If former Bond girl Valerie Leon has her way, the world will never see a female James Bond.

The 75-year-old actress, who starred in 1977's "The Spy Who Loved Me" and 1983's "Never Say Never Again," griped on "Good Morning Britain": "The world has gone mad. I'm dressed in black. I am in mourning that we're here to talk about Bond being a woman."

She continued, "He was conceived as a man, Ian Fleming created him as a man."

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London-bred Leon added, "He's a fantasy. So many men have wanted to be Bond and women have wanted to be with Bond. How can people fantasize about a woman as Bond? Men aren't going to go for a woman as a killer or an assassin."

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Finally, she offered a more practical argument, noting, "Why would the producers change something that's been so successful for years?"

Leon isn't the only Bond girl with those sentiments.

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Eva Green, who starred as Vesper Lynd alongside Daniel Craig in "Casino Royale," previously said Bond should always be a man.

Over the weekend, "GoldenEye" star Pierce Brosnan made headlines when he supported the idea of a female James Bond, but said he didn't think it would happen with the franchise's current producers.

Warning: Spoilers ahead.

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Still, the feminist angle may be gaining traction.

The upcoming "No Time to Die," which will be Craig's last appearance as Bond, will reportedly reveal the next agent 007: actress Lashana Lynch.

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"There is a pivotal scene at the start of the film where M says 'Come in 007,' and in walks Lashana who is black, beautiful and a woman," a Bond insider previously claimed. "It's a popcorn-dropping moment. Bond is still Bond but he's been replaced as 007 by this stunning woman."