Christopher Lee Biography
Christopher Lee (Sir Christopher Frank Carandini Lee) was born on May 27, 1922 an died on June 7, 2015. He was an English actor, singer, military officer, and author. With a career spanning nearly 70 years, Lee was well known for portraying villains and became best known for his role as Count Dracula in a sequence of Hammer Horror films, a typecasting situation he always lamented. His other film roles include Francisco Scaramanga in the James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), Saruman in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy (2001–2003) and The Hobbit film trilogy (2012–2014), and Count Dooku in the second and third films of the Star Wars prequel trilogy (2002 & 2005).
Lee was knighted for services to drama and charity in 2009, received the BAFTA Fellowship in 2011, and received the BFI Fellowship in 2013. Lee considered his best performance to be that of Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah in the biopic Jinnah (1998), and his best film to be the British cult film The Wicker Man (1973). He frequently appeared opposite Peter Cushing in many horror films, and late in his career had roles in six Tim Burton films.
Always noted as an actor for his deep, strong voice, Lee was also known for his singing ability, recording various opera and musical pieces between 1986 and 1998, and the symphonic metal album Charlemagne: By the Sword and the Cross in 2010, after having worked with several metal bands since 2005. The heavy metal follow-up Charlemagne: The Omens of Death was released on 27 May 2013, Lee’s 91st birthday. He was honoured with the “Spirit of Metal” award at the 2010 Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards ceremony. Lee died from complications of respiratory problems and heart failure on the morning of 7 June 2015, aged 93.
Christopher Lee Age
Lee died from complications of respiratory problems and heart failure on the morning of 7 June 2015, aged 93.
Christopher Lee Height
Chrsitopher Lee is 1.796 meters tall.
Christopher Lee Daughter
Christopher Lee is father to Christina Erika Lee, his daughter. Christina Lee was born on 23 November 1963. She is married to Juan Francisco Aneiros Rodriguez. they married 2001.
Christopher Lee Young
Lee was born in Belgravia, London, the son of Lieutenant Colonel Geoffrey Trollope Lee (1879–1941) of the 60th King’s Royal Rifle Corps, and his wife, Countess Estelle Marie (née Carandini di Sarzano; 1889–1981). Lee’s father fought in the Boer War and First World War, and his mother was an Edwardian beauty who was painted by Sir John Lavery, Oswald Birley, and Olive Snell, and sculpted by Clare Sheridan; her lineage can be traced to Charlemagne. Lee’s maternal great-grandfather was an Italian political refugee, whose wife, Lee’s great-grandmother, was English-born opera singer Marie Carandini (née Burgess).
He had one sister, Xandra Carandini Lee (1917–2002). Lee’s parents separated when he was four and divorced two years later. During this time, his mother took him and his sister to Wengen in Switzerland. After enrolling in Miss Fisher’s Academy in Territet, he played his first role, as Rumpelstiltskin. They then returned to London, where Lee attended Wagner’s private school in Queen’s Gate, and his mother married Harcourt George St-Croix Rose, a banker and uncle of Ian Fleming. Fleming, author of the James Bond novels, thus became Lee’s step-cousin.
The family moved to Fulham, living next door to the actor Eric Maturin. One night, he was introduced to Prince Yusupov and Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich, the assassins of Grigori Rasputin, whom Lee was to play many years later. When Lee was nine, he was sent to Summer Fields School, a preparatory school in Oxford whose pupils often later attended Eton. He continued acting in school plays, though “the laurels deservedly went to Patrick Macnee”. Lee applied for a scholarship to Eton, where his interview was in the presence of the ghost story author M. R. James. Sixty years later, Lee played the part of James for the BBC.
His poor maths skills meant that he placed eleventh, and thus missed out on being a King’s Scholar by one place. His step-father was not prepared to pay the higher fees that being an Oppidan Scholar meant, and so he did not attend. Instead, Lee attended Wellington College, where he won scholarships in the classics, studying Ancient Greek and Latin. Aside from a “tiny part” in a school play, he didn’t act while at Wellington. He was a “passable” racquets player and fencer and a competent cricketer but did not do well at the other sports played: hockey, football, rugby and boxing.
He disliked the parades and weapons training and would always “play dead” as soon as possible during mock battles. Lee was frequently beaten at school, including once at Wellington for “being beaten too often”, though he accepted them as “logical and therefore acceptable” punishments for knowingly breaking the rules. At age 17, and with one year left at Wellington, the summer term of 1939 was his last. His step-father had gone bankrupt, owing £25,000. His mother separated from Rose, and Lee had to get a job, his sister already working as a secretary for the Church of England Pensions Board.
With most employers on or preparing to go on summer holidays, there were no immediate opportunities for Lee, and so he was sent to the French Riviera, where his sister was on holiday with friends. On his way there he stopped briefly in Paris, where he stayed with the journalist Webb Miller, a friend of Rose, and witnessed Eugen Weidmann’s execution by guillotine – the last public execution performed in France.
Arriving in Menton, he stayed with the Russian Mazirov family, living among exiled princely families. It was arranged that he should stay on in Menton after his sister had returned home, but with Europe on the brink of war, he returned to London instead. He worked as an office clerk for United States Lines, taking care of the mail and running errands.
Christopher Lee Military
Military service during the Second World War
When the Second World War broke out, Lee volunteered to fight for the Finnish forces during the Winter War in 1939. He and other British volunteers were kept away from actual fighting, but they were issued winter gear and were posted on guard duty a safe distance from the front lines. After a fortnight, they returned home. Lee returned to work at United States Lines and found his work more satisfying, feeling that he was contributing. In early 1940, he joined Beecham’s, at first as an office clerk, then as a switchboard operator.
When Beecham’s moved out of London, he joined the Home Guard. In the winter, his father fell ill with bilateral pneumonia and died on 12 March 1941. Realising that he had no inclination to follow his father into the Army, Lee decided to join up while he still had some choice of service, and volunteered for the Royal Air Force. Lee reported to RAF Uxbridge for training and was then posted to the Initial Training Wing at Paignton.
After he had passed his exams in Liverpool, the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan meant that he travelled on the Reina del Pacifico to South Africa, then to his posting at Hillside, at Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia. Training with de Havilland Tiger Moths, Lee was having his penultimate training session before his first solo flight, when he suffered from headaches and blurred vision. The medical officer hesitantly diagnosed a failure of his optic nerve, and he was told he would never be allowed to fly again.
Lee was devastated, and the death of a fellow trainee from Summer Fields only made him more despondent. His appeals were fruitless, and he was left with nothing to do. He was moved around to different flying stations before being posted to Southern Rhodesia’s capital, Salisbury, in December 1941. He then visited the Mazowe Dam, Marandellas, the Wankie Game Reserve and the ruins of Great Zimbabwe. Thinking he should “do something constructive for my keep”, he applied to join RAF Intelligence.
His superiors praised his initiative, and he was seconded into the Rhodesian Police Force and was posted as a warder at Salisbury Prison. He was then promoted to leading aircraftman and moved to Durban in South Africa, before travelling to Suez on the Nieuw Amsterdam. After “killing time” at RAF Kasfareet near the Great Bitter Lake in the Suez Canal Zone, he resumed intelligence work in the city of Ismaïlia. He was then attached to No. 205 Group RAF before being commissioned as a pilot officer at the end of January 1943, and attached to No. 260 Squadron RAF as an intelligence officer.
As the North African Campaign progressed, the squadron “leapfrogged” between Egyptian airstrips, from RAF El Daba to Maaten Bagush and on to Mersa Matruh. They lent air support to the ground forces and bombed strategic targets. Lee, “broadly speaking, was expected to know everything”. The Allied advance continued into Libya, through Tobruk and Benghazi to the Marble Arch and then through El Agheila, Khoms and Tripoli, with the squadron averaging five missions a day.
As the advance continued into Tunisia, with the Axis forces digging themselves in at the Mareth Line, Lee was almost killed when the squadron’s airfield was bombed. After breaking through the Mareth Line, the squadron made their final base in Kairouan. After the Axis surrender in North Africa in May 1943, the squadron moved to Zuwarah in Libya in preparation for the Allied invasion of Sicily. They then moved to Malta, and, after its capture by the British Eighth Army, the Sicilian town of Pachino, before making a permanent base in Agnone Bagni.
