GENEVA: He wasn't a competitor, but Mark Sutton still got one of the biggest cheers of the 2012 Olympics. 

Sutton, who was killed during a wingsuit jump in the Alps this week, was the skydiver who parachuted into London's Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony dressed as James Bond, alongside another stuntman disguised as Queen Elizabeth II. 

It was the punchline to a filmed sequence in which Daniel Craig's Bond escorted the real queen from Buckingham Palace onto a helicopter, and, for many, the highlight of director Danny Boyle's ceremony. 

Swiss police confirmed that Sutton died on Wednesday when he crashed into a rocky ridge near Trient in the southwestern Valais region. They gave his age as 42. 

Wingsuits — aerodynamic jumpsuits that make wearers look like winged superheroes — allow fliers to jump from planes, helicopters and occasionally cliffs and soar long distances before opening parachutes to land. 

Boyle today paid tribute to Sutton, saying he and fellow diver Gary Connery had "made the stadium gasp ... and left indelible memories for people from all walks of life all over the world." 

"The show was built from so many contributions from so many people, none finer and braver than Mark Sutton," Boyle said. "On behalf of everyone in the show we were all honored to have worked with him and to have known him as a friend and a professional. " 

London 2012 chief Sebastian Coe said Sutton was "a consummate professional and team player" who would be widely missed. 

Online extreme sports broadcaster Epic TV said Sutton was killed during a gathering it had organised involving 20 wingsuit pilots who were filmed as they jumped from helicopters. The firm said Sutton's death was "a tragic loss for the global wingsuit community." 

The former British army officer with the Gurkha Rifles who worked as a derivatives adviser was an accomplished skydiver. He performed at the Olympics alongside his friend Gary Connery. Sutton was the tuxedo-clad Bond, while Connery wore a pink dress and wig to play the queen. 

Connery told The Sun newspaper that he had lost a friend who was "smart, articulate and funny."

"In any sport where you share a common bond you can make friends in a heartbeat that last a lifetime," he was quoted as saying. "My relationship with Mark was like that."

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