Jack Wade (Joe Don Baker)
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Character: Jack Wade
Actor: Joe Don Baker
Movie: GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies
Status: Retired
Appearance: Solid build, White/Gray hair, loud southern American
accent.
Date of Birth: 12th February 1936
Height: 6' 2½" (1.89m)
Place of Birth: Groesbeck, Texas, USA
"For crying out loud, another stiff-assed Brit...
with your secret codes and your passwords."
Pleased To Meet You
Bond arrives in freezing St. Petersburg knowing nothing about Wade except
the shape and wording of his tattoo. 007 bullies the normally jovial
Jack Wade into "dropping it" and showing him the Muffy tattoo,
a remnant of Wade's third wife.
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Personality
Although he may be a wise-cracking, world weary and cynical spook
in pay of the CIA, Jack Wade is a genuinely resourceful ally
for 007 on more than on occasion. What he lacks in style he more
than makes up for in his efficiency and ability to access top
US resources and leave them at the disposal of James Bond. Wade
refuses to call 007 "James", feeling it far too formal,
and constantly jibes at Bond by calling him "Jimbo" or "Jimmy".
Jack, like his British counterpart, James, rarely plays by the
rules - much to the annoyance of their respective superiors.
Involvement
GoldenEye - After the meeting at the car-park and
Wade gets his banged-up
motor running, Wade reintroduces 007
to an
old
nemesis, the ex-KGB agent turned mobster, Valentin
Dimitreveych Zukovsky. Wade refuses to come into the Zukovsky nightclub but
points Bond in the right direction and admires 007 for asking
Valentin for a favour. Later, Jack arranges transport for 007
and his girl, Natalya, as they scout the Cuban jungles for a
radio satellite transmitter that Janus is using to control the
GoldenEye EMP. Bond swaps his BMW for a light aircraft and reminds
Jack not to touch any of the buttons.
Tomorrow Never Dies - Jack is on hand on 007's next mission
when he needs to harness the might of the US Air Force and make
a HALO jump into unfriendly waters. Wade quips his way though
the day as James Bond prepares to make a death defying leap.
Wade comments that the US is not concerned with trying to stop
World War III unless they caused it themselves.
Trivia
In an interesting reversal, Joe Don Baker took over the role
of Bond's CIA contact, having previously starred as the Bond
villain Brad Whitaker in The
Living Daylights.
Biography
Born in Groesback, Texas, in 1936, Joe Don Baker was the son of Edna and Doyle
Baker. His first onscreen role was as an extra in Clint Eastwood's "Cool
Hand Luke" - which hit the cinemas in 1967. Although he did not receive
credit for his bit part, this sparked an interest in the cinema. His big
break arrived in 1972 when he appeared in "Junior Bonner", playing
the young brother of screen legend Steve McQueen.
His career boomed in the 1970s - what had started
out as a few cameo roles was now a prosperous career for Baker.
His 1973 role in "Charley Varrick" as the eccentric
hit man, Molly, saw him gain popularity. Baker made a household
name of himself playing the police detective Earl Eischied in "To
Kill A Cop".
Following the success of
this one-off crime drama Joe Don Baker was to be offered
$1 million for a TV series in 1980. The show was "Eischied",
a spin off of his popular character. Regrettably, "Eischied" did
not run for long - a short 12 episode season - but it was
enough to keep Baker's career at full throttle.
In the '80s, he worked on the political
and highly regarded TV-thriller "Edge of Darkness".
Directed by Martin Campbell and starring Bob Peck, Ian
McNeice and Hugh Fraser, this TV mini-series saw Baker
take one of the lead roles of Darius Jedburgh. For this
work, Baker was nominated at the British Academy Television
Awards.
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Shortly after his entrenchment in British TV,
Baker was offered the opportunity to play opposite Timothy Dalton
in 1987's "The Living Daylights". 1995's "GoldenEye" saw Martin
Campbell at the helm and he brought Baker back into the Bond
family, this time as Bond's (Pierce
Brosnan) American contact at the CIA, Jack
Wade.
In 1991, Baker worked with famed director Martin
Scorsese on "Cape Fear", where he played another hitman
opposite Robert DeNiro. Since the turn of the millennium, Joe
Don Baker has slowed his career, still appearing in token productions
including "The Dukes of Hazzard" (2005) and "The
Commission" (2003).
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