The Sunday Telegraph

Churchill’s favourite spy ‘would be cancelled’ in this PC age

- By Steven Edginton

WINSTON CHURCHILL’s “favourite spy”, a hellraisin­g heroine who was the inspiratio­n for James Bond’s MI6 lover, Vesper Lynd, would not have lasted long in today’s politicall­y correct environmen­t, says the star who plays her in a new film.

Described by contempora­ries as “the bravest of the brave”, Krystyna Skarbek’s exploits in the Second World War involved her operating in Nazi-occupied Europe with a gusto that would inspire several characters from Ian Fleming’s Bond novels.

Morgane Polanski, who plays the outspoken spy in a forthcomin­g biopic of her life, says people could learn from her courage today.

“I think more women and more men should be like Skarbek,” the actor and daughter of the director Roman Polanski said.

“I think more people should just stick to what they believe in without allowing other people to gaslight them in the fear of being cancelled or, whatever… Believe that the truth will always prevail.

“So I think we have more women like Skarbek, we have less men like Skarbek.”

The spy, who was known for arguing with her British handlers and was kicked out of school for setting fire to a priest’s robe during a mass, was unafraid of friend and foe alike.

As to whether the agent would get cancelled today, Polanski said: “I think she would not be afraid to speak for what she stands for. So does that get you cancelled? I feel like maybe.”

Polanski, star of Wes Anderson’s French Dispatch and the TV series Vikings, also had kind words to say of Skarbek’s wartime fan Churchill. “I will say I adore his quotes. I think he has the wittiest, most brilliant quotes,” she said. “And I admire what he did during World War Two. So him and de Gaulle, I think were [among] our many heroes during World War Two.”

As activists re-examine past figures such as Churchill, whose statue in Parliament Square was vandalised with a message describing the wartime leader as a racist during an Extinction Rebellion protest in 2020, Hollywood portrayals of historical characters have come under close scrutiny in recent years. Netflix was recently criticised by historians for portraying Cleopatra as black in a new documentar­y about the Egyptian Queen’s life.

Born in Warsaw in 1908, Krystyna

Skarbek fled to London at the outbreak of the Second World War to join the newly set up Special Operations Executive (SOE), which Churchill famously ordered to “set Europe ablaze”.

Upon first contact with her, British agents described Skarbek as a “flaming Polish patriot, expert skier, and great adventures­s”.

During the course of the war she would carry out a series of dangerous missions that would take her from Cairo to Budapest.

Examples of her courageous­ness include biting her own tongue until it bled to fake TB and evade her Nazi captors. She also negotiated the release of Allied operatives in occupied France.

The new film about her life, The Partisan, is set to be released in the summer of 2024. Shooting is taking place in Poland where the film is partly set.

The £7.5million project, supported in part by the Polish Film Institute, is directed by James Marquand, whose previous works include the comedy films Between Two Worlds and One Night in Istanbul.

Skarbek was said to be Fleming’s inspiratio­n for 007’s provocativ­e MI6 lover, Vesper Lynd but Marquand believes he undersold her as a side character, saying: “Truthfully, if she’s any character, she is James Bond.”

“Probably one of (the SOE’s enemies’) weaknesses was underestim­ating women. So a female spy could do a hell of a lot more than a male spy,” he said.

Like Skarbek, Polanski has Polish roots, being born in Paris to her director father, and the French actress Emmanuelle Seigner in 1993.

On 1 February 1978, after 42 days in jail, Roman Polanski fled the US while awaiting final sentencing, having pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercours­e with a minor.

‘More people should stick to what they believe in without fear of being cancelled. The truth will always prevail’

 ?? ?? Morgane Polanski in The Partisan, above, as the agent Krystina Skarbek, above left, and with her director father, Roman, left
Morgane Polanski in The Partisan, above, as the agent Krystina Skarbek, above left, and with her director father, Roman, left
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom