In a recent interview with The Independent, she explained why fame can be a liability when it comes to finding Bond’s successor.

Debbie McWilliams Says Mystery Matters More Than Fame

McWilliams is hardly an outside observer. Over the course of 13 Bond films, she selected Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan, and Daniel Craig to inherit one of cinema’s most recognizable roles. Now retired following Amazon’s takeover of MGM and the franchise’s creative transition, she believes familiarity has become a major obstacle for the actors currently topping fan speculation.

Referring to Callum Turner, Harris Dickinson, Jacob Elordi, and the other frequently mentioned names, McWilliams was direct about her reservations. “I don’t want to see any of them as Bond because we now know so much about them. We want to know as little about them personally as possible, because that’s what spies are.” She added that audiences should never be thinking about where Bond shops, who his family is, or what his private life looks like.

For McWilliams, the role demands more than charisma or star power. “A vital element of the whole thing is his job description. He’s licensed to kill, and we have to believe that he can do that. If you don’t, then you’ve lost the audience.” That philosophy reflects the approach she followed throughout her career, consistently backing performers who had yet to become household names.

The comments stand in contrast to the current wave of speculation surrounding the franchise. Turner has emerged as one of the names most often linked to the role thanks to projects such as “Masters of the Air” and “The Boys in the Boat.” Dickinson has built momentum through acclaimed performances in films including “Triangle of Sadness,” “The Iron Claw,” and “Babygirl,” while Elordi’s profile has skyrocketed after “Euphoria,” “Saltburn,” and his Oscar-nominated turn in Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein.”

Whether the next Bond turns out to be one of the rumored favorites or a complete unknown remains to be seen. Amazon MGM is moving ahead with “Bond 26” under director Denis Villeneuve, writer Steven Knight, and casting director Nina Gold, with auditions reportedly underway as the studio searches for a younger actor to launch a new chapter for the franchise.