London. Master of the macabre Christopher Lee, who
portrayed Dracula in outrageous Hammer Films horror classics but became
known to later generations for roles in “Star Wars” and as the wizard
Saruman in the “Lord of the Rings,” has died aged 93.
Lee died last Sunday in hospital, where he had been undergoing
treatment for respiratory problems, a copy of his death certificate
posted online showed. Lee’s agent, in an e-mailed statement, said his
family “wishes to make no comment.”
Roger Moore, who played James Bond in “The Man with the Golden Gun”
(1974) in which Lee was the villain Scaramanga, paid tribute to Lee on
Twitter and offered condolences to his wife of 54 years, the former
Danish model Birgit Kroncke, their daughter Christina and her husband,
Juan Francisco Aneiros Rodriguez.
“It’s terrible when you lose an old friend, and Christopher Lee was one of my oldest,” Moore said. “We first met in 1948.”
The London-born Lee achieved fame from the late 1950s into the 1970s
playing characters such as Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and the Mummy
for Hammer Films.
With his deep, mellifluous voice and ramrod 1.93-meter frame, Lee was
the last English-language horror movie star in a line that traced back
to silent era luminary Lon Chaney and included Bela Lugosi, Boris
Karloff, Vincent Price and Peter Cushing, Lee’s regular Hammer Films
co-star.
Lee brought to his monsters a sense of pitifulness that he called
“the loneliness of evil.” Despite being a master of the horror genre,
Lee did not even like the word.
“It implies something nauseating, revolting, disgusting – which one
sees too often these days. I prefer the word ‘fantasy,’” he told the New
York Times in 2002.
Many leading directors sought out Lee’s talents, especially in the latter stages of his career when he was already elderly.
Career renaissance
He won new generations of fans after the turn of the century in some
of the biggest money-makers in film history. He played the evil Count
Dooku, fighting Jedi knights in “Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the
Clones” (2002) and “Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith”
(2005).
Lee was also the fiendish criminal genius Fu Manchu in five films,
Scaramanga in the Bond film and, in a rare departure from cinematic
wickedness, gave life to the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes in a
couple of movies.
Lee also portrayed the power-hungry wizard Saruman in Peter Jackson’s
“The Lord of the Rings” trilogy in 2001, 2002 and 2003, and in “The
Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” (2012) and “The Hobbit: The Battle of the
Five Armies” (2014).
As part of his late-career flourish, he also appeared in Martin
Scorsese’s “Hugo” (2011) and Tim Burton’s black comedy “Dark Shadows”
(2012) with Johnny Depp.
According to movie industry website IMDB, Lee has a lead role in the
as-yet unreleased “Angels in Notting Hill” and was to have appeared in
“The 11th,” which has not yet begun production.
He also had a lifelong interest in music and his single “Jingle Hell”
in 2013 entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number 22, making him the
oldest living artist to enter the charts.
Christopher Frank Carandini Lee was born on May 27, 1922, and took up
acting on the suggestion of a cousin after serving in Britain’s Royal
Air Force in World War Two.
He made his film debut in 1947, launching a career that eventually spanned more than 200 movies.
Lee was most closely associated with the role of Dracula, dispensing
with the nobility Lugosi had given the role and adopting a more beastly,
lustful bearing as he dispatched various buxom victims.
Reuters
By Michael Roddy on 11:30 pm Jun 11, 2015
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