Imagine filming a scene in an iconic film (Lord of the Rings in case you are wondering), and the Director asks the character to scream as he gets stabbed in the back, what would your reply be when this legend of stage and screen says that he has seen plenty of men get killed in this way and that the only noise they make is that of sighing as the air escapes their lungs…
I do not know about you, but I would be asking questions, or maybe you would not, considering the actor was 6ft5 Sir Christopher Lee and according to witnesses to the conversation, his reply broached no further enquiry.
But what had the man who had played characters like Dracula and Scaramanga (where I first saw him, that dastardly man with the golden gun) experienced to enable him to make a quite shocking comment? As with so many of his era, he had seen action in the Second World War, and by that I do not mean he dabbled, he was heavily involved. Whilst exactly what part Sir Christopher played is still shrouded in secrecy, even before he passed away in 2015 he would not reveal exactly what he had done, we still have some idea as we know the units he worked with.
If after reading this you do not see him in a different light, even if you admired him before, then read it again…
He came from a military family, his father was a Lieutenant Colonel with the 60th Kings Rifle Corps and had seen action in both the Boer War, and World War One, it seemed that Lee was destined to follow his father when at the age of 18 and in a military academy, he volunteered to fight for Finland against the Russian invasion in the Winter War. Whilst they kept the British volunteers far from the front line, and they returned back to Blighty after only a few weeks, Lee did say with hindsight that he probably would not have still been alive if he had been allowed to fight.
Fast forward to March 1941, and the death of his father made him realise that joining the Army was not a step he wanted to follow, and he enlisted in the Royal Air Force (RAF) whilst he still had a choice. The original plan was to be a pilot, but after an optical problem was found just before he was due to go solo which caused him to have blurred vision, headaches and associated dizziness he was grounded – despite his many appeals to the contrary.
This set back did not stop him wanting to do his bit for King and Country, he joined the Intelligence branch of the RAF and spent time in South Africa and places like Southern Rhodesia before joining the Long Range Desert Patrol. These men were experts in desert navigation, and during the bulk of the North African campaign, spent their time behind enemy lines guiding the SAS (called L Detachment) and other special forces. Lee not only took on the role of “guide”, he saw active combat and had airfields he was based at bombed to near destruction, came down with Malaria (six times according to the history books) and tripped over a live bomb when an aircraft crashed near him. He also spent time attached to Churchill’s Special Operations Executive (SOE), whose role was that of espionage, sabotage and reconnaissance in those parts of Europe that were occupied. His ability as a multi linguist and fluency in French, German and Italian (it is reported he could speak six different languages) would have been a definite plus point for this secondment. Even those with a rudimentary knowledge of WW2 history would know the danger anyone posing resistance to the Axis forces took, hangings, public shootings…thrown into one of the camps (something thing Lee did mention he saw, the aftermath of the worst of humanity).
Even after the war ended, his service did not, he began working for the Central registry of War Criminals and security suspects, in effect, he became a Nazi hunter, tracking down the worst of the worst when it came to offenders.
I have not gone into detail as to the battles he took part in, basically because we do not know, the records are still sealed and may well be for a very long time. After his death in 2015, as tends to happen, people started to question whether this operatic singer, actor, and former soldier had actually done everything he discretely alluded to. As with another war hero, Dirk Bogarde, I would ask, why would they lie? In fact, with Lee he never particular told anyone anything, so who exactly was he trying to mislead?
We do know for certain that he joined the RAF after August 1940, and that his service number was 1389854.
Maybe one day when those ultra-secret files are opened, we will see his name on all of these missions, but until then, I think we take his “word” for it.