The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Margaret Lee

British actress who starred in Italian Eurospy movies and made a string of thrillers with Klaus Kinski

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MARGARET LEE, who has died aged 80, was an actress from the West Midlands who won fame overseas as a knowing, Marilyn Monroe-like blonde in a series of European genre movies cranked out in the late 1960s and early 1970s; in the UK, however, she remained largely uncelebrat­ed – although her story could have played out very differentl­y had a pivotal early-career audition gone in her favour.

Aged barely 20 as a fresh-faced graduate of the Italia Conti theatre school, Margaret Lee found herself in the running to play Tatiana Romanova, the KGB agent who seduces, and subsequent­ly falls for, James Bond in From Russia with Love (1963). She lost out to the Italian newcomer Daniela Bianchi – and yet it would be Margaret Lee who eclipsed Daniela Bianchi to become one of Italy’s biggest female stars, chiefly by playing the love interest in 007 knock-offs and parodies.

In a string of popular comedies featuring the Italian duo Franco Franchi and Ciccio Ingrassia – including Two Jokers at the

Moulin Rouge (1964) and General Custer’s

Two Sergeants (1965) – Margaret Lee served as Dorothy Lamour had done in Bob Hope and Bing Crosby’s Road movies, cutting through the boys’ bluff badinage with flashes of leg and wit. “It was not the career in theatre I had dreamed of,” she told one interviewe­r, “but it was acting.”

Margaret Lee became a major Italian cover girl thanks to a rash of slapdash spy pastiches from the opportunis­tic producer Harry Alan Towers, positionin­g himself as a cut-price Cubby Broccoli. Our Man in

Marrakesh (1966) paired her with Tony Randall, Herbert Lom and Wilfrid HydeWhite; in Five Golden Dragons (1967), which spliced espionage capers with the newly voguish kung fu, Margaret Lee gave a breathy rendition of the John Barry-aping theme song.

She had a dancer’s pep, and appeared in 12 films in 1965 alone: “I adored it,” she said. “I felt so at home on the movie set that I often would stay behind to watch filming even when I had finished for the day. We often worked very long hours but it seemed to actually give me energy rather than tire me.” Even so, she later confessed to a measure of Marilynesq­ue regret as to how those energies had been applied: “I imagined myself in more dramatic roles, but I guess that is not how others saw me.”

She was born Margaret Gwendolyn Box on August 4 1943 to a mother who had been relocated to Wolverhamp­ton during the Blitz. At the end of the war the family returned to London, where the young Margaret studied at Greenwich’s Roan School for Girls (according to one contempora­ry, the pair spent their teenage years chasing a pre-fame Mick Jagger around the south London rail network).

After graduating from Italia Conti, Margaret Lee successful­ly answered an advert in The Stage seeking dancers for the

Moulin Rouge; once installed on the continent, she won a role opposite Elizabeth Taylor in the Cinecitta-shot Cleopatra (1963), but her scenes were cut from the finished film. Instead, she made her screen debut in lowlier circumstan­ces, appearing alongside 1957’s Mr Universe Reg Lewis in Fire Monsters Against the Son of Hercules (1962), a routine sword-and-sandals programmer.

Her sensuality was a gift for a newly permissive cinema: in Casanova 70 (1965), she was manhandled by Marcello Mastroiann­i, whom she described as “sweet”. Yet – like many – she endured a fraught working relationsh­ip with Klaus

Kinski, the emergent wild man of European cinema, with whom Margaret Lee made a total of 11 increasing­ly lurid thrillers between 1966 and 1971.

Margaret Lee felt obliged to correct the record of Kinski’s characteri­stically unreliable, self-glorifying 1975 memoir All I

Need Is Love, in which the actor claimed that he enjoyed threesomes with his co-star and her fellow actress Maria Rohm: “This is totally untrue, and I am sorry he abased himself this way. Klaus and I were chums and he was a close friend of my husband Gino, too; there was never any sexual side to our friendship… ever. I was angry for a while, but now I forgive him.”

Returning home upon the birth of her second child in 1973, Margaret Lee booked one episode of the Gerry Andersonpr­oduced ITV caper The Protectors (1972-74), but saw her visibility dwindle as a result of industry indifferen­ce, “I guess because I was known in Italy and to some extent France, but not in England. I did not think seriously of trying to work there.” Her final screen credit, at the age of 40, came with the crime comedy Neapolitan Sting (1983) opposite Treat Williams.

She moved decisively to northern California in the mid-1980s, studying Stanislavs­ki in San Francisco and working in local theatre, but still thinking of herself as an Italian movie actress and never aspiring to be known internatio­nally. In retrospect, she said, “this might have been a limitation and a mistake”.

She was married three times – to the producer Gino Malerba, Patrick Anderson and Walter Creighton – and is survived by two sons, the production manager Damian Anderson and Roberto Malerba, a producer on the Bond film Spectre (2015).

Margaret Lee, born August 4 1943, died April 24 2024

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in Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die (1966): her sensuality was a gift for a newly permissive cinema
Margaret Lee in Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die (1966): her sensuality was a gift for a newly permissive cinema

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