😡 “I COULDN’T WAIT TO LEAVE SET!” Roger Moore’s SHOCKING List of 5 Co-Stars He Secretly LOATHED 🧨🎥

Roger Moore spent over a decade as 007, embodying the role of James Bond with cool confidence, dry wit, and a tuxedo that never wrinkled.

Roger Moore Names the 5 Co-stars He Hated Most

But while the cameras captured his charm, the reality behind the scenes wasn’t always so smooth.

According to excerpts from his memoir “My Word is My Bond” and interviews both public and private, Moore harbored real tension with several of his famous co-stars—some of whom pushed his legendary patience to the edge.

1.Grace Jones – A View to a Kill (1985)
Moore was 57.

Jones was a fierce, unapologetic force of nature.

The result? Explosive tension.

Grace Jones - IMDb

Moore admitted he was intimidated by her presence and “uncomfortable” with her behavior on set.

“She scared the hell out of me,” he once quipped.

Crew members say the clash of energies was electric—but far from friendly.

While Jones found Moore’s Bond outdated and cold, Moore found her “too unpredictable.

” They reportedly avoided each other off-camera entirely.

2.Tony Curtis – The Persuaders! (1971–1972)
Their chemistry onscreen was undeniable, but off-camera, Moore and Curtis were oil and water.

Moore later revealed that Curtis was constantly late, difficult, and—according to Moore—“impossible to trust” professionally.

Tony Curtis | Biography, Movies, & Facts | Britannica

“He was charming to the press, rude to the crew, and completely full of himself,” Moore once said.

Their working relationship was so strained that Moore refused to consider a reunion series, even when studios begged for it.

3.Christopher Lee – The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
This one shocked fans.

Moore respected Lee’s acting, but behind the scenes, he found Lee “cold and condescending.

Christopher Lee - IMDb

” The two men reportedly clashed over creative direction and character interpretations.

Moore believed Bond films should be fun and flashy, while Lee, ever the serious thespian, treated the material like Shakespeare.

“He took himself far too seriously for a Bond villain,” Moore once joked in a rare moment of candor.

4.Hervé Villechaize – The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
While Hervé’s performance as Nick Nack is iconic, Moore had deep issues with the actor’s attitude.

“He was very difficult,” Moore wrote.

Hervé Villechaize

“He demanded first-class everything, from hotels to trailers, and complained constantly.

” Tensions hit a peak when Villechaize allegedly made inappropriate comments to female crew members—behavior Moore openly condemned.

“I found him disrespectful and exhausting,” Moore admitted.

5.Tanya Roberts – A View to a Kill (1985)
Though Tanya Roberts played Bond girl Stacey Sutton with beauty and grace, Moore was reportedly frustrated by her inexperience.

At 58, Moore was already feeling too old to play Bond opposite much younger women, and Roberts’ lack of confidence only added to his discomfort.

“She was sweet, but completely lost,” Moore once said.

“It was hard to build chemistry when you feel more like a mentor than a co-star.

Despite these rocky relationships, Moore always tried to maintain his signature charm in public.

Actress TANYA ROBERTS Classic Publicity Photo Poster Picture Print 13x19 |  eBay

But friends and colleagues say he never forgot who treated him with professionalism—and who didn’t.

And while he rarely named names while alive, bits of truth slipped out in interviews, memoirs, and sly one-liners sprinkled through the years.

Fans, however, were none the wiser.

Moore’s image as the polite Bond masked these tensions flawlessly.

Now, years after his passing, we’re finally seeing the full picture of a man who, even while dodging bullets and seducing spies, was quietly keeping receipts.

Hollywood is full of egos, but few carried themselves with as much dignity—even while seething inside—as Roger Moore.

So next time you watch a Bond flick and see Moore exchanging witty banter with a co-star, remember: not all the acting was on screen.