Roger Lewis, in his no-holds-barred biography, exposes a Peter Sellers
the world little knows. Recognized as the greatest British comic since
Charlie Chaplin, Sellers was the grand master of fifty-five films - from
Dr. Strangelove, to Being There and the Pink Panther hits. But shadowing
his phenomenal career was a history of increasingly bizarre behavior
involving psychotic violence, compulsive promiscuity, drug abuse and
humiliating self-destructive obsessions with people including Princess
Margaret, Sophia Loren, Liza Minnelli and each of his four wives (Ann
Hayes, Britt Ekland, Miranda Quarry and Lynne Frederick). He alternately
showered his wives and children with gifts and then threatened to kill
them. Sellers' fluidity as an actor made for a terrifying madness that
grew like a slow metastasizing cancer throughout his adult life. The
story of Peter Sellers concludes with his premature death at the age of
54, "sick at heart and alone in those sunless hotel rooms, " so recoiled
from intimacy that no one really knew him anymore.