Bond producer: 007 'can be of any color' but never a woman

Lashana Lynch, left, Daniel Craig and Naomie Harris in "No Time to Die." (MGM/YouTube)
Lashana Lynch, left, Daniel Craig and Naomie Harris in "No Time to Die." (MGM/YouTube)

A woman is at the helm of the James Bond film franchise, but 007 will never be a woman as long as she's in charge.

In an interview with Variety, Barbara Broccoli, who inherited control of the spy saga with her half-brother, Michael G. Wilson, in the 1990s, shared her thoughts on what the next Bond could look like. And while she's open to some diversification, a female Bond is where she draws the line.

"He can be of any color, but he is male," Broccoli told Variety. "I believe we should be creating new characters for women - strong female characters. I'm not particularly interested in taking a male character and having a woman play it. I think women are far more interesting than that."

In the buzz leading up to the spring release of the next Bond film, "No Time to Die," many speculated that "Captain Marvel" actress Lashana Lynch would succeed Daniel Craig as the sophisticated MI6 agent. Amid a flurry of rumors sparked by her casting, the first official trailer for the highly anticipated sequel did eventually confirm Lynch's status as a new 00 - but not that 00.

"The world's moved on, Commander Bond," Lynch's Nomi tells the veteran operative in the trailer. "So stay in your lane. You get in my way, I will put a bullet in your knee."

Another female newcomer to the series, "Knives Out" breakout Ana de Armas, recently told the Los Angeles Times that she looked forward to playing a different kind of Bond girl who is proof of the franchise's progress.

"I'm in total denial," she told Variety. "I've accepted what Daniel has said, but I'm still in denial. It's too traumatic for me."

"No Time to Die," directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga and co-written by "Fleabag" mastermind Phoebe Waller-Bridge, hits theaters April 10.

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