At the end of July 1943, Lee received his second promotion of the year, this time to flying officer. After the Sicilian campaign was over, Lee came down with malaria for the sixth time in under a year, and was flown to a hospital in Carthage for treatment. When he returned, the squadron was restless, frustrated with a lack of news about the Eastern Front and the Soviet Union in general, and with no mail from home or alcohol. Unrest spread and threatened to turn into mutiny. Lee, by now an expert on Russia, talked them into resuming their duties, which much impressed his commanding officer.
After the Allied invasion of Italy, the squadron was based in Foggia and Termoli during the winter of 1943. Lee was then seconded to the Army during an officer’s swap scheme. He spent most of this time with the Gurkhas of the 8th Indian Infantry Division during the Battle of Monte Cassino. While spending some time on leave in Naples, Lee climbed Mount Vesuvius, which erupted three days later. During the final assault on Monte Cassino, the squadron was based in San Angelo, and Lee was nearly killed when one of the planes crashed on takeoff, and he tripped over one of its live bombs.
After the battle, the squadron moved to airfields just outside Rome, and Lee visited the city, where he met his mother’s cousin, Nicolò Carandini, who had fought in the Italian resistance movement. In November 1944, Lee was promoted to flight lieutenant and left the squadron in Iesi to take up a posting at Air Force HQ. Lee took part in forward planning and liaison, in preparation for a potential assault into the rumoured German Alpine Fortress. After the war ended, Lee was invited to go hunting near Vienna and was then billeted in Pörtschach am Wörthersee.
For the final few months of his service, Lee, who spoke fluent French and German, among other languages, was seconded to the Central Registry of War Criminals and Security Suspects. Here, he was tasked with helping to track down Nazi war criminals. Of his time with the organisation, Lee said: “We were given dossiers of what they’d done and told to find them, interrogate them as much as we could and hand them over to the appropriate authority … We saw these concentration camps. Some had been cleaned up. Some had not.” He retired from the RAF in 1946 with the rank of flight lieutenant.
Lee’s stepfather served as a captain in the Intelligence Corps, but it is unlikely he had any influence over Lee’s military career. Lee saw him for the last time on a bus in London in 1940, by then divorced from Lee’s mother, though Lee did not speak to him. Lee mentioned that during the war he was attached to the Special Operations Executive and the Long Range Desert Group, the precursor of the SAS, but always declined to go into details.
I was attached to the SAS from time to time but we are forbidden – former, present, or future – to discuss any specific operations. Let’s just say I was in Special Forces and leave it at that. People can read in to that what they like.
Christopher Lee Career
1947–1957: Christopher Lee Career beginnings
Returning to London in 1946, Lee was offered his old job back at Beecham’s, with a significant raise, but he turned them down as “I couldn’t think myself back into the office frame of mind.” The Armed Forces were sending veterans with an education in the Classics to teach at universities, but Lee felt his Latin was too rusty and didn’t care for the strict curfews.
During lunch with his cousin Nicolò Carandini, now the Italian Ambassador to Britain, Lee was detailing his war wounds when Carandini said, “Why don’t you become an actor, Christopher?” Lee liked the idea, and after assuaging his mother’s protests by pointing to the successful Carandini performers in Australia (which included his great-grandmother Marie Carandini, who had been a successful opera singer), he met Nicolò’s friend Filippo Del Giudice, a lawyer-turned-film producer.
The head of Two Cities Films, part of the Rank Organisation, Giudice, “looked me up and down… [and] concluded that I was just what the industry had been looking for”. He was sent to see Josef Somlo for a contract, who immediately announced that he was “much too tall to be an actor”. Somlo sent him to see Rank’s David Henley and Olive Dodds, who signed him on a seven-year contract.
A student at Rank’s “Charm School”, Lee and many of the others had difficulty finding work. He finally made his film début in Terence Young’s Gothic romance Corridor of Mirrors (1947). He played Charles; the director got around his height by placing him at a table in a nightclub alongside Lois Maxwell, Mavis Villiers, Hugh Latimer and John Penrose. Lee had a single line, “a satirical shaft meant to qualify the lead’s bravura”.
His “apprenticeship” lasted ten years, as he mostly played supporting and background characters.
I was around a long time – nearly ten years. Initially, I was told I was too tall to be an actor. That’s a quite fatuous remark to make. It’s like saying you’re too short to play the piano. I thought, “Right, I’ll show you…” At the beginning I didn’t know anything about the technique of working in front of a camera, but during those 10 years, I did the one thing that’s so vitally important today – I watched, I listened and I learned. So when the time came I was ready… Oddly enough, to play a character who said nothing.
Also in this early period, he made an uncredited appearance in Laurence Olivier’s film version of Hamlet (1948), as a spear carrier (his later co-star and close friend Peter Cushing played Osric). A few years later, he appeared in Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951) as a Spanish captain. He was cast when the director asked him if he could speak Spanish and fence, which he was able to do. Lee appeared uncredited in the American epic Quo Vadis (also 1951), which was shot in Rome, playing a chariot driver and was injured when he was thrown from it at one point during the shoot.
Lee recalled that his breakthrough came in 1952, when Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. began making films at the British National Studios. He said in 2006, “I was cast in various roles in 16 of them and even appeared with Buster Keaton and it proved an excellent training ground.” The same year, he appeared in John Huston’s Oscar-nominated Moulin Rouge. Throughout the next decade, he made nearly 30 films, including Cockleshell Heroes, playing mostly stock action characters.
1957–1976: Christopher Lee Work with Hammer
Lee’s first film for Hammer was The Curse of Frankenstein (1957), in which he played Frankenstein’s monster, with Peter Cushing as Baron Victor Frankenstein. It was the first film to co-star Lee and Cushing, who ultimately appeared together in over twenty films and became close friends. When he arrived at a casting session for the film, “they asked me if I wanted the part, I said yes and that was that”. A little later, Lee co-starred with Boris Karloff in the film Corridors of Blood (1958). Lee had previously appeared with Karloff in 1955 in the “At Night, All Cats are Grey” episode of the British television series Colonel March of Scotland Yard.
Lee’s own appearance as Frankenstein’s monster led to his first appearance as the Transylvanian vampire Count Dracula in the film Dracula (1958, known as Horror of Dracula in the United States). A critically acclaimed film that saw Lee fix the image of the fanged vampire in popular culture, Dracula has been ranked among the best British films. The film magazine Empire ranked Lee’s portrayal as Dracula the 7th Greatest Horror Movie Character of All Time. Lee accepted a similar role in an Italian-French horror picture called Uncle Was a Vampire (1959).
Lee returned to the role of Dracula in Hammer’s Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1965). Lee’s role has no lines, he merely hisses his way through the film. Stories vary as to the reason for this: Lee states he refused to speak the poor dialogue he was given, but screenwriter Jimmy Sangster claims that the script did not contain any lines for the character. This film set the standard for most of the Dracula sequels in the sense that half the film’s running time was spent on telling the story of Dracula’s resurrection and the character’s appearances were brief.
Lee went on record to state that he was virtually “blackmailed” by Hammer into starring in the subsequent films; unable or unwilling to pay him his going rate, they would resort to reminding him of how many people he would put out of work, if he did not take part. The process went like this: The telephone would ring and my agent would say, “Jimmy Carreras has been on the phone, they’ve got another Dracula for you.” And I would say, “Forget it! I don’t want to do another one.” I’d get a call from Jimmy Carreras, in a state of hysteria.
“What’s all this about?!” “Jim, I don’t want to do it, and I don’t have to do it.” “No, you have to do it!” And I said, “Why?” He replied, “Because I’ve already sold it to the American distributor with you playing the part. Think of all the people you know so well, that you will put out of work!” Emotional blackmail. That’s the only reason I did them.
His roles in the films Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968), Taste the Blood of Dracula (1969), and Scars of Dracula (1970) all gave the Count very little to do. Lee said in an interview in 2005, “all they do is write a story and try and fit the character in somewhere, which is very clear when you see the films. They gave me nothing to do! I pleaded with Hammer to let me use some of the lines that Bram Stoker had written. Occasionally, I sneaked one in.” Although Lee may not have liked what Hammer was doing with the character, worldwide audiences embraced the films, which were all commercially successful.
