Sir Christopher Lee
There are no words, Mom;
You know what he meant to me.
The day my mother told my father she was pregnant with me they went to a drive in movie in KY. Hound of the Baskervilles was playing. Unknown to Mom there was a resident dog at the drive in that would go around scarfing up the inedible hamburgers, hot dogs and cardboard pizzas......
A big dog - a Great Dane.
The timing was perfect, I'm told. When the Hound on the screen attacked the Great Dane leaned his head in Mom's window and muffed at her.
My father ended up on his tailbone sitting outside the car and Mom was standing over him trying to calm her racing heart, his ears ringing from her scream. She had somehow gotten out over him and under the steering wheel, knocking him out of the car.
He couldn't get off the asphalt for several minutes because he was laughing so hard. Word spread quickly and she was the rage of the drive-in.
Fast forward to my fifth grade year. One of the books available for a large book report assignment was Hound of the Baskervilles. I chose that one without knowing the story of the drive-in. I was already a Chris Lee and Peter Cushing fan, again without knowing the story. I became a Sherlock Holmes fan. I can also throw in that I'm terrified of spiders - without knowing the story or movie.
Mom always swore that she "marked" me in her womb that night!
You know what he meant to me.
The day my mother told my father she was pregnant with me they went to a drive in movie in KY. Hound of the Baskervilles was playing. Unknown to Mom there was a resident dog at the drive in that would go around scarfing up the inedible hamburgers, hot dogs and cardboard pizzas......
A big dog - a Great Dane.
The timing was perfect, I'm told. When the Hound on the screen attacked the Great Dane leaned his head in Mom's window and muffed at her.
My father ended up on his tailbone sitting outside the car and Mom was standing over him trying to calm her racing heart, his ears ringing from her scream. She had somehow gotten out over him and under the steering wheel, knocking him out of the car.
He couldn't get off the asphalt for several minutes because he was laughing so hard. Word spread quickly and she was the rage of the drive-in.
Fast forward to my fifth grade year. One of the books available for a large book report assignment was Hound of the Baskervilles. I chose that one without knowing the story of the drive-in. I was already a Chris Lee and Peter Cushing fan, again without knowing the story. I became a Sherlock Holmes fan. I can also throw in that I'm terrified of spiders - without knowing the story or movie.
Mom always swore that she "marked" me in her womb that night!
Christopher
Lee, Legendary Movie Villain and Horror Icon, Dies at 93
The Hollywood ReporterJune 11, 2015
Christopher Lee (Getty Images)
By Mike Barnes, Duane Byrge
Christopher Lee, the mystical British actor
whose haunting, intimidating performances as Count Dracula, the Frankenstein
monster and Fu Manchu made him an icon of horror films and the cinematic
embodiment of villainy, has died. He was 93.
Lee, who as bad guy Scaramanga battled Roger
Moore’s James Bond in The Man With the Golden Gun (1974) and re-ignited
his career in his late 70s with what would be recurring roles in the Lord of
the Rings, Hobbit and Star Wars franchises, has died. He was 93.
According to media reports, Lee died on Sunday
morning, June 7 at Westminster Hospital in London after being admitted for
respiratory problems and heart failure. The Guardian reported that his
wife, former Danish model and painter Gitte Kroencke, decided to release the
news days later in order to inform family members first. The couple had been
married since 1961
Incredibly, the London native had more than
275 credits on IMDb, making him perhaps the most prolific feature-film actor in
history. He did many of his own stunts, likely appeared in more on-screen sword
fights than anyone else and was the only member of the Lord of the Rings
cast to have actually met author J.R.R. Tolkien, who was born in 1892.
With his gaunt 6-foot-5 frame and deep, strong
voice, Lee was best at playing characters — slave traders, crazed kings,
vampires, demented professors — who were evil, murderous, dour and
unrepentantly ruthless.
Starting with The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and Horror of Dracula (1958), Lee, like a mad scientist, helped
Hammer Films bring the genre of horror back to life. He played the bloodsucking
and brooding Prince of Darkness 10 times but disliked being known as a “horror
legend.”
Lee was menacing in the title role of The
Mummy (1959) and, that same year, starred as the new owner of Baskerville
Hall in the remake of The Hound of the Baskervilles, starring his best
friend, Peter Cushing, as Sherlock Holmes. The suave and courtly Cushing was
his castmate in Curse of Frankenstein and Horror of Dracula as
well.
He appeared three times as Holmes on screen,
most recently in the 1991 telefilm Incident at Victoria Falls, and
starred as the detective’s brother Mycroft in Billy Wilder’s The Private
Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970).
Lee also was Rasputin and Lucifer, and his
characters executed King Charles I of England and Louis the XVI of France. He
relished the evil roles: “As Boris Karloff [his Corridors of Blood
co-star] told me, you have to make your mark in something other actors cannot,
or will not, do. And if it’s a success, you’ll not be forgotten.”
His 1977 autobiography was titled Tall, Dark
and Gruesome.
