A host of celebrities from footballers to Hollywood stars make appearances in former British prime minister Tony Blair’s memoirs.
Mr Blair lavishes praise on his famous acquaintances, describing Diana, Princess of Wales, as “extraordinarily captivating” and saying U2 frontman and anti-poverty campaigner Bono is “great with people, very smart and an inspirational speaker”,
Film director Lord Attenborough as “just a superlative human being”, David Beckham was a “complete pro” in supporting London’s bid for the 2012 Olympics and Kevin Spacey was a “really fun guy” at Labour’s 2002 autumn party conference.
Mr Blair was criticised in office for his fondness for entertaining stars from the worlds of television, film, music and sport.
His book makes no reference to some of his best-known brushes with celebrity, including the 1997 “Cool Britannia” reception at Downing Street attended by Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher.
But it does contain a hesitant defence of Labour’s use of endorsements by famous faces under his leadership.
“To this day, I’m never sure of the effect the celebrity thing has. I don’t dismiss it, as some do,” he writes. “When you are trying to capture the mood - and this is more often so for a progressive party - celebs can reinforce, even boost the message.
“They add some glamour and excitement to what can often be a dreary business.
“What they can’t do, of course, is substitute for the politics. In fact, if they try to, they become immediately counterproductive. If they begin lecturing the people as to why or how they should vote, it’s nearly always a disaster.
“They clearly don’t determine the outcome, but properly used, they help. And frankly, given the difficulty in rousing the damn thing, we needed the help.”
The book records how, from his earliest days in politics, Mr Blair instinctively felt his party needed to use popular culture.
After a concert by the 1980s Red Wedge collective of Labour-supporting musicians, including Paul Weller and Billy Bragg, he recalled that he said: “We need to reach the people listening to Duran Duran and Madonna.”
He notes that this comment went down “like a cup of sick” at the time.
By the 2001 election Labour had “celebrities out in abundance”, which “added some spice”, Mr Blair writes.
They included Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson, Welsh singer Charlotte Church, soprano Lesley Garrett, Simply Red frontman Mick Hucknall, veteran actor Sir John Mills and stars of Coronation Street and EastEnders.
Most of the book’s references to celebrities are included in passing to illustrate key stages in Mr Blair’s “journey”.
He describes meeting Hollywood director Steven Spielberg - "actually a rather modest person" - and telling him how Schindler's List affected him more than any film he had seen.
He says he “always got on well” with Nelson Mandela, “partly I think because I treated him as a political leader and not a saint”.