Sue Bond

Sue Bond

Birthday: 9 May 1945, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Height: 157 cm
Sue Bond is a blonde British actress and singer best remembered for her appearances on Benny Hill's Show in the early 1970s.Born 9 May 1945, in Aylesbury, Sue's first film appearances were in the 8mm glamour/girlie films of George Harrison Marks in the late 1960s. These early softcore films included the bizarre "Hot Teddy" in wh... Show more »
Sue Bond is a blonde British actress and singer best remembered for her appearances on Benny Hill's Show in the early 1970s.Born 9 May 1945, in Aylesbury, Sue's first film appearances were in the 8mm glamour/girlie films of George Harrison Marks in the late 1960s. These early softcore films included the bizarre "Hot Teddy" in which Sue has sex with a large cuddly teddy bear; "First You See It", features Sue as a naked fantasy woman who appears and disappears in the hero's bathroom, bedroom, dining room etc, while "Coitus - An Experience in Motion and Emotion", adopts a Pseudo sex education approach in order to show Sue and a male partner indulging in a variety of sexual positions, all of which are inter-cut with title cards offering advice to 'young married couples'. The 8mm films lead to a role in Marks' feature film The Nine Ages of Nakedness (1969) and other sex film roles including Secrets of Sex (1970) and her only lead role in the The Yes Girls (1971). She was also an extra in Anne of the Thousand Days (1969) and has a 'blink and you'll miss her' appearance in Lindsay Shonteff's film Clegg (1970) - billed as 'Suzy Bond' - as a woman who appears to have gone shopping in her underwear. Sue appeared in The Benny Hill Show for three years between 1970 and 1973, making her one of the longest serving female cast members of the pre-Hill's Angels era.In the mid-seventies Sue began to get offered more character roles in sitcoms. She claimed (to Titbits magazine) in 1975, that her ambitions at the time were to be a Bond girl in a James Bond film and appear in Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters. Neither transpired, although she did appear in a Bradford theatre production of Jack and the Beanstalk with Charlie Drake the same year.Alongside of her acting Sue also had a second career as a singer, mainly on the Northern Club Circuit. Sue's last acting credit was in the short lived revival of Mind Your Language' in 1986, although she was still performing as a singer on the cabaret circuit into the early 1990s. Show less «
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