Lee played Rochefort of Three Musketeers
fame three times and was Sax Rohmer’s Asian evil genius with that distinctive
mustache in five films of the 1960s, starting with The Face of Fu Manchu
(1965).
Ian Fleming, the creator of Bond, was his
cousin and frequent golf companion. The author wanted Lee to play the title
villain in the 007 film Dr. No (1962), but the job went to Joseph
Wiseman. For Bond fans, it was worth the wait after seeing his turn as the
wealthy assassin who employs only bullets made of gold in The Man With the
Golden Gun.
Lee’s considerable body of film work also
included Captain Horatio Hornblower (1951), The Wicker Man
(1973), To the Devil a Daughter (1976), The Passage (1979), House
of the Long Shadows (1983), Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990), The
Golden Compass (2007), The Resident (2011), Hugo (2011) and
four films with director/fan Tim Burton: Sleepy Hollow (1999), Charlie
and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of
Fleet Street (2007) and Dark Shadows (2012).
Lee, who was knighted in 2009, appeared as
Saruman in Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy and in the
director’s two Hobbit films, including The Battle of Five Armies (2014).
And he was Count Dooku in the Star Wars installments Attack of the
Clones (2002), Revenge of the Sith (2005) and The Clone Wars (2008).
“This last decade has been the most
extraordinary decade of my life,” he said in a 2012 interview.
Christopher Frank Carandini Lee was born on
May 27, 1922 (American horror legend Vincent Price was born on the same date 11
years earlier), and attended exclusive prep schools. He went to Eton College
and Wellington College and studied Greek and Latin.
During World War II, Lee served in the Royal
Air Force and Special Forces and spent one year in a hellacious winter campaign
in Finland. He was said to be a spy but never wanted to talk about it, honoring
an oath of secrecy.
“When the Second World War finished I was 23
and already I had seen enough horror to last me a lifetime,” he told the Telegraph in 2011.
“I’d seen dreadful, dreadful things, without saying a word. So seeing horror
depicted on film doesn’t affect me much.”
Lee was decorated for distinguished service,
and after his discharge, he took the advice of his uncle, the Italian
ambassador in London, and tried his hand in the film business, landing a
contract with the Rank Organisation.
The Curse of Frankenstein — a box-office hit and the first film to
feature Mary Shelley’s disfigured creature in color — was a big break for him.
Lee likely landed the gig because he was so tall.
Wilder told him he needed to come to America
to further his career, and he took that advice and made Airport ’77, in
which his character died under water and he almost drowned.
He said the film that made him the most proud
was Jinnah (1998), in which he played the founder of Pakistan.
Despite his serious demeanor, Lee liked to
showcase his offbeat, self-deprecating wit. He hosted Saturday Night Live
in 1978, and his show (with musical guest Meat Loaf) reached 35 million
viewers, one of its most-watched installments.
“As you may know, I first came to public
attention as a result of my appearances in certain rather eerie and even
macabre films,” he said during the SNL opening. “You may be surprised to
know that I haven’t made one in several years.
“This is because I have a great deal of
respect for this kind of film, and I don’t think that very good ones are being
produced anymore. Week after week, I find myself receiving scripts like The
Creature From the Black Studies Program … and Frankenstein Snubs The
Wolf Man … and of course, Dr. Terror’s House of Pancakes.”
Later, he played a Russian commandant for
laughs in Police Academy: Mission to Moscow (1994).
An expert fencer and honorary member of three
stuntmen unions, Lee also knew how to handle a golf club. He was the first
actor to be accepted into The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers. How good
was he? He thought he had enough cred to offer advice to Tiger Woods on how to
play The Masters.
Music was important to him. He appeared in
operas, sang “Name Your Poison” in The Return of Captain
Invincible (1983) opposite Alan Arkin and was among the
pack of “convicts” on the cover of Paul McCartney & Wings’ 1973 album Band
on the Run.
In 2010, Lee recorded a symphonic heavy metal
concept album, Charlemagne: By the Sword and the Cross (he said he was
related to the emperor on his mother’s side). Three years later, he released a
follow-up that had Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath on guitar.
“People never thought I would be a heavy metal
performer. Well, I am,” he said in the 2012 interview.
Sure, he never was nominated for an Oscar, but
he has a Metal Hammer Golden God Award.
Survivors include his wife, former Danish
model and painter Gitte Kroencke, whom he married in 1961, and their daughter
Christina.
Lee, who had a library of 12,000 books on the occult, admitted to being fascinated by the nature of evil during a 2003 interview with the Guardian.
Lee, who had a library of 12,000 books on the occult, admitted to being fascinated by the nature of evil during a 2003 interview with the Guardian.
“ ‘Good’ people … being persistently noble can
b
ecome rather uninteresting,” he said. “There is a dark side in all of us. And
for us ‘bad’ people, the bad side dominates. I think there is a great sadness
in villains, and I have tried to put that across. We cannot stop ourselves
doing what we are doing.”
Comments
Post a Comment