Actually James Bond was the inspiration for all the spy shows, Man From Uncle, I Spy, even the comedy Get Smart. Actually James Bond was the inspiration for all the spy shows, Man From Uncle, I Spy, even the comedy Get Smart.
You'd better clarify what you mean by "all" and "James Bond," whether you mean only all
American spy shows and whether you're referring to the Bond movies or to Ian Fleming's source novels.
In Britain, the television spy series
Danger Man, starring Patrick McGoohan, began in 1960 as a half-hour program that made McGoohan a star in Britain and the rest of Europe*. That half-hour format lasted until 1962, coincidentally the same year
Dr. No, the first Bond movie, was released. Moreover, McGoohan, an international star already although not in the US, had been offered the role of Bond, but as we all know, he refused it.
However, McGoohan stuck with
Danger Man, which returned in 1964--two years before MI premiered--in a one-hour version of the show. This was also shown in the US but renamed
Secret Agent, although the half-hour version had already been aired in the US on CBS in 1961--predating the release of
Dr. No. For the US version, Edwin Astley's opening theme music was replaced by the rock song "Secret Agent Man," which became one of singer Johnny Rivers's biggest hits.
Patrick McGoohan went onto develop and star in another spy series,
The Prisoner, which premiered in the UK in 1967 and came to the US I think the following year, and for which he may be best remembered. Meanwhile, debate still rages whether
The Prisoner is a continuation of
Danger Man and its lead character John Drake or is an entirely different premise. (I believe the latter.)
In sum, the original
Danger Man, launched in 1960, predates the first Bond film,
Dr. No, released in 1962, and in fact
Danger Man's star Patrick McGoohan had been tapped to play Bond but declined the role. However, the Fleming Bond novels began in 1953 with the publishing of
Casino Royale, although spy stories have been around a long time--both espionage and prostitution are often cited as being "the world's oldest profession," and it's no surprise that espionage has enlisted the services of the "honeytrap" (e.g., Cinnamon Carter) as part of its tradecraft for just as long--was the Biblical Delilah not a honeytrap of sorts?
So, Bond may have inspired American spy series--and I have no disagreement with the assertion that the Bond film franchise solidified the 1960s spy craze in pop culture--but the British series
Danger Man/
Secret Agent actually was the first successful spy series of the decade, with its star given dibs on the role of James Bond in film before Sean Connery.
* Then as now, I suppose, we need to separate the two as Brexit has done . . .
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"The past is never dead. It isn't even past." -- William Faulkner
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