Lee starred in two further Dracula films for Hammer in the early 1970s, both of which attempted to bring the character into the modern-day era. These were not commercially successful: Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972) and The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973). The latter film was tentatively titled Dracula Is Dead… and Well and Living in London, a parody of the stage and film musical revue Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris, but Lee was not amused. Speaking at a press conference in 1973 to announce the film, Lee said, “I’m doing it under protest… I think it is fatuous. I can think of twenty adjectives – fatuous, pointless, absurd.
It’s not a comedy, but it’s got a comic title. I don’t see the point.” The Satanic Rites Of Dracula was the last Dracula film that Christopher Lee played the Dracula role in, as he felt he had played the part too many times and that the Dracula films had deteriorated in quality. Hammer went on to make one more Dracula film without him: The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974), with John Forbes-Robertson playing the Count and David de Keyser dubbing him. In all, Lee played Dracula ten times: seven films for Hammer Productions, once for Jesse Franco’s Count Dracula (1970), uncredited in Jerry Lewis’s One More Time (1970) and Édouard Molinaro’s Dracula and Son (1976).
Lee’s other work for Hammer included The Mummy (1959). Lee portrayed Rasputin in Rasputin, the Mad Monk (1966) and Sir Henry Baskerville (to Cushing’s Sherlock Holmes) in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959). Lee later played Holmes himself in 1962’s Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace, and returned to Holmes films with Billy Wilder’s British-made The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970), in which he plays Sherlock’s smarter brother, Mycroft.
Lee considers this film to be the reason he stopped being typecast: “I’ve never been typecast since. Sure, I’ve played plenty of heavies, but as Anthony Hopkins says, “I don’t play villains, I play people.”” Lee played a leading role in the German film The Puzzle of the Red Orchid (1962), speaking German, which he had learned during his education in Switzerland. He auditioned for a part in the film The Longest Day (1962), but was turned down because he did not “look like a military man”. Some film books incorrectly credit him with a role in the film, something he had to correct for the rest of his life.
Lee’s friend Dennis Wheatley, a noted author, was responsible for bringing the occult to him. The company made two films from Wheatley’s novels, both starring Lee. The first, The Devil Rides Out (1967), is generally considered to be one of Hammer’s crowning achievements. According to Lee, Wheatley was so pleased with it, that he offered the actor the film rights to his remaining black magic novels, free of charge. However, the second film, To the Devil a Daughter (1976), was fraught with production difficulties and was disowned by its author. Although financially successful, it was Hammer’s last horror film, and marked the end of Lee’s long association with the studio that had a major impact on his career.
Various roles: Christopher Lee In The Wicker Man and James Bond
Like Cushing, Lee also appeared in horror films for other companies during the 20-year period from 1957 to 1977. Other films in which Lee performed include the series of Fu Manchu films made between 1965 and 1969, in which he starred as the villain in heavy oriental make-up; I, Monster (1971), in which he played Jekyll and Hyde; The Creeping Flesh (1972); and his personal favourite, The Wicker Man (1973), in which he played Lord Summerisle. Lee wanted to break free of his image as Dracula and take on more interesting acting roles.
Lee met with screenwriter Anthony Shaffer, and they agreed to work together. Film director Robin Hardy and British Lion head Peter Snell became involved in the project. Shaffer had a series of conversations with Hardy, and the two decided that it would be fun to make a horror film centring on “old religion”, in sharp contrast to the popular Hammer films of the day. Shaffer read the David Pinner novel Ritual, in which a devout Christian policeman is called to investigate what appears to be the ritual murder of a young girl in a rural village, and decided that it would serve well as the source material for the project.
Shaffer and Lee paid Pinner £15,000 for the rights to the novel, and Schaffer set to work on the screenplay. However, he soon decided that a direct adaptation would not work well, and began to craft a new story, using only the basic outline of the novel. Lee was so keen to get the film made, he gave his services for free, as the budget was so small. He would later refer to the film as the best he had ever made. Lee appeared as the on-screen narrator in Jess Franco’s Eugenie (1970) as a favour to producer Harry Alan Towers, unaware that it was softcore pornography, as the sex scenes were shot separately.
I had no idea that was what it was when I agreed to the role. I was told it was about the Marquis de Sade. I flew out to Spain for one day’s work playing the part of a narrator. I had to wear a crimson dinner jacket. There were lots of people behind me. They all had their clothes on. There didn’t seem to be anything peculiar or strange. A friend said: ‘Do you know you are in a film in Old Compton Street?’ In those days that was where the mackintosh brigade watched their films. ‘Very funny,’ I said. So I crept along there heavily disguised in dark glasses and scarf, and found the cinema and there was my name. I was furious! There was a huge row.
When I had left Spain that day everyone behind me had taken their clothes off! In addition to making films in the United Kingdom, Lee made films in mainland Europe: he appeared in two German films, Count Dracula (1970), where he again played the vampire count, and The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism (1967). Other films in Europe he made include Castle of the Living Dead (1964) and Horror Express (1972). Lee was a producer of the horror film Nothing But the Night (also 1972), in which he also starred. It was the first and last film he ever produced, as he did not enjoy the process.
Lee appeared as the Comte de Rochefort in Richard Lester’s The Three Musketeers (1973). Lee was wounded in his left knee during filming, an injury he still felt many years later. Lee also appeared in the sequel film The Four Musketeers (1974), which was actually shot at the same time. Although “killed” in the latter film, he reprised the role in The Return of the Musketeers (1989), with his character given token dialogue explaining that his wound in the earlier film’s climactic sword fight wasn’t fatal.
After the mid-1970s, Lee eschewed horror roles almost entirely. Ian Fleming, author of the James Bond spy novels and Lee’s step-cousin, had offered him the role of the titular antagonist in the first Eon-produced Bond film Dr. No (1962). Lee enthusiastically accepted, but by the time Fleming told the producers, they had already chosen Joseph Wiseman for the role. Lee finally got to play a James Bond villain in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), in which he was cast as the deadly assassin Francisco Scaramanga. Lee said of his performance, “In Fleming’s novel he’s just a West Indian thug, but in the film he’s charming, elegant, amusing, lethal… I played him like the dark side of Bond.”
Because of his filming schedule in Bangkok, film director Ken Russell was unable to sign Lee to play the Specialist in Tommy (1975). That role was eventually given to Jack Nicholson. In an AMC documentary on Halloween (1978), John Carpenter states that he offered the role of Samuel Loomis to Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, before Donald Pleasence took the role. Years later, Lee met Carpenter, and told him that the biggest regret of his career was not taking the role of Dr. Loomis.
Lee appeared on the cover of the Wings album Band on the Run (1973), along with others including chat show host Michael Parkinson, singer Kenny Lynch, film actor James Coburn, world boxing champion John Conteh, and broadcaster Clement Freud.
1977: Christopher Lee Move to Hollywood
In 1977, Lee left Britain for the US, concerned at being typecast in horror films, as had happened to his close friends Peter Cushing and Vincent Price. He said in an interview in 2011: Peter and Vincent made some wonderful serious movies but are only known for horror. That was why I went to America. I couldn’t see anything happening here except a continuation of what had gone before. A couple of friends, Dick Widmark and Billy Wilder, told me I had to get away from London otherwise I would always be typecast.
Lee’s first American film was the disaster film Airport ’77 (1977). In 1978, Lee surprised many people with his willingness to go along with a joke, by appearing as guest host on NBC’s Saturday Night Live. As a result of his appearance on SNL, Steven Spielberg, who was in the audience, cast him in 1941 (1979). Meanwhile, Lee co-starred with Bette Davis in the Disney film Return from Witch Mountain (1978). He turned down the role of Dr. Barry Rumack (finally played by Leslie Nielsen) in the disaster spoof Airplane! (1980), a decision he later called “a big mistake”.
Lee appeared in The Return of Captain Invincible (1982), a comedy-musical film. Lee plays a fascist who plans to rid America (and afterwards, the world) of all non-whites. Lee sings on two tracks in the film (“Name Your Poison” and “Mister Midnight”), written by Richard O’Brien (who had written The Rocky Horror Picture Show seven years previously) and Richard Hartley. Later, Lee appeared alongside Reb Brown and Sybil Danning in Howling II: Your Sister Is a Werewolf (1985). Lee made his last appearances as Sherlock Holmes in Incident at Victoria Falls (1991) and Sherlock Holmes and the Leading Lady (1992).
In addition to more than a dozen feature films together for Hammer Films, Amicus Productions, and other companies, Lee and Peter Cushing both appeared in Hamlet (1948) and Moulin Rouge (1952), albeit in separate scenes; and in separate instalments of the Star Wars films, Cushing as Grand Moff Tarkin in the original film, Lee decades later as Count Dooku. The last project which united them in person was a documentary, Flesh and Blood: The Hammer Heritage of Horror (1994), which they jointly narrated. It was the last time they saw each other, as Cushing died two months later.
In 1998, Lee starred in the role of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, founder of modern Pakistan, in the film Jinnah. In 2002, while talking about his favourite role in film at a press conference at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival, he declared that his role in Jinnah was by far his best performance.
Lee was considered for the role of comic book villain/hero Magneto in the screen adaptation of the popular comic book series X-Men, but he lost the role to Sir Ian McKellen, his co-star in The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.
2000s: Christopher lee In The Lord of the Rings and Star Wars
Lee had many television roles, including that of Flay in the BBC television miniseries, based on Mervyn Peake’s novels, Gormenghast (2000), and Stefan Wyszyński in the CBS film John Paul the Second (2005). He played Lucas de Beaumanoir, the Grand Master of the Knights Templar, in the BBC/A&E co-production of Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe (1997). He played a role in the made-for-TV series La Révolution française (1989) in part 2, “Les Années Terribles”, as the executioner, Charles-Henri Sanson, who beheaded King Louis XVI, Maximilien de Robespierre, and others.
Lee played Saruman in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy. In the commentary, he stated he had a decades-long dream to play Gandalf, but that he was now too old, and that his physical limitations prevented him from being considered. The role of Saruman, by contrast, required no horseback riding and much less fighting. Lee had met J. R. R. Tolkien once (making him the only person involved in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy to have done so) and made a habit of reading the novels at least once a year.
In addition, he performed for the album The Lord of the Rings: Songs and Poems by J.R.R. Tolkien in 2003. Lee’s appearance in the final film in the trilogy, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, was cut from the theatrical release, but the scene was reinstated in the extended edition. The Lord of the Rings marked the beginning of a major career revival that continued in Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) and Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005), in which he played the villainous Count Dooku.
Lee did most of the swordplay himself, though a double was required for the long shots with more vigorous footwork. Lee was one of the favourite actors of Tim Burton, and became a regular in many of Burton’s films, working for the director five times, starting in 1999, where he had a small role as the Burgomaster in the film Sleepy Hollow. In 2005, Lee played Willy Wonka’s strict dentist father, Dr. Wilbur Wonka, in Burton’s reimagining of the Roald Dahl tale Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and voiced the character of Pastor Galswells in Corpse Bride, co-directed by Burton and Mike Johnson.
In 2007, Lee collaborated with Burton on Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, playing the spirit of Sweeney Todd’s victims, called the Gentleman Ghost, alongside Anthony Head, with both singing “The Ballad of Sweeney Todd”, its reprises and the Epilogue. These songs were recorded, but eventually cut since Burton felt that the songs were too theatrical for the film. Lee’s appearance was completely cut from the film, but Head still had an uncredited one-line cameo. In 2008, he was offered the role of King Balor in Guillermo del Toro’s Hellboy II: The Golden Army, but had to turn it down due to prior commitments.
In late November 2009, Lee narrated the Science Fiction Festival in Trieste, Italy. Also in 2009, Lee starred in Stephen Poliakoff’s British period drama Glorious 39 with Julie Christie, Bill Nighy, Romola Garai, and David Tennant, Academy Award-nominated director Danis Tanović’s war film Triage with Colin Farrell and Paz Vega, and Duncan Ward’s comedy Boogie Woogie alongside Amanda Seyfried, Gillian Anderson, Stellan Skarsgård, and Joanna Lumley.
2010’s: Christopher Lee Later roles
In 2010, Lee marked his fourth collaboration with Tim Burton by voicing the Jabberwock in Burton’s adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic book Alice in Wonderland, alongside Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, and Anne Hathaway. While he only had two lines, Burton said that he felt Lee to be a good match for the iconic character, because of Lee himself being “an iconic guy”.
Lee won the “Spirit of Metal” award in the Metal Hammer Golden Gods 2010. The award was presented by Tony Iommi. In 2010, Lee received the Steiger Award (Germany) and, in February 2011, Lee was awarded the BAFTA Fellowship. In 2011, he appeared in a Hammer film for the first time in thirty-five years, the last being 1976’s To the Devil a Daughter. The film was called The Resident, and he gave a “superbly sinister” performance alongside Hilary Swank and Jeffrey Dean Morgan. Whilst filming scenes for the film in New Mexico in early 2009, Lee injured his back when he tripped over power cables on set.
Lee had to undergo surgery, and as a result, he was unable to play the role of Sir Lachlan Morrison in The Wicker Tree, the sequel to The Wicker Man. Very disappointed, director Robin Hardy recast the role, but Lee was determined to appear in the film, so Hardy wrote a small scene specially for him. Lee appears as the unnamed “Old Gentleman” who acts as Lachlan’s mentor in a flashback.
Hardy stated that fans of The Wicker Man would recognise this character as Lord Summerisle, but Lee contradicted this, stating that they are two unrelated characters. Also in 2011, Lee appeared in the critically acclaimed Hugo, directed by Martin Scorsese. On 11 January 2011, Lee announced on his website that he would be reprising the role of Saruman for the prequel film The Hobbit.
Lee had originally said that he would have liked to have shown Saruman’s corruption by Sauron, but that he wouldn’t be comfortable flying to New Zealand at his age. The production was adjusted to accommodate Lee’s travel concerns, thereby allowing him to participate in the film from London. Lee said he worked on his role for the films over the course of four days, portraying Saruman as a kind and noble wizard, before his subsequent fall into darkness, as depicted in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.
In 2012, Lee marked his fifth and final collaboration with Tim Burton, by appearing in Burton’s film adaptation of the gothic soap opera Dark Shadows, in the small role of a New England fishing captain. In an interview in August 2013, Lee said that he was “saddened” to hear his friend Johnny Depp considering retirement from acting, noting that he himself had no intention of retiring. There are frustrations – people who lie to you, people who don’t know what they are doing, films that don’t turn out the way you had wanted them to – so, yes, I do understand.
I always ask myself “well, what else could I do?”. Making films has never just been a job to me, it’s my life. I have some interests outside of acting – I sing and I’ve written books, for instance – but acting is what keeps me going, it’s what I do, it gives life purpose… I’m realistic about the amount of work I can get at my age, but I take what I can, even voice-overs and narration. Lee narrated the feature-length documentary Necessary Evil: Super-Villains of DC Comics, which was released on 25 October 2013. In 2014, Lee appeared in an episode of the BBC documentary series Timeshift called How to Be Sherlock Holmes: The Many Faces of a Master Detective.
Lee and others who had played Sherlock Holmes discussed the character and the various interpretations of him. He also appeared in a web exclusive, reading an excerpt from the short story The Final Problem. He also narrated an advertising campaign for Age UK, reading a poem by Roger McGough. A month before his death, Lee had signed to star with an ensemble cast in the Danish film The 11th.
Lee’s final performance was the independent Angels of Notting Hill directed by Michael Pakleppa. A comedy about an angel trapped in London who falls in love with a human being. Lee plays The Boss/Mr. President and the film premiered in the Regent Street Cinema, London on Saturday 29 October 2016 Lee recorded his final words for film at his Redwood Studios in Soho, London on 17 May 2015 just 3 weeks before his death on 7 June 2015.
Christopher LeeChristopher Lee Voice work
Lee spoke fluent English, Italian, French, Spanish, and German, and was moderately proficient in Swedish, Russian, and Greek. He was the original voice of Thor in the German dubs of the Danish 1986 animated film Valhalla, and of King Haggard in both the English and German dubs of the 1982 animated adaptation of The Last Unicorn.
Lee provided the off-camera voice of “U. N. Owen”, the mysterious host who brings disparate characters together in Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians (1965). The film was produced by Harry Alan Towers, for whom Lee had worked repeatedly in the 1960s. Even though he was not credited on the film, his voice is unmistakable. He also provided all the voices for the English dub of Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday (1953).
