<p>Sean Connery, who has died aged 90, was one of Britain's greatest film stars, earning worldwide fame and adoration for playing iconic secret agent 007, James Bond.</p>.<p>The Oscar-winning actor will always be associated with his smooth, Scottish-accented portrayal of the suave spy and was considered a sex symbol well into old age.</p>.<p>Connery was a fiercely proud Scot and a financial backer of the Scottish National Party (SNP), which advocates separating Scotland from the United Kingdom.</p>.<p>The first actor to utter the unforgettable "Bond, James Bond", Connery made six official films as novelist Ian Fleming's creation, giving what many still consider as the definitive portrayal.</p>.<p>He starred as Bond in "Dr. No" (1962), his favourite "From Russia With Love" (1963), "Goldfinger" (1964), "Thunderball" (1965), "You Only Live Twice" (1967) and "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971).</p>.<p>He made a comeback as the British spy in the unofficial 1983 film "Never Say Never Again" and was even named People Magazine's sexist man in 1989 -- just shy of his 60th birthday.</p>.<p>Thomas Sean Connery was born on 25 August 1930 in the working class Fountainbridge area of Edinburgh to a truck driver father and a factory worker mother, the eldest of two boys.</p>.<p>"My childhood was less than auspicious, but when I was young we didn't know we lacked anything because we had nothing to compare it to and there's a freedom in that," he said on receiving the 34th American Film Institute Life Achievement Award in 2006.</p>.<p>"I got my break, big break, when I was five years old and it's taken me more than 70 years to realise it. You see, at five, I learned to read. It's that simple and it's that profound."</p>.<p>He left school at 13 and started his working life as a milkman before joining the Royal Navy at 16. He was discharged after three years due to a stomach ulcer.</p>.<p>His two tattoos, acquired while serving, read "Mum and Dad" and "Scotland Forever".</p>.<p>Connery returned to Edinburgh and worked as a bricklayer, lifeguard, and coffin polisher, among other manual jobs.</p>.<p>His bodybuilding hobby led him to enter the Mr Universe competition, where a fellow competitor urged him to audition for acting parts.</p>.<p>He got bit-parts for years before his big break in a film melodrama, "Another Time, Another Place" (1958), and then went on to win the Bond role.</p>.<p>Connery's 007 portrayal helped him land a role in director Alfred Hitchcock's 1964 thriller "Marnie". However, he spent much of his post-Bond film career in ensemble casts.</p>.<p>He played in "Murder on the Orient Express" (1974), "The Man Who Would Be King" (1975), "Robin and Marian" (1976) and "Highlander" (1986), before a memorable performance as the eponymous hero's father in "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989).</p>.<p>Connery won the 1988 best supporting actor Oscar for his portrayal of street-wise policeman Jim Malone in "The Untouchables".</p>.<p>"There are seven genuine movie stars in the world today, and Sean is one of them," director Steven Spielberg said at the time.</p>.<p>In the 1990s, Connery produced many of the films he starred in, appearing in "The Hunt for Red October" (1990) as a Russian submarine commander, "Rising Sun" (1993) alongside Wesley Snipes, action film "The Rock" (1996) and "Entrapment" (1999) with Catherine Zeta-Jones.</p>.<p>He announced his retirement after "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" (2003).</p>.<p>Wearing full Highland dress, including a tartan kilt, Connery was knighted in July 2000 by Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh's Holyrood Palace.</p>.<p>"It's one of the proudest days of my life," the newly-dubbed Sir Sean told reporters.</p>.<p>Among his other honours, he was awarded the freedom of the city of Edinburgh, an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of St Andrews, and France's Legion d'Honneur.</p>.<p>He won Britain's 1988 best actor BAFTA for his portrayal of Franciscan friar William of Baskerville in the film adaptation of Umberto Eco's "The Name of the Rose".</p>.<p>Connery also received a BAFTA lifetime achievement award in 1998 for his contribution to world cinema.</p>.<p>In 2003, film magazine Empire put him top of their bad accents list for keeping his Scottish tones, whatever the role.</p>.<p>Despite his love of Scotland, SNP supporter Connery was a tax exile for decades in Marbella, Spain, and in the Bahamas.</p>.<p>He was infuriated in 2000 when new rules prevented non-domiciles from donating to British political parties.</p>.<p>"I was paying 98 percent tax. I was making all this money and making movies and I had nothing," he once said, when asked why he quit his homeland.</p>.<p>Connery's marriage to second wife Micheline Roquebrune, a French artist, came in 1975 not long after he divorced Australian actress Diane Cilento with whom he had a son in 1963, Jason, who is an actor.</p>.<p>But although he denied Cilento's claims that he had beaten her in the past, he courted controversy by maintaining it was justifiable in certain circumstances for a man to slap his wife.</p>.<p>Cilento blamed his poor upbringing for their clashes but Connery saw his background as the key to his acting success.</p>.<p>"My strength as an actor is that I've stayed close to the core of myself, which has something to do with a voice, a music, a tune that is very much tied up with my background," he told The New York Times.</p>
