Furthermore, numerous stuntmen and extras appeared on-screen in various parts in both franchises, but did not receive an on-screen acting credit. Of them, four (Sir Christopher Lee, John Hollis, Julian Glover, Max Von Sydow) have played Bond villains three (Jeremy Bulloch, John Hollis, Julian Glover) were in For Your Eyes Only, and three (Bruce Boa, Richard LeParmentier, and Dermot Crowley) were in Octopussy. Aide) Dermot Crowley (appeared in Return of the Jedi as General Madine, and in Octopussy as Kamp) Max von Sydow (appeared in The Force Awakens as Lor San Tekka and Never Say Never Again (1983) as Blofeld) and Daniel Craig (appeared in The Force Awakens in a cameo, and Casino Royale (2006), Quantum of Solace (2008), Skyfall (2012), Spectre (2015), and No Time to Die (2021) as James Bond himself), and David Prowse (appeared in Casino Royale (1967) as Frankenstein's Creature, and as Darth Vader in the original Star Wars trilogy). General) Richard LeParmentier (appeared in A New Hope as Admiral Conan Antonio Motti and in Octopussy as U.S. Ranger Crewman, and For Your Eyes Only (1981) and Octopussy (1983) as Smithers) John Hollis (appeared in The Empire Strikes Back as Lobot and For Your Eyes Only (1981) as Ernst Stavro Blofeld Julian Glover (appeared in The Empire Strikes Back as General Veers, and For Your Eyes Only as Aristotle Kristatos) Bruce Boa (appeared in The Empire Strikes Back as General Rieekan and Octopussy (1983) as U.S. May 4 is known as "Star Wars Day" because of the pun in the date ("May the fourth be with you.").Īs of this film, eleven actors have appeared in Star Wars and James Bond films Sir Christopher Lee (appeared in Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002) as Count Dooku, and The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) as Scaramanga) Shane Rimmer (appeared in Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977) as InCom Engineer, You Only Live Twice (1967) as Hawaii Radio Operator, Diamonds Are Forever (1971) as Tom, Live and Let Die (1973) as Hamilton, and The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) as Commander Carter) Jeremy Bulloch (appeared in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980) and Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (1983) as Boba Fett, and The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) as H.M.S. Before performing the song, Miranda and Abrams explained that the song's lyrics are in Huttese, and they translate as "No, lover lover: it wasn't me", which Miranda jokingly described as a tribute to Shaggy's 2000 reggae hit "It Wasn't Me".
Since only about 20 $10 tickets are available, but thousands of people show up each day, Miranda instituted this performance series so that the lottery ticket buyers (the vast majority of whom will never win the chance to buy a ticket) would have some consolation. This was one of the regular performances presented for the "Ham 4 Ham" lottery, the short events outside the Richard Rogers, in conjunction with the lottery for the small number of $10 tickets to "Hamilton" that are made available daily.
Miranda and Abrams performed "Jabba Flow", the cantina song from this movie that the pair had composed together.
Abrams appeared outside the Richard Rodgers Theatre on Broadway with "Hamilton" composer and star Lin-Manuel Miranda. Highest IMAX Opening-Weekend Gross ($48 million). Additionally, it set the following worldwide records: Highest Opening-Weekend Gross ($528 million). Highest Opening-Week Gross ($390 million). Highest Third-Weekend Gross ($90 million). Highest Second-Weekend Gross ($149 million). Highest IMAX Opening Weekend Gross ($30 million). Widest December Opening (4,134 theaters). Highest Opening Weekend Per Theater Average ($59,000). Highest Opening Weekend Gross ($247 million). Highest Opening-Day Gross ($119 million).
Highest Thursday Preview Gross ($57 million).
Fastest to Become Highest-Grossing Film (20 days). box-office records: Highest Gross ($934 million).