He contributed with his voice as Death in the animated versions of Terry Pratchett’s Soul Music and Wyrd Sisters, and reprised the role in the Sky1 live action adaptation The Colour of Magic, taking over the role from the late Ian Richardson.
Lee provided the voice for the role of Ansem the Wise/DiZ in the video games Kingdom Hearts II, Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days, and Kingdom Hearts 2.5 HD Remix, but veteran voice actor Corey Burton (who would also take over for Lee in Star Wars: The Clone Wars) took over for Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories, Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep, and Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance, as well as the version of Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days that was released as part of Kingdom Hearts 1.5 HD Remix. He was the voice of Lucan D’Lere in the trailers for EverQuest II.
Lee reprised his role as Saruman in the video game The Lord of the Rings: The Battle for Middle-earth along with the other actors of the films. He also narrated and sang for the Danish musical group The Tolkien Ensemble, taking the role of Treebeard, King Théoden and others in the readings or singing of their respective poems or songs. In 2007, he voiced the transcript of The Children of Húrin by J.R.R. Tolkien for the audiobook version of the novel.
In 2005, Lee provided the voice of Pastor Galswells in The Corpse Bride, co-directed by Tim Burton and Mike Johnson. He served as the narrator on The Nightmare Before Christmas’ poem, written by Tim Burton as well. Lee reprised his role as Count Dooku in the Star Wars: The Clone Wars 2008 animated film, but Corey Burton took his place for the character in the TV series.
From 2008 until 2010, Lee was the host and narrator of “Mystery Theater” which aired on radio worldwide. Lee introduced American classic radio mystery, sci-fi and detective programs in a series produced, written and directed by Carl Amari. In 2010, he collaborated again with Tim Burton, this time by voicing the Jabberwocky in Burton’s adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic book Alice in Wonderland.
Some thirty years after playing Francisco Scaramanga in The Man with the Golden Gun, Lee provided the voice of Scaramanga in the video game GoldenEye: Rogue Agent. In 2013, Lee voiced The Earl of Earl’s Court in the BBC Radio 4 radio play Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman. Lee recorded special dialogue, in addition to serving as the Narrator, for the Lego The Hobbit video game released in April 2014.
Christopher Lee Music career
With his operatic bass voice, Lee sang on The Wicker Man soundtrack, performing Paul Giovanni’s composition, “The Tinker of Rye”. He sang the closing credits song of the 1994 horror film Funny Man. His most notable musical work on film, however, appears in the superhero comedy/rock musical The Return of Captain Invincible (1983), in which Lee performs a song and dance number called “Name Your Poison”, written by Richard O’Brien. In 1977 he appeared on Peter Knight and Bob Johnson’s (from Steeleye Span) concept album The King of Elfland’s Daughter. In the 1980s, during the height of Italo disco, he provided vocals to Kathy Joe Daylor’s song “Little Witch”.
Lee’s first contact with heavy metal music came by singing a duet with Fabio Lione, lead vocalist of the Italian symphonic power metal band Rhapsody of Fire on the single “The Magic of the Wizard’s Dream” from their album Symphony of Enchanted Lands II – The Dark Secret (he only performs backing vocals on the album version). Later he appeared as a narrator and backing vocalist on the band’s four albums Symphony of Enchanted Lands II – The Dark Secret, Triumph or Agony, The Frozen Tears of Angels, and From Chaos to Eternity, as well as on the EP The Cold Embrace of Fear – A Dark Romantic Symphony, portraying the Wizard King.
Lee also worked with Manowar while they were recording a new version of their first album, Battle Hymns. The original voice was done by Orson Welles (who was long dead at the time of the re-recording). The new album, Battle Hymns MMXI, was released on 26 November 2010. In 2006, he bridged two disparate genres of music by performing a heavy metal variation of the Toreador Song from the opera Carmen with the band Inner Terrestrials. The song was featured on his album Revelation in 2007. The same year, he produced a music video for his cover version of the song “My Way”.
Lee’s first complete metal album was Charlemagne: By the Sword and the Cross, which was critically acclaimed and awarded with the “Spirit of Metal” award from the 2010 Metal Hammer Golden Gods ceremony, where he described himself as “a young man right at the beginning of his career”. It was released on 15 March 2010. In June 2012, he released a music video for the song “The Bloody Verdict of Verden”.
On his 90th birthday (27 May 2012), he announced the release of his new single “Let Legend Mark Me as the King” from his upcoming album Charlemagne: The Omens of Death, signifying his move onto “full on” heavy metal, which makes him the oldest performer in the history of the genre. The music was arranged by Richie Faulkner from the band Judas Priest, and featured World Guitar Idol Champion, Hedras Ramos.
In December 2012, Lee released an EP of heavy metal covers of Christmas songs called A Heavy Metal Christmas. Lee released a second in December 2013, entitled A Heavy Metal Christmas Too. With the song Jingle Hell, Lee entered the Billboard Hot 100 chart at #22, thus becoming the oldest living performer to ever enter the music charts, at 91 years and 6 months.
The record was previously held (among living artists) by Tony Bennett, who was 85 when he recorded “Body and Soul” with Amy Winehouse in March 2011 (Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World” charted when Armstrong would have been 86 years old in 1987, but Armstrong had recorded the song 20 years prior, and was already dead by the time the song became a hit). After media attention, the song rose to #18.
Lee released a third EP of covers in May 2014, to celebrate his 92nd birthday, called Metal Knight, in addition to a cover of “My Way”, it contains “The Toreador March”, inspired by the opera Carmen, and the songs “The Impossible Dream” and “I Don Quixote” from the Don Quixote musical Man of La Mancha. Lee was inspired to record the latter songs because, “as far as I am concerned, Don Quixote is the most metal fictional character that I know”.
Lee’s fourth EP and third annual Christmas release came in December 2014, as he put out “Darkest Carols, Faithful Sing”, a playful take on “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing”. He explained: “It’s light-hearted, joyful and fun… At my age, the most important thing for me is to keep active by doing things that I truly enjoy. I do not know how long I am going to be around, so every day is a celebration, and I want to share it with my fans.”
On the self-titled debut album by Hollywood Vampires, a supergroup consisting of Johnny Depp, Alice Cooper, and Joe Perry, Lee is featured as a narrator in the track “The Last Vampire”. Being recorded shortly before his death, this marks Lee’s final appearance on a musical record.
Christopher Lee Dracula
On a search for his missing friend Jonathan Harker (John Van Eyssen), vampire hunter Dr. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing) is led to Count Dracula’s (Christopher Lee) castle. Upon arriving, Van Helsing finds an undead Harker in Dracula’s crypt and discovers that the count’s next target is Harker’s ailing fiancée, Lucy Holmwood (Carol Marsh). With the help of her brother, Arthur (Michael Gough), Van Helsing struggles to protect Lucy and put an end to Count Dracula’s parasitic reign of terror.
