Remembering Sir Christopher Lee on his birthday (27 May 1922 …

TheChiseler Online Magazine interviewed Zeenaabout her memories of actor Christopher Lee:

The interdisciplinaryavant garde artistspoke exclusively with the Chiseler about the legendary actor.

Zeena met Christopher Lee as a result of being co-producer for the CD Christopher Lee Sings Devils Rogues and other Villians. Specifically, I first met him at the apartment in Los Angeles that Nikolas and I rented for him and his wife Gitte to stay in while we worked on the recording of Christopher Lee Sings Devils Rogues and other Villains.

Long before Lee recorded with the symphonic power metal group Rhapsody of Fire, he was involved with Christopher Lee Sings Devils, Rogues & Other Villains (From Broadway To Bayreuth And Beyond).

Nikolas knew of Lees love of classical music, opera and Broadway musicals. But at that time, the general public only knew Lee for his vampire roles and had little awareness of his musical talent and appreciation, Zeena explained.

Lee maintained that his one regret was his decision not to become an opera singer.

Nikolas conceived of the idea to spotlight Christopher Lees considerable singing talents, Zeena said. But he knew that to do that effectively, such a project would need to focus on musical selections one would automatically think of Lee singing, appropriately sinister villainous characters from Opera and musicals.

Lee was very enthusiastic at the proposal. So it was through helping Nikolas with the planning, production and coordinating of that project that I got to know Christopher. We recorded it at a studio in Crossroads of the World in Los Angeles. A considerable amount of work and expense went into finding suitable, classically trained musicians and a musical director (Dean Shepherd, who was fantastic) who had the right skills and temperament to work well with Lee.

The friendship endured long after the work was completed.

We stayed in contact throughout the years following that album, she said. Wed see him whenever he was in Berlin for the Berlin Film Festival and the Cinema for Peace benefit.[...]It goes without saying that Christopher was a very colorful person, Zeena said. But for me, the most interesting conversations with him revolved around his descriptions of his WWII work as a British Intelligence officer. He talked about parachuting into German enemy Waffen SS camps and, well, he did what the British government trained him to do, which was not pretty.

I got the impression he was still rather haunted, even decades later, by some of his experiences during the war. Even though he believed that what he did was for virtuous and just reasons, she added.[...]He definitely had an interest in magic beyond the roles he played, Zeena said. But we need to make a distinction between 'interest and 'involvement. He had no first-hand involvement in any magical, occult or satanic groups and even declined direct invitations from such groups.

He liked horror fiction of authors like H.P. Lovecraft, Bram Stoker, Algernon Blackwood, etc. But that was purely a literary appreciation. He also had an interest in John Dee, The Golden Dawn and other 19th and early 20th century magical groups, she explained.

However, it should be stated that Lee had an interest in a wide variety of eclectic subjects, which had nothing to do with occultism. He was simply very well-read and inquisitive by nature, she added.

Lee was in the enviable position to be able to satisfy his many curiosities.

As a result of his years in British intelligence, hed known figures like Dennis Wheatley, his cousin Ian Fleming, etc., and had heard of their experiences with Aleister Crowley. In fact he was lifelong friends with Dennis Wheatley and agreed with Wheatleys views on the occult. But their friendship grew out of their mutual intelligence work, not because of occult or magical interests.

Christopher Lee was instrumental in getting Wheatley works to film. WheatleysThe Forbidden Territorywas made into a movie starring Ronald Squire as Sir Charles rather than Duke de Richleau in 1934.

It was Lee who convinced Hammer films to buy the rights to Wheatleys books for the films he would star in, Zeena said. But it should be clarified that Lee was very dismissive and wary of occultists, black magicians or satanists.

During Zeenas involvement in the Lee album, she had the opportunity to ask Lee about the rumor that her father knew Christopher Lee.

When Nikolas and I got to know Lee, we were able to discuss this rumor with him in detail, Zeena said. Both Lee and his wife Gitte refuted the rumor vehemently. Lee explained that, as a result of working on the U.S. TV moviePoor Devil, with Sammy Davis, Jr. (who became a Priest in the Church of Satan), Davis tried to ingratiate Lee into accepting an invitation at the behest of my father, offering Lee a copy of The Satanic Bible, personally inscribed and signed by my father.

Lee still had the book in his collection and, on one of Nikolass visits to London for preparations of the CD, Lee showed Nikolas the book referring to it as a cheap paperback from the '60s witchcraft fads. Lee didnt take it at all seriously, Zeena said. His wife Gitte recalled another time they visited Sammy and his wife Altovise in Los Angeles, when again Sammy tried to serve as middle-man between Dracula and the Black Pope, and again to no avail.

Lee had no interest. He said Sammy was nuts about my father but Lee saw my father as a 'Johnny-come-lately opportunist and con-man within the occult. Lee expressed that he had no intention of ever meeting LaVey. Then, Lee pointedly looked me in the eye and said 'Im very glad that you had the sense to get out of all of that destructive rubbish, expounding on what he called the ruinous effects ofthat type of belief system, she concluded.

The levelheaded enchantress also got to see the work that went into his actors preparation.

Lee took personal responsibility to research his roles, to learn what he could about the characters and the historical context, in order to bring a more believable performance to each character, Zeena said. His interest in devilish and monstrous roles was purely a matter of aesthetics and literary appreciation - but not at all a personal lifestyle.

I think he considered the villainous roles he played as having allegorical and moral significance. Sort of like morality tales for a new generation. I dont think he expected to actually inspire people to want to become the characters he played. He was part Italian and had a very strong sense of religious moral ethics. So even though he befriended Wheatley and personally researched the villainous roles he would play, it was really out of a dedication to portray those roles in as real a way as possible, to understand those characters from their own points of view and to make them believable, she said.THERE'S MORE TO THE ARTICLE -READ THE FULL INTERVIEWHERE

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Remembering Sir Christopher Lee on his birthday (27 May 1922 ...

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