Early years and film career Bond was born on September 25, 1945, in
Los Angeles, California, and grew up horseback riding, skating and skiing on her father's ranch in Colorado. As a teenager, she was spotted on a beach and given a modeling contract. Another one of her early jobs, performing as a
trapeze artist, paved the way for her introduction to movies, when she was hired to perform in a 1963 television series
The Greatest Show on Earth. A year later, she made her film debut as a beach girl in
Pajama Party (1964), which set the tone of her movie career, as she wore a bikini in every one of her credited film appearances. She received featured billing in 1965's ''
A Swingin' Summer'', as the "girl in the polka dot bikini" and the opening credits show her in her pink and white bikini dancing on water skis. The film starred
James Stacy,
William Wellman Jr.,
Quinn O'Hara and a newcomer,
Raquel Welch. Her next film,
Tickle Me (1965), starring
Elvis Presley was limited to a few appearances at the swimming pool. She returned to television with a couple of appearances in 1965 on
The Beverly Hillbillies with a role as a beach extra, and then did a role
doubling for
Claudia Cardinale in
Blindfold (1966). Bond's last known film appearance was an uncredited bit part in the 1968
Jane Fonda film
Barbarella. She began working with a group of feminists on several projects. Meeting at the cultural center Cicip & Ciciap they held various discussions on women's issues, including political and social restrictions. In 1978, they published a book,
Ci vediamo mercoledì. Gli altri giorni ci immaginiamo (We'll see you Wednesday. The other days we imagine.) which was a collection of photographs exploring feminist issues. The women worked both individually and collectively to produce the images; for example, one segment features photographs by Paola Mattioli taken of Bond in 1977. The series shows Bond in a mirror removing a white mask. The collection of photos of Bond by Mattioli was presented in an exhibition from October to December 2014, in Milan. One of her ongoing works of art is called "Dolls on the Road", which are like
paperdolls on canvas, depicting the way women are "cut out" of society. Long before
The Flat Stanley Project began documenting paperdoll travels, Bond's dolls, beginning with "Donna" in 1976, were traveling the world, being photographed, obtaining passport stamps to prove their existence. For thirty years, Bond has traveled with her "dolls" on three continents. ==Selected works==