it just made me stop to think. Vera Atkins was far from being a secretary, and her character was a world away from Moneypenny's. I wonder if there's any evidence at all that Fleming based Moneypenny on her. I can see a slight physical resemblance to Vera Atkins, and I suppose they were both efficient. But Moneypenny does precious little, really - Atkins recruited and trained agents, and made sure that justice was done to those who killed them in contrvaention of the Geneva Convention.
An obituary of Vera Atkins
#28
Posted 25 June 2005 - 12:26 AM
#29
Posted 25 June 2005 - 12:37 AM
#30
Posted 25 June 2005 - 12:52 AM
Moneypenny definitely has an important role in Intelligence - we've seen her as a field agent (DAF), a propoganda generator (in one of the Bros films, can't recall now, but she often seems to be putting spins on things for the news), and all-around factotum for the office. Somebody really should write about her adventures.