Casino Royale 1954 Barry Nelson

Barry Nelson as Bond in 1954. Producer and Director Gregory Ratoff bought the rights to the Ian Fleming novel Casino Royale in May 1954. It was a six month option and Ratoff took this to CBS whom produced and broadcast this one hour episode for Climax! American Agent Jimmy Bond (Barry Nelson) plays baccarat for high stakes with a Soviet agent (Peter Lorre) who needs to win to cover his embezzlement of party funds and will stop at nothing to get 80 million Francs. Season 1, Episode 3 (1954).

Summary

The complete list of unofficial James Bond films, lesser known than the 24 official films made by EON Productions. Includes multiple adaptions of Casino Royale, and a remake of Thunderball.

« See also: List of all official Bond films


#1 Casino Royale, 1954

James Bond:Barry Nelson
Bond Girl:Valerie Mathis
Director:William Brown Jr.
Running Time:48 Minutes

Synopsis:

American secret agent 'Card sense Jimmy' Bond meets British agent Clarence Leiter at Casino Royale. Bond teaches Leiter how to play baccarat, and then defeats Soviet villain Le Chiffre at a high stakes game. Le Chiffre, afraid that the KGB will kill him for gambling away their money, tries to steal it back from Bond. Bond prevails, killing Le Chiffre and winning back his girlfriend.

#2 Casino Royale, 1967

Casino Royale 1954 Youtube

James Bond:David Niven
Bond Girl:Vesper Lynd
Director:John Huston, Ken Hughes
Running Time:131 Minutes

Casino Royale 1954 Barry Nelson Youtube

Synopsis:

Sir James Bond, played by David Niven, is forced out of retirement when M blows up his house! In a psychedelic spoof of the Sean Connery films, Niven takes over MI6 and renames every agent 'James Bond' to confuse the enemy (who turns out to be lead by his nephew.)

#3 Never Say Never Again, 1983

Casino Royale 1954 Dvd

James Bond:Sean Connery
Bond Girl:Domino Petachi
Director:Irvin Kershner
Running Time:134 Minutes

Synopsis:

Never Say Never Again is a remake of Thunderball by Kevin McClory, who sued for the film rights to the book. The title refers to the fact that Sean Connery vowed he would 'Never Again' play Bond, after filming Diamonds Are Forever. With an almost identical plot to Thunderball, SPECTRE steal two nuclear warheads and try to extort NATO. Bond must eliminate SPECTRE before they make good on their threats.


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LOS ANGELES -- Barry Nelson, a Broadway leading man who launched his career at MGM in the 1940s and earned a niche in show business history as the first actor to play British secret agent James Bond, as an American named Jimmy Bond, in a live television production of 'Casino Royale' in the 1950s, has died. He was 89.

Mr. Nelson died April 7 in a hotel in Bucks County, Pa., his wife, Nansi, said. The cause of death has yet to be determined.

As an MGM contract player in the 1940s, Mr. Nelson appeared in films such as 'Shadow of the Thin Man,' 'Dr. Kildare's Victory,' 'A Yank on the Burma Road,' 'The Human Comedy,' 'Bataan,' and 'A Guy Named Joe.'

Barry

He later played opposite Debbie Reynolds in the 1963 movie comedy 'Mary, Mary,' a role he originated on Broadway with costar Barbara Bel Geddes. He also appeared in the films 'Airport,' 'Pete 'n' Tillie' and 'The Shining.'

But Mr. Nelson had some of his greatest successes on Broadway, including appearing in 'Light Up the Sky' and 'The Moon Is Blue' in the 1940s, 'Cactus Flower' opposite Lauren Bacall (in the '60s) and 'The Act' opposite Liza Minnelli (for which he received a Tony Award nomination as best actor in a musical in 1978).

'He was a charming light comedian with a wonderful boyish face and a lovely youthful quality,' Miles Kreuger, president of the Institute of the American Musical in Los Angeles, said yesterday.

On television in the early '50s, Mr. Nelson starred as a globe-trotting businessman involved in international intrigue in 'The Hunter,' a half-hour series that ran on CBS from 1952 to 1954.

He also costarred opposite Joan Caulfield in 'My Favorite Husband,' a situation comedy that ran on CBS from 1953 to 1957.

It was while he was doing that series that he was offered the role of Bond in 'Casino Royale,' the television adaptation of Ian Fleming's first Bond novel, on the CBS dramatic anthology series 'Climax!'

Mr. Nelson had, in fact, just completed the 103d episode of 'My Favorite Husband' and was in need of a break.

'I was burned out,' he recalled in a 2002 interview with the Daily Mirror of London. ' 'My Favorite Husband' was filmed live. It was so tiring and difficult. I took a vacation to Jamaica and told my agent I'd had it for a while.'

But soon after arriving in Jamaica, he recalled, 'My agent called saying there was this part that CBS really wanted me for.. . . I had to get the next flight back to America. They were starting rehearsals the next day.'

He said he had doubts about playing the role until he learned who was playing the villain: Peter Lorre.

'That,' he said, 'was the clincher.'

With Mr. Nelson 'decked out in a crooked bow tie and cut-rate suit' and playing Bond as 'sexless and glum,' as the Times' Susan King later put it, the 'Casino Royale' segment of 'Climax!' aired live on Oct. 21, 1954.

Although it reportedly was favorably received, Mr. Nelson later said that he had no clue that Fleming's 007 character would ultimately achieve international renown.

'But nobody else did either,' he said in a 1992 interview with the Riverside Press-Enterprise. 'CBS even had an option on the Bond stories; they didn't pick it up.'

Royale

Eight years after Mr. Nelson's portrayal of 'Jimmy Bond,' Sean Connery debuted as the dashing 'Bond, James Bond' in the hit film 'Dr. No.'

He leaves his wife, Nansi.