Initial release: 8 May 1958 (USA)
Director: Terence Fisher
Adapted from: Dracula
Production company: Hammer Film Productions
Producer: Anthony Hinds
Christopher Lee Movies/ Filmography
# | Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1948 | Corridor of Mirrors | Charles | |
2 | One Night with You | Pirelli’s Assistant | ||
3 | Hamlet | Spear Carrier | Uncredited | |
4 | Penny and the Pownall Case | Jonathan Blair | ||
5 | A Song for Tomorrow | Auguste | ||
6 | My Brother’s Keeper | Second Constable | Scenes deleted | |
7 | Saraband for Dead Lovers | Bit Part | Uncredited | |
8 | Scott of the Antarctic | Bernard Day | ||
9 | 1949 | Trottie True | Bongo | |
10 | 1950 | They Were Not Divided | Chris Lewis | |
11 | Prelude to Fame | Newsman | ||
12 | 1951 | Valley of Eagles | Det. Holt | |
13 | Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. | Spanish Captain | ||
14 | Quo Vadis | Chariot Driver | Uncredited | |
15 | 1952 | The Crimson Pirate | Joseph (attache) | |
16 | Top Secret | Russian Agent | Uncredited | |
17 | Paul Temple Returns | Sir Felix Raybourne | ||
18 | Babes in Bagdad | Slave Dealer | ||
19 | Moulin Rouge | Georges Seurat | ||
20 | 1953 | Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot | Voice | Uncredited |
21 | Innocents in Paris | Lieutenant Whitlock | ||
22 | 1954 | Destination Milan | Svenson | |
23 | 1955 | Man in Demand | ||
24 | Cross-Roads | Harry Cooper | ||
25 | Final Column | |||
26 | That Lady | Captain | ||
27 | Police Dog | Johnny, a constable | ||
28 | The Dark Avenger | French Patrol Captain at Tavern | Uncredited | |
29 | The Cockleshell Heroes | Lt. Cdr. Dick Raikes, RN (Submarine Commander) | ||
30 | Storm Over the Nile | Karaga Pasha | ||
31 | 1956 | Alias John Preston | John Preston | |
32 | Private’s Progress | Gen. von Linbeck’s aide | Uncredited | |
33 | Port Afrique | Franz Vermes | ||
34 | Beyond Mombasa | Gil Rossi | ||
35 | The Battle of the River Plate | Manolo | ||
36 | 1957 | Ill Met by Moonlight | German officer at dentist’s | |
37 | Fortune Is a Woman | Charles Highbury | ||
38 | The Traitor | Dr. Neumann | ||
39 | The Curse of Frankenstein | The Creature | ||
40 | Manuela | Voice | Uncredited | |
41 | Bitter Victory | Sgt. Barney | ||
42 | The Truth About Women | François | ||
43 | 1958 | A Tale of Two Cities | Marquis St. Evremonde | |
44 | Dracula | Count Dracula | Alternative title: Horror of Dracula | |
45 | Battle of the V-1 | Labor Camp Captain, Men’s Section | ||
46 | Corridors of Blood | Resurrection Joe | ||
47 | 1959 | The Hound of the Baskervilles | Sir Henry Baskerville | |
48 | The Man Who Could Cheat Death | Pierre Gerard | ||
49 | The Treasure of San Teresa | Jaeger | ||
50 | The Mummy | Kharis, the Mummy | ||
51 | Uncle Was a Vampire | Baron Roderico da Frankurten | ||
52 | 1960 | Too Hot to Handle | Novak | |
53 | Beat Girl | Kenny | ||
54 | The City of the Dead | Prof. Alan Driscoll | Alternative title: Horror Hotel | |
55 | The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll | Paul Allen | Alternative titles: House of Fright and Jekyll’s Inferno | |
56 | The Hands of Orlac | Nero the magician | ||
57 | 1961 | The Terror of the Tongs | Chung King | |
58 | Taste of Fear | Doctor Pierre Gerrard | ||
59 | The Devil’s Daffodil | Ling Chu | ||
60 | Ercole al centro della terra | King Lico (Licos) | Alternative title: Hercules in the Haunted World | |
61 | 1962 | Stranglehold | ||
62 | The Puzzle of the Red Orchid | Captain Allerman | ||
63 | The Pirates of Blood River | Captain LaRoche | ||
64 | The Devil’s Agent | Baron von Staub | ||
65 | Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace | Sherlock Holmes | ||
66 | 1963 | Katarsis | Mephistoles | |
67 | The Virgin of Nuremberg | Erich | Alternative titles: Castle of Terror and La vergine di Norimberga | |
68 | La frusta e il corpo | Kurt Menliff | Alternative titles: The Whip and the Body and Night Is the Phantom | |
69 | 1964 | Il castello dei morti vivi | Count Drago | Alternative title: Castle of the Living Dead |
70 | Terror in the Crypt | Count Ludwig Karnstein | Alternative titles: Crypt of the Vampire and Crypt of Horror | |
71 | The Devil-Ship Pirates | Captain Robeles | ||
72 | The Gorgon | Prof. Karl Meister | ||
73 | 1965 | Dr Terror’s House of Horrors | Franklyn Marsh | |
74 | She | Billali | ||
75 | The Skull | Sir Matthew Phillips | ||
76 | Ten Little Indians | Voice of “Mr. Owen” | Uncredited | |
77 | The Face of Fu Manchu | Dr. Fu Manchu | ||
78 | 1966 | Theatre of Death | Philippe Darvas | |
79 | Dracula: Prince of Darkness | Count Dracula | ||
80 | Rasputin, the Mad Monk | Grigori Rasputin | ||
81 | Circus of Fear | Gregor | Alternative title: Psycho Circus | |
82 | The Brides of Fu Manchu | Dr. Fu Manchu | ||
83 | 1967 | The Vengeance of Fu Manchu | ||
84 | Night of the Big Heat | Godfrey Hanson | ||
85 | Five Golden Dragons | Dragon #4 | ||
86 | The Blood Demon | Count Frederic Regula, Graf von Andomai | Alternative titles: The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism and Castle of the Walking Dead | |
87 | 1968 | Curse of the Crimson Altar | Morley | Alternative title: The Crimson Cult |
88 | The Devil Rides Out | Duc de Richleau | Alternative title: The Devil’s Bride | |
89 | Eve | Colonel Stuart | Alternative title: The Face of Eve | |
90 | The Blood of Fu Manchu | Dr. Fu Manchu | ||
91 | Dracula Has Risen from the Grave | Count Dracula | ||
92 | 1969 | The Castle of Fu Manchu | Dr. Fu Manchu | |
93 | The Oblong Box | Dr J. Neuhart | ||
94 | The Magic Christian | Ship’s vampire | ||
95 | 1970 | Scream and Scream Again | Fremont | |
96 | Umbracle | The Man | ||
97 | The Bloody Judge | Lord George Jeffreys | Alternative title: Night of the Blood Monster | |
98 | Count Dracula | Count Dracula | ||
99 | Taste the Blood of Dracula | Count Dracula | ||
100 | One More Time | Count Dracula | ||
101 | Julius Caesar | Artemidorus | ||
102 | Eugenie | Dolmance | Alternative title: Eugenie – The Story of Her Journey into Perversion | |
103 | The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes | Mycroft Holmes | ||
104 | Scars of Dracula | Count Dracula | ||
105 | 1971 | The House That Dripped Blood | John Reid | Segment: “Sweets to the Sweet” |
105 | Cuadecuc, vampir | Count Dracula/Himself | ||
106 | I, Monster | Dr. Charles Marlowe / Mr. Edward Blake | ||
107 | Hannie Caulder | Bailey | ||
108 | 1972 | Death Line | Stratton-Villiers, MI5 | Alternative title: Raw Meat |
109 | Nothing But the Night | Col. Charles Bingham | ||
110 | Dracula A.D. 1972 | Count Dracula | ||
111 | 1973 | Dark Places | Dr. Mandeville | |
112 | The Creeping Flesh | James Hildern | ||
113 | The Satanic Rites of Dracula | Count Dracula | ||
114 | Horror Express | Sir Alexander Saxton | ||
115 | The Three Musketeers | Rochefort | ||
116 | The Wicker Man | Lord Summerisle | Lee considered The Wicker Man to be his best film. | |
117 | 1974 | The Four Musketeers | Rochefort | |
118 | The Man with the Golden Gun | Francisco Scaramanga | ||
119 | 1975 | Diagnosis: Murder | Stephen Hayward | |
120 | Le boucher, la star et l’orpheline | Van Krig / Himself | ||
121 | The Story of Heidi | Additional Voices | 1979 dub | |
122 | 1976 | The Keeper | The Keeper | |
123 | Killer Force | Major Chilton | Alternative title: The Diamond Mercenaries | |
124 | To the Devil, A Daughter | Father Michael Rayner | ||
125 | Dracula père et fils | The Prince of Darkness | Alternative title: Dracula and Son | |
126 | Albino | Bill | Alternative titles: Whispering Death and Death in the Sun | |
127 | 1977 | Airport ’77 | Martin Wallace | |
128 | Meatcleaver Massacre | On-screen narrator | Alternative titles: Evil Force and Revenge of the Dead | |
129 | End of the World | Father Pergado / Zindar | ||
130 | Starship Invasions | Captain Rameses | ||
131 | 1978 | Return from Witch Mountain | Victor Gannon | |
132 | Caravans | Sardar Khan | ||
133 | Circle of Iron | Zetan | Alternative title: The Silent Flute | |
134 | 1979 | The Passage | Gypsy | |
135 | Arabian Adventure | Alquazar | ||
136 | Nutcracker Fantasy | Uncle Drosselmeyer / Street Singer / Watchmaker | Voice | |
137 | Jaguar Lives! | Adam Caine | ||
138 | Bear Island | Lechinski | ||
139 | 1941 | Capt. Wolfgang von Kleinschmidt | ||
140 | Captain America II: Death Too Soon | Miguel | ||
141 | 1980 | Serial | Luckman Skull | |
142 | 1981 | The Salamander | Prince Baldasar, the Director of Counterintelligence | |
