1900s
1908
- May
28: Ian Fleming is born in Mayfair, London, to
Valentine and Eve Fleming (Christopher Lee, who would play Francisco Scaramanga in The Man with the Golden Gun, was
his cousin).
1950s
1952
- February
17: To distract himself from his forthcoming nuptials, Fleming starts
writing Casino Royale at his Goldeneye estate in Jamaica.
- March
18: Fleming finishes work on the script and shows it to an ex-girlfriend,
Clare Blanchard, who advises him not to publish it at all, but that if he
does so, it should be under another name.
- March
24: Ian Fleming marries Ann Charteris in Jamaica.
1953
- April
13: Fleming publishes his first novel, Casino
Royale, establishing the character of James
Bond. It was a success and three print runs were needed to cope with
the demand.
1954
- April
5: The second Bond novel, Live and Let Die, is released.
- October
21: An hour-long television adaptation of Casino
Royale is aired as an episode of CBS's dramatic anthology series Climax
Mystery Theater.
1955
- April
7: Fleming's third novel, Moonraker,
is published.
1956
- Moonraker is
retitled Too Hot to Handle for its release in the U.S.
- March
26: Fleming's fourth novel, Diamonds Are Forever is
published.
1957
- April
8: The fifth Bond novel, From Russia with Love, is published.
Fleming toys with the idea of killing off the James Bond character, unsure
of whether he should write another Bond novel or not.
1958
- March
31: Fleming's sixth novel, Dr. No,
is published. The novel was originally a screenplay written in 1956 for
what would have been a television show entitled Commander Jamaica.
It marks the first appearance of both Major Boothroyd and
Bond's signature weapon, the Walther
PPK.
- Summer:
Fleming and his friend, Ivar Bryce, begin talking about the possibility of
a James Bond film.
- Autumn:
Bryce introduces Fleming to a young Irish writer and director, Kevin
McClory, and the three of them, together with Fleming and Bryce's
friend Ernest Cuneo, form the partnership Xanadu Productions.
1959
- March
23: Goldfinger, the seventh novel in Ian Fleming's
James Bond series is published.
- May:
Fleming, Bryce, Cuneo and McClory come up with a story outline based on an
aeroplane full of celebrities and a female lead called Fatima Blush. Over
the next few months there are ten outlines, treatments and scripts.
1960s
1960
- American
copies of Moonraker are reverted to the original title.
- January-March:
Fleming writes the novel Thunderball at Goldeneye, based
on the screenplay written by himself, Whittingham and McClory.
- April
11: A collection of short stories by Ian Fleming are published under the
title For Your Eyes Only.
1961
- March
17: In an article in Life Magazine, US President John F.
Kennedy lists From Russia, with Love as one of his ten
favourite books.
- March
26: Thunderball, the eighth novel in Ian Fleming's
James Bond series is published. Notably, it introduces Bond's nemesis, Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
- Ian
Fleming sells the film rights to his novels to Harry Saltzman.
1962
- Saltzman
and Albert R. Broccoli co-produce the film
version of Dr. No. Sean
Connery is cast as Bond, and the film is an instant success.
- April
16: The Spy Who Loved Me, the ninth novel
in Ian Fleming's James Bond series is published. It is the shortest novel
in the series, and is told from the first-person perspective of a woman
named Vivienne Michel, rather than the third-person used in the other
books.
1963
- April
1: On Her Majesty's Secret Service,
the tenth novel in Ian Fleming's James Bond series is published. It is the
first Fleming novel published after the release of the film Dr. No.
- October
10: The film version of From Russia with Love is
released. Notably, it is the first time the character of Ernst Stavro Blofeld appears on
screen.
- November
19: McClory takes Fleming to court over the publication of Thunderball,
suing him for plagiarism. They settle out of court. McClory gains the
literary and film rights for the screenplay, while Fleming is given the
rights to the novel, although it has to be recognised as being "based
on a screen treatment by Kevin McClory, Jack Whittingham and the
Author".
1964
- March
16: You Only Live Twice, the eleventh
novel (and twelfth book) in Ian Fleming's James Bond series of stories is
published. It is the final Bond novel to be released in Fleming's
lifetime.
- August
12: Fleming dies of a heart attack in Canterbury, Kent, England.
- September
17: The third Eon Productions film Goldfinger is
released.
1965
- April
1: The Man with the Golden Gun,
the twelfth novel (and thirteenth book) of Ian Fleming's James Bond series
is posthumously published. It is the first and only novel published after
Ian Fleming's death.
- February
16: Filming commences the fourth Eon Productions film Thunderball after
producers Broccoli and Saltzman agree with McClory to cinematically adapt
the novel. The joint production stops McClory from making any further
versions of the novel for a period of ten years following the release of
the Eon-produced version.
- December
9: The fourth Eon Productions film Thunderball is
released.
1966
- Octopussy and The Living
Daylights, a collection of Fleming's short stories, is published.
It is Fleming's last publication.
1967
- April
13: The unofficial James Bond satire Casino Royale is released.
- June
12: The fifth film in the Eon film series, You Only Live Twice, is released.
- July
29: It is officially announced that Sean
Connery is leaving the role of James Bond.
1968
- September: George Lazenby is cast as Connery's
replacement.
- March
28: Colonel Sun - the first continuation
James Bond novel published after the death of Ian Fleming - is published
by Glidrose Productions and written by Kingsley Amis under the pen name of
Robert Markham.
