This book is now available to pre-order on the Telos website www.telos.co.uk although it will become available later on both Amazon UK and Amazon USA and there will also be a Kindle version.
The sixties James Bond spoof Casino Royale was a psychedelic multi-storylined extravaganza of improvisation and the constant rewriting of various screenplays, brought about after negotiations between producer Charles K Feldman, Eon Productions, United Artists and Columbia Pictures failed to bring about a co-production. Realising that he would have to proceed without Bond actor Sean Connery, Feldman crammed his picture with as many famous names as possible: Peter Sellers, Woody Allen, David Niven, Ursula Andress, Orson Welles, Deborah Kerr, Daliah Lavi, Joanna Pettet, Barbara Bouchet, William Holden and Jean Paul Belmondo to name but a few. The cast also included several unbilled cameos such as: Peter O’Toole, Caroline Munro, Dave Prowse, John Le Mesurier, Fiona Lewis and ex-F1 racing driver Stirling Moss.

Just to whet your appetite I can confirm that you will discover the answers to the following…
1 During development, which James Bond actor was approached about playing the character for what would have been the first time in June 1964?
2 During December 1965, which actress well known for appearing in The Avengers was named in the American press as being lined-up to appear in Casino Royale?
3 For his cameo role in the Scottish Marching Band sequence, what did Peter O’Toole accept as payment?
4 Why did Sarah Miles turn down the role of Meg, one of the McTarry daughters?
5 What did Shirley MacLaine do the week before principal photography was due to commence that stopped production?
6 Why was Blake Edwards turned down as a director for Casino Royale?
7 After suffering the bad experience of having his screenplay constantly rewritten while making the film What’s New Pussycat? Why did Woody Allen agree to work with Charles K Feldman again on Casino Royale?
8 What role was Dave Prowse originally going to play in Peter Sellers’ nightmare?
All this and more (as the saying goes) in The Making of Casino Royale (1967).