<p>Sean Connery, who has died aged 90, was one of Britain's greatest film stars, earning worldwide fame and adoration for playing iconic secret agent 007, James Bond.</p>.<p>The Oscar-winning actor will always be associated with his smooth, Scottish-accented portrayal of the suave spy and was considered a sex symbol well into old age.</p>.<p>Connery was a fiercely proud Scot and a financial backer of the Scottish National Party (SNP), which advocates separating Scotland from the United Kingdom.</p>.<p>The first actor to utter the unforgettable "Bond, James Bond", Connery made six official films as novelist Ian Fleming's creation, giving what many still consider as the definitive portrayal.</p>.<p>He starred as Bond in "Dr. No" (1962), his favourite "From Russia With Love" (1963), "Goldfinger" (1964), "Thunderball" (1965), "You Only Live Twice" (1967) and "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971).</p>.<p>He made a comeback as the British spy in the unofficial 1983 film "Never Say Never Again" and was even named People Magazine's sexist man in 1989 -- just shy of his 60th birthday.</p>.<p>Thomas Sean Connery was born on 25 August 1930 in the working class Fountainbridge area of Edinburgh to a truck driver father and a factory worker mother, the eldest of two boys.</p>.<p>"My childhood was less than auspicious, but when I was young we didn't know we lacked anything because we had nothing to compare it to and there's a freedom in that," he said on receiving the 34th American Film Institute Life Achievement Award in 2006.</p>.<p>"I got my break, big break, when I was five years old and it's taken me more than 70 years to realise it. You see, at five, I learned to read. It's that simple and it's that profound."</p>.<p>He left school at 13 and started his working life as a milkman before joining the Royal Navy at 16. He was discharged after three years due to a stomach ulcer.</p>.<p>His two tattoos, acquired while serving, read "Mum and Dad" and "Scotland Forever".</p>.<p>Connery returned to Edinburgh and worked as a bricklayer, lifeguard, and coffin polisher, among other manual jobs.</p>.<p>His bodybuilding hobby led him to enter the Mr Universe competition, where a fellow competitor urged him to audition for acting parts.</p>.<p>He got bit-parts for years before his big break in a film melodrama, "Another Time, Another Place" (1958), and then went on to win the Bond role.</p>.<p>Connery's 007 portrayal helped him land a role in director Alfred Hitchcock's 1964 thriller "Marnie". However, he spent much of his post-Bond film career in ensemble casts.</p>.<p>He played in "Murder on the Orient Express" (1974), "The Man Who Would Be King" (1975), "Robin and Marian" (1976) and "Highlander" (1986), before a memorable performance as the eponymous hero's father in "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989).</p>.<p>Connery won the 1988 best supporting actor Oscar for his portrayal of street-wise policeman Jim Malone in "The Untouchables".</p>.<p>"There are seven genuine movie stars in the world today, and Sean is one of them," director Steven Spielberg said at the time.</p>.<p>In the 1990s, Connery produced many of the films he starred in, appearing in "The Hunt for Red October" (1990) as a Russian submarine commander, "Rising Sun" (1993) alongside Wesley Snipes, action film "The Rock" (1996) and "Entrapment" (1999) with Catherine Zeta-Jones.</p>.<p>He announced his retirement after "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" (2003).</p>.<p>Wearing full Highland dress, including a tartan kilt, Connery was knighted in July 2000 by Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh's Holyrood Palace.</p>.<p>"It's one of the proudest days of my life," the newly-dubbed Sir Sean told reporters.</p>.<p>Among his other honours, he was awarded the freedom of the city of Edinburgh, an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of St Andrews, and France's Legion d'Honneur.</p>.<p>He won Britain's 1988 best actor BAFTA for his portrayal of Franciscan friar William of Baskerville in the film adaptation of Umberto Eco's "The Name of the Rose".</p>.<p>Connery also received a BAFTA lifetime achievement award in 1998 for his contribution to world cinema.</p>.<p>In 2003, film magazine Empire put him top of their bad accents list for keeping his Scottish tones, whatever the role.</p>.<p>Despite his love of Scotland, SNP supporter Connery was a tax exile for decades in Marbella, Spain, and in the Bahamas.</p>.<p>He was infuriated in 2000 when new rules prevented non-domiciles from donating to British political parties.</p>.<p>"I was paying 98 percent tax. I was making all this money and making movies and I had nothing," he once said, when asked why he quit his homeland.</p>.<p>Connery's marriage to second wife Micheline Roquebrune, a French artist, came in 1975 not long after he divorced Australian actress Diane Cilento with whom he had a son in 1963, Jason, who is an actor.</p>.<p>But although he denied Cilento's claims that he had beaten her in the past, he courted controversy by maintaining it was justifiable in certain circumstances for a man to slap his wife.</p>.<p>Cilento blamed his poor upbringing for their clashes but Connery saw his background as the key to his acting success.</p>.<p>"My strength as an actor is that I've stayed close to the core of myself, which has something to do with a voice, a music, a tune that is very much tied up with my background," he told The New York Times.</p>