The second part of our spotlight on Bernard Lee looks at his television work.
Lee’s
first encounter with television was during the dawn of the media in 1938 when
he appeared in Love From A Stranger (23rd
November 1938), a version of the Agatha Christie short story, transmitted live
on the fledgling BBC TV service to a very small audience in the London area. No
recording was made of this production. Another early appearance was shortly
after the TV service resumed after World War Two. The BBC production I Have Been Here Before (29th
May 1949), based on a J B Priestly play, saw Lee playing Walter Ormund, one of
six guests at The Black Bull Inn in North Yorkshire that become increasingly
anxious when they are convinced they have been at the hotel before – perhaps in
a past life? Lee’s next BBC TV play was Sweet
Coz (4th January 1955) a comedy adapted from the play by
Josephine Tey.
Lee was
a regular player in single plays for the fledgling ITV network in the 1950s
with roles in such productions as Television
Playhouse – ‘The Golden Fleece’
(31st December 1955), Playdate
– ‘All Correct Sir’ (13th
December 1956) and Television Playhouse
– ‘Cornelius’ (18th July
1958). ‘Cornelius’ was an adaptation
of a play by J B Priestley depicting the story of a small business nearing
bankruptcy with Lee cast as the eponymous Cornelius, the head of the doomed
business. Lee also made three different appearances in episodes of the
prestigious Armchair Theatre strand; ‘Ernie
Barger is 50’ (8th February 1959) had Lee struggling with an
American accent, ‘Cold Fury’ (31st January 1960) and ‘Nest of Four’
(15th May 1960). The latter play was written by Brian Clemens and told
the tale of four men who are about to commit a robbery when one of them shoots
a policeman. They gang hide out before they are eventually caught. Lee played
the leader of the gang with Alfred Lynch undertaking the role of the youngest
gang member who fires the gun that kills the policeman. ‘Cold Fury’ was written
by James Workman and directed by Dennis Vance with a cast that also included Sam
Wanamaker and Lyndon Brook. The plot featured three men cooped up in an Artic
weather station with their relationship slowly disintegrating. Lee’s character,
Aaronson, burns to death after lighting a doctored stove.
During the same period Lee also contributed towards several plays for the BBC Sunday Night Theatre strand; ‘Mirror,
Mirror’ (20th March 1955), ‘In Writing’ (1st January
1956), ‘The Uninvited’ (23rd November 1958) and ‘Crime Passionnel’ (20th
September 1959). ‘In Writing’ cast Lee as another policeman, Detective
Inspector Hurst, who is locked in a battle of wills with Terence Morgan who is
suspected of killing his wife. The Stage
declared the play was “one of the most worthwhile excursions into crime to be
televised for many a day.[1]”
‘Crime Passionnel’ was based on the Jean Paul Sartre play and also featured a
young David McCallum in the cast.
Lee’s next
BBC role was as Superintendent Farron in the play The Interrogator (22nd December 1961) written by Troy
Kennedy Martin. Lee was Special Branch Superintendent in a story set in Cyprus
during 1956 with Lee’s character interrogating a group of terrorists during a
night that becomes a struggle for survival. A rare leading role was in the BBC One
play O Captain, My Captain (31st
August 1961) which saw Lee sharing screen time and cabins with Kevin Stoney
playing a ship’s mate. Lee was Vasco a discredited skipper of a Costa Rican
tramp steamer who undertakes to deliver a valuable cargo of diamond drills to
Antwerp. His tough outlook and discipline makes the voyage an ordeal for his
crew. The voyage also seems to have been an ordeal for viewers as well with The Stage newspaper declaring “What
might have been a promising theme was destroyed by an over-indulgent drunk
performance on the part of Bernard Lee.[2]”
Lee also appeared as Angus Meyrick in
an episode of the TV series The Third Man
(‘Portrait of Harry’ – 18th May 1963).
By now Lee was starting to make guest appearances in ongoing series and this
become his mainstay of employment as the decade progressed with the actor
making fewer appearance in single plays or one off dramas. TV plays were not
forgotten, just fewer and included Thirty
Minute Theatre – ‘The Passenger’ (30th December 1965). Lee was
given top billing for this intriguing half hour thriller, though his character
has no name and simply credited as ‘man’. The story sees a mental patient has
escaped and two strangers meet on a train, a man and a woman. Each suspect that
the other passenger is the escaped patient… Lee’s first starring role in a TV series, and a rare
commitment to an ongoing series, came with the BBC production King of the River. Lee was cast as Joss
King, head of the King family who tries keep their sail driven barge business
going over seventeen episodes transmitted between 6th July 1966 and
19th February 1967[3]. The
series was created and produced by Colin Morris and took in location filming at
Newhaven, Faversham, Whitstable and Sheerness.
His other major TV role of the year was in Talking to a Stranger (2nd October to 23rd October 1966), often cited as one of the most important and affecting TV dramas of the decade. The series consisted of four separate plays which told the events of one weekend from the viewpoints of four members of the same family. The role of the daughter, Terry, was an early part for Judi Dench who would also eventually come to play M in the Bond films! Dench won a BAFTA for her performance in the series. Lee’s other TV roles for 1966 include guest roles in episodes of the Court Martial, Danger Man and The Baron.
For the remainder of the decade Lee undertook guest roles in a variety of continuing series; Man in a Suitcase (1967), Mogul (1967), Public Eye (1968), The Champions (1969) and horror anthology series Journey to the Unknown (1969) amongst many others. The run of guest appearances continued into the 1970s with Lee gracing episodes of Follyfoot (1973) and Father Brown (1974) before taking the role of Beeley in ‘Murrain’ (1975). The roles became less as the decade continued. He made a rare appearance in a comedic role as Wally Warner in What a Turn Up (7th August 1975) a comedy play written by Brian Clemens and Dennis Spooner and had a small role as a yachtsman in ‘Knight Errant’ (20th January 1976), an episode of the BBC drama series Warship. He also appeared alongside Michael Horden and John Le Mesurier as the Ghost of Christmas Present in a prestigious BBC production of A Christmas Carol (24th December 1977). His final continuing role was in the ATV business drama The Foundation which saw him play the character Eddie Prince over two seasons during 1977 and 1978. His final role in a single play came with Saint Joan (30th December 1979), a BBC One production of the George Bernard Shaw play which cast Lee as Monseigneur de la Tremoiulle, Lord Chamberlain. He was also a participant in the games show Star Games, which pitched personalities in competitive sports, on 4th November 1980 alongside Tom Adams, Gareth Hunt, Paul Darrow and Jaqueline Pearce.
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