He was once described as “probably the greatest symbol of masculinity and virility developed in the modern age”.
Errol Flynn – found fame with his portrayals of swashbuckling heroes such as Robin Hood and Captain Blood yet his real life was even more adventurous than any of his films.
The original serial womanising, heavy-drinking, drug-taking hellraiser packed more into his 50 years than most would do in several lifetimes.
Born in Hobart, Tasmania, Flynn worked as a gold prospector in New Guinea before