1969
- November:
George Lazenby steps down from the role as James Bond following advice
that the Bond series was outdated, and unresolved disputes with Broccoli
and Saltzman.
- December
18: The sixth film in the James Bond film series, On Her Majesty's Secret Service,
is released.
1970s
1971
- Dec
14: The seventh film in the Eon Productions film franchise, Diamonds Are Forever, is released.
1973
- June
27: The release of Live and Let Die. It is the eighth film
in the James Bond film series, and the first to star Roger Moore as Bond.
- Non-Canon
continuation novel James Bond: The
Authorized Biography of 007 is published.
1974
- December
19: The release of The Man with the Golden Gun.
It is the ninth official James Bond movie.
1975
- After
suffering troubling financial disputes, his wife's diagnosis of terminal
cancer, and depression, Harry Saltzman sells his 50% stake in Danjaq, LLC,
the parent company of Eon Productions, for £20 million.
- Kevin
McClory first announces that he is remaking Thunderball under
the title Warhead. The concept would remain in limbo before
eventually being replaced by the Never Say Never Again project.
1976
- December
5: The 007 Stage - one of the
largest silent stages in the world - is officially opened atPinewood Studios in a ceremony attended
by former British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson.
1977
- July
7: The release of The Spy Who Loved Me. It is the tenth
official James Bond movie.
1979
- June
26: The release of Moonraker.
It is the eleventh official James Bond movie.
1980s
1981
- After
his previous failure to begin production of Warhead, Kevin
McClory finds a production company set up by a top Hollywood lawyer and
announces a new project. Again, it would be a remake of Thunderballstarring
Sean Connery. It would become Never Say Never Again.
- June
24: The release of For Your Eyes Only. It is the twelfth
official James Bond movie.
1983
- June
6: The release of Octopussy.
It is the thirteenth official James Bond movie.
- October
5: A newly discovered asteroid is named 9007 James Bond in honour of Ian Fleming.
- October
7: The unofficial James Bond film and remake of the 1965 film Thunderball - Never Say Never Again - is
released by Warner Bros.
1984
- June
27: The 007 Stage is burnt to the ground towards the end
of filming of Ridley Scott's Legend.
1985
- January:
After being rebuilt, the 007 Stage is reopened with the
new name, "Albert R. Broccoli 007 Stage".
- May
24: A View to a Kill, is released in the USA.
It is the fourteenth entry in the James
Bond series of films made by EON Productions, and the last to star Roger
Moore.
1986
- December
11: Prince Charles and Princess Diana visit the set of The Living Daylights to meet the
new James Bond, Timothy Dalton.
1987
- July
31: The Living Daylights is released
in the USA, featuring Timothy Dalton as 007.
1989
- July
14: Licence to Kill is released in the
USA. This would be Timothy Dalton's second and final
portrayal of James Bond.
1990s
1990
- MGM/UA
is sold to Pathé Communications. Danjaq, the Swiss based parent company of
Eon, sues MGM/UA and its new chairman to protect the TV distribution
rights of the series from being devalued. These legal disputes engendered
a several year hiatus in the series.
1993
- May:
MGM creative affairs VP Elizabeth Robinson announces in Variety that work
on the 17th 007 movie has resumed with writer Michael France penning a
fresh script.
1994
- April
12: Timothy Dalton announces that he would not be returning as James Bond.
- June
8: Pierce Brosnan is introduced to the world as the new 007.
1995
- November
17: GoldenEye, the 17th Bond film and the first to
star Pierce Brosnan, is release in the USA.
1997
- October
13: Kevin McClory and Sony Pictures Entertainment Company (SPE) announce
their intention to remake Thunderball for a second time.
The rumored title would be Warhead
2000.
- December
19: Tomorrow Never Dies is released
in the USA. It is the first Bond film to be release after the death of Albert R. Broccoli in 1996.
1999
- March
30: Kevin McClory's Warhead 2000 AD project is officially
terminated after Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer obtains the film rights to Casino
Royale from Sony Pictures Entertainment for $10 million in the
out-of-court settlement of a law suit.
- November
19: The World Is Not Enough, the 19th
film in the official James Bond series, is released in the USA.
2000s
2002
- November
20: The twentieth Eon film, Die Another Day, is released. It was the
last film starring Pierce Brosnan.
2004
- July:
Pierce Brosnan announces that he is leaving the role, stating "Bond
is another lifetime, behind me".
2005
- June
21: The quote "Bond. James Bond," is declared as the 22nd
greatest film quote of all time by theAmerican Film Institute.
- October
14: Eon Productions officially name Daniel
Craig as the sixth actor to portray 007, taking over from Pierce
Brosnan.
2006
- November
14: The twenty first official film, Casino
Royale, is released starring Daniel Craig as 007. This version is
a reboot of the 007 franchise.
2008
- October
29: The twenty-second official film, Quantum of Solace, is released. The film
picks up right where the 2006 film Casino Royale leaves
off, with Bond avenging the death of Vesper Lynd.
2010s
2010
- Skyfall,
then known by the working title Bond 23, was suspended throughout 2010
because of MGM's financial troubles.
- December
21: Bond 23 resumes pre-production.
2012
- October
23: Skyfall is premiered in London, becoming the
twenty third Eon James Bond film.
2015
- October
26: Spectre has
its official premier at the Royal Albert Hall in London. It becomes the
twenty fourth James Bond film.
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