143 | Desperate Moves | Carl Boxer | ||
144 | An Eye for an Eye | Morgan Canfield | ||
145 | 1982 | Safari 3000 | Count Borgia | |
146 | The Last Unicorn | King Haggard | Voice; also in German language version | |
147 | 1983 | New Magic | Mr. Kellar | |
148 | The Return of Captain Invincible | Mr. Midnight | ||
149 | House of the Long Shadows | Corrigan | ||
150 | 1984 | The Rosebud Beach Hotel | Clifford King | |
151 | 1985 | Mask of Murder | Chief Supt. Jonathan Rich | |
152 | Howling II: Your Sister Is a Werewolf | Stefan Crosscoe | ||
153 | 1986 | The Girl | Peter Storm | |
154 | 1987 | Jocks | President White | |
155 | Mio min Mio | Kato | ||
156 | 1988 | Dark Mission | Luis Morel | |
157 | 1989 | Murder Story | Willard Hope | |
158 | La chute des aigles | Walter Strauss | ||
159 | The Return of the Musketeers | Rochefort | ||
160 | 1990 | The Rainbow Thief | Uncle Rudolf | |
161 | L’avaro | Cardinale Spinosi | ||
162 | Honeymoon Academy | Lazos | ||
163 | Panga | – | ||
164 | Gremlins 2: The New Batch | Doctor Catheter | ||
165 | 1991 | Curse III: Blood Sacrifice | Doctor Pearson | |
166 | 1992 | Jackpot | Cedric | |
167 | Kabuto | King Philip | ||
168 | 1994 | Police Academy: Mission to Moscow | Cmndt. Alexandrei Nikolaivich Rakov | |
169 | Funny Man | Callum Chance | ||
170 | Flesh and Blood | Narrator/Self | Last collaboration with Peter Cushing | |
171 | 1995 | A Feast at Midnight | V. E. Longfellow, a.k.a. Raptor | |
172 | 1996 | Welcome to the Discworld | Death | |
173 | The Stupids | Evil Sender | ||
174 | 1998 | Tale of the Mummy | Sir Richard Turkel | |
175 | Jinnah | Mohammed Ali Jinnah | Lee considered this to be his favourite / most significant role | |
176 | 1999 | Sleepy Hollow | Burgomaster | |
177 | 2001 | The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring | Saruman | |
178 | 2002 | Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones | Count Dooku / Darth Tyranus | |
179 | The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers | Saruman | ||
180 | 2003 | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King | Saruman | Extended Edition only |
181 | 2004 | Crimson Rivers II: Angels of the Apocalypse | Heinrich von Garten | |
182 | 2005 | The Adventures of Greyfriars Bobby | The Lord Provost | |
183 | Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith | Count Dooku / Darth Tyranus | ||
184 | Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | Wilbur Wonka | Narrator | |
185 | Corpse Bride | Pastor Galswells | Voice | |
186 | 2007 | The Golden Compass | First High Councillor | |
187 | 2008 | Star Wars: The Clone Wars | Count Dooku / Darth Tyranus | Voice |
188 | 2009 | Boogie Woogie | Alfred Rhinegold | |
189 | Triage | Joaquín Morales | ||
190 | Glorious 39 | Walter | ||
191 | 2010 | Alice in Wonderland | The Jabberwocky | Voice |
192 | Burke & Hare | Joseph | ||
193 | The Heavy | Mr. Mason | ||
194 | 2011 | Season of the Witch | Cardinal d’Ambroise | |
195 | The Resident | August | ||
196 | The Wicker Tree | Old Gentleman | ||
197 | Grave Tales | Himself | Original version only | |
198 | Hugo | Monsieur Labisse | ||
199 | 2012 | Dark Shadows | Silas Clarney | |
200 | The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey | Saruman | ||
201 | 2013 | Extraordinary Tales | Narrator | Voice |
202 | Night Train to Lisbon | Father Bartolomeu | ||
203 | Necessary Evil | Narrator | Voice | |
204 | The Girl from Nagasaki | Old Officer Pinkerton | ||
205 | 2014 | The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies | Saruman | |
206 | 2015 | Angels in Notting Hill | God / Mr. President | Voice |
207 | 2016 | The Hunting of the Snark | Narrator | |
208 | 2017 | The Time War | Narrator |
Christopher Lee Television
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1953–56 | Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Presents | Different roles | 13 episodes |
1955 | Moby Dick—Rehearsed | A Stage Manager/Flask | TV film |
The Vise | Different roles | Episodes: “Stronghold”, “Price of Vanity”, and “The Final Column” | |
Tales of Hans Anderson | Different roles | Episodes: “Wee Willie Winkie” and “The Cripple Boy” | |
1956 | Chevron of Fallen Stars | Governor | Episode: “Captain Kidd” |
The Scarlet Pimpernel | Louis | Uncredited Episode: “The Elusive Chauvelin” |
|
Colonel March of Scotland Yard | Jean-Pierre | Episode: “At Night All Cats Are Grey” | |
Sailor of Fortune | Different roles | Episodes: “The Desert Hostages” and “Stranger in Danger” | |
The Adventures of Aggie | Inspector Hollis | Episode: “Cut Glass” | |
1956–57 | Assignment Foreign Legion | Different roles | Episodes: “As We Forgive” and “The Anaya” |
1957 | The Errol Flynn Theatre | Different roles | 4 episodes |
The Gay Cavalier | Colonel Jeffries | Episode: “The Lady’s Dilemma” | |
1958 | O.S.S. | Dessinger | Episode: “Operation Firefly” |
Ivanhoe | Sir Otto | Episode: “The German Knight” | |
White Hunter | Mark Caldwell | Episode: “This Hungry Hell” | |
1959 | The Adventures of William Tell | Prince Erik | Episode: “Manhunt” |
1960 | Tales of the Vikings | Norman Knight | Episode: “The Bull” |
1961 | Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond | Wilhelm Reitlinger | Episode: “The Sorcerer” |
1964 | The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | Karl Jorla | Episode: “The Sign of Satan” |
1967 | The Avengers | Professor Stone | Episode: “Never, Never Say Die” |
1969 | The Avengers | Colonel Mannering | Episode: “The Interrogators” |
Light Entertainment Killers | TV film | ||
1973 | Poor Devil | Lucifer | |
Orson Welles’ Great Mysteries | Arnaud | Episode: “The Leather Funnel” | |
1976 | Space: 1999 | Captain Zandor | Episode: “Earthbound” |
1978 | How the West Was Won | The Grand Duke | TV miniseries |
The Pirate | Samir Al Fay | TV film | |
Saturday Night Live | Host | Episode: “Christopher Lee/Meat Loaf” | |
1979 | Captain America II: Death Too Soon | Miguel | TV film |
1980 | Once Upon a Spy | Marcus Valorium | |
Charlie’s Angels | Dale Woodman | Episode: “Angel in Hiding” | |
1981 | Evil Stalks This House | Host | TV film |
Goliath Awaits | John McKenzie | ||
1982 | Massarati and the Brain | Victor Leopold | |
Charles & Diana: A Royal Love Story | Prince Philip | ||
1984 | The Far Pavilions | Kaka-ji Rao | TV miniseries |
Faerie Tale Theatre | King Vladimir V | Episode: “The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers” | |
1986 | Un métier du seigneur | Fog | TV film |
The Disputation | King James of Aragon | ||
Shaka Zulu | Lord Bathurst | TV miniseries | |
1989 | Around the World in 80 Days | Stuart | |
La Révolution française | Sanson | Segment: “Les Années Terribles” | |
1990 | The Care of Time | Karlis Zander | TV film |
Treasure Island | Blind Pew | ||
1991 | Sherlock Holmes and the Leading Lady | Sherlock Holmes | |
1992 | Incident at Victoria Falls | Sherlock Holmes | |
Beauty and the Beast | Monsieur Renard (voice) | ||
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles | Count Ottokar Graf Czerin | Episode: “Austria, March 1917” | |
Double Vision | Mr. Bernard | TV film | |
1993 | Death Train | General Konstantin Benin | TV film |
1995 | The Tomorrow People | Rameses | 5 episodes |
Moses | Ramesses II | TV film | |
Tales of Mystery and Imagination | Host | TV series | |
1996 | Sorellina e il principe del sogno | Azaret | TV film |
1997 | Ivanhoe | Lucas de Beaumanoir | TV miniseries |
Soul Music | Death | TV series | |
Wyrd Sisters | Death | TV miniseries | |
The Odyssey | Tiresias | ||
1997–98 | The New Adventures of Robin Hood | Olwyn | 6 episodes |
2000 | Gormenghast | Flay | TV miniseries |
In the Beginning | Rameses I | TV film | |
Ghost Stories for Christmas | M. R. James | TV miniseries | |
2001 | Les Redoutables | Death | Segment: “Confession” |
2005 | Pope John Paul II | Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński | TV miniseries |
2008 | The Colour of Magic | Death | Voice TV film |
Christopher Lee Star Wars
It has been three years since the Clone Wars began. Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) and Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) rescue Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) from General Grievous, the commander of the droid armies, but Grievous escapes. Suspicions are raised within the Jedi Council concerning Chancellor Palpatine, with whom Anakin has formed a bond. Asked to spy on the chancellor, and full of bitterness toward the Jedi Council, Anakin embraces the Dark Side.
Initial release: 17 May 2005 (Kuwait)
Director: George Lucas
Box office: 848.8 million USD
Budget: 113 million USD
Featured song: Anakin vs. Obi-Wan
Christopher Lee Metal
Christopher Lee Lord Of The Rings
The future of civilization rests in the fate of the One Ring, which has been lost for centuries. Powerful forces are unrelenting in their search for it. But fate has placed it in the hands of a young Hobbit named Frodo Baggins (Elijah Wood), who inherits the Ring and steps into legend. A daunting task lies ahead for Frodo when he becomes the Ringbearer – to destroy the One Ring in the fires of Mount Doom where it was forged.
Initial release: 10 December 2001 (United Kingdom)
Director: Peter Jackson
Music composed by: Howard Shore
Budget: 93 million USD
Box office: 871.5 million USD
Christopher Lee Band
Christopher Lee Charlemagne
Christopher Lee Cause Of Death
Sir Christopher Lee, known as the master of horror, died at the age of 93 after being hospitalised for respiratory problems and heart failure. His wife, the former Danish model Birgit Kroencke, decided to hold back the information for four days until all family members and friends were informed. The couple had been married for more than 50 years and had one daughter, Christina.
News of his death prompted an outpouring of grief from actors, musicians, and even the prime minister; all paid tribute to Lee’s great talent.
Peter Cushing And Christopher Lee
Christopher Lee Frankenstein
Victor Frankenstein (Peter Cushing) is a brilliant scientist willing to stop at nothing in his quest to reanimate a deceased body. After alienating his longtime friend and partner, Paul Krempe (Robert Urquhart), with his extreme methods, Frankenstein assembles a hideous creature (Christopher Lee) out of dead body parts and succeeds in bringing it to life. But the monster is not as obedient or docile as Frankenstein expected, and it runs amok, resulting in murder and mayhem.
Initial release: 2 May 1957 (United Kingdom)
Director: Terence Fisher
Music composed by: James Bernard
Budget: 500,000 USD
Story by: Mary Shelley
Christopher Lee Facts
- Army Brat
Christopher Frank Carandini Lee was born in West London on May 27, 1922. His father, Geoffrey, had fought in the Boer War and the First World War with the 60th King’s Royal Rifle Corps.
- Elementary!
Lee remains to be one of the very few actors who has played three different characters from the Sherlock Holmes stories. He played Sherlock Holmes, Mycroft Holmes, and Ser Henry Baskerville, in different productions, of course—otherwise, that would’ve made one heck of a one-man show.
- I Just Wanted to Fly!
At the outbreak of World War II, Lee signed up with the Royal Air Force to become a fighter pilot. However, Lee was diagnosed with a failed optic nerve while he was nearly finished training. He was forbidden from flying, much to his disappointment. However, he had himself transferred to the RAF Intelligence unit instead.
- Family Connections
After Lee’s parents divorced in the late 1920s, his mother remarried the uncle of none other than Ian Fleming, who would go on to create the literary—and film—legend James Bond.
- Don’t Be So Insecure!
Lee’s towering height at 6’5” got him entered into the Guinness Book of World Records as the tallest lead actor. Despite this honor, his height actually proved to be a handicap early on in Lee’s career. He couldn’t land many supporting roles because the leading actors were all much shorter than he, and this was a time when men would happily wear platform shoes to look as tall as possible on camera.
- Sir, Your Resume is a Book…
Despite any initial setbacks, Lee proved to be one of the most prolific actors of all time. In two different years—1955 and 1970—Lee acted in nine films within the span of the year. In total, he appeared in more than 220 feature films.
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Christopher Lee Charlie And The Chocolate Factory
Based on the beloved Roald Dahl tale, this comedic and fantastical film follows young Charlie Bucket (Freddie Highmore) and his Grandpa Joe (David Kelly) as they join a small group of contest winners who get to tour the magical and mysterious factory of eccentric candy maker Willy Wonka (Johnny Depp). Aided by his diminutive Oompa Loompa workers (Deep Roy), Wonka has a hidden motivation for the tour, one that he will reveal only after the children in the group show their true colors.
Initial release: 10 July 2005 (USA)
Director: Tim Burton
Featured song: Main Titles
Narrated by: Geoffrey Holder
Box office: 475 million USD
Christopher Lee Tolkien
Christopher Lee Jinnah
Mohammed Ali Jinnah (Christopher Lee), the founder of Pakistan, tells his guide in the afterlife about his experiences.
Initial release: 7 November 1998
Director: Jamil Dehlavi
Producer: Jamil Dehlavi
Screenplay: Jamil Dehlavi, Akbar Ahmed
Languages: English, Urdu
Christopher Lee Rhapsody
Christopher Lee Sleepy Hollow
Set in 1799, “Sleepy Hollow” is based on Washington Irving’s classic tale “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” Faithful to the dreamy custom-bound world that Irving paints in his story, the film mixes horror, fantasy and romance and features an extraordinary cast of characters that dabble in the supernatural.
Initial release: 17 November 1999 (USA)
Director: Tim Burton
Music composed by: Danny Elfman
Story by: Washington Irving, Andrew Kevin Walker, Kevin Yagher
Awards: Academy Award for Best Production Design …
Christopher Lee Grave/ Funeral
Sir Christopher Lee was cremated and his ashes scattered Surrey Hills in England.
Christopher Lee Quotes
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.
By Christopher Lee
I associate heavy metal with fantasy because of the tremendous power that the music delivers.
By Christopher Lee
I wasn’t a spy. I’d have been spotted in five seconds. Yes, I was in intelligence, but that covered a multitude of things.
By Christopher Lee
We don’t always get the kind of work we want, but we always have a choice of whether to do it with good grace or not.
By Christopher Lee
The thing I have always tried to do is surprise people: to present them with something they didn’t expect.
By Christopher Lee
Get more of his quotes here
Christopher Lee Interview
Christopher Lee Singing
Christopher Lee Awards And Nominations
Year | Nominated work | Award | Results |
---|---|---|---|
1973 | The Wicker Man | Saturn Award for Best Actor | Nominated |
1979 | Arabian Adventure | Saturn Award for Best Actor | Nominated |
2001 | The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring | Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast | Won |
MTV Movie Award for Best Fight | Nominated | ||
MTV Movie Award for Best Villain | Nominated | ||
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture | Nominated | ||
2002 | Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones | MTV Movie Award for Best Fight | Won |
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers | Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast | Won | |
Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast | Won | ||
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture | Nominated | ||
2010 | Alice in Wonderland | Teen Choice Award for Movie – Choice Fight | Won |
2011 | Hugo | Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Cast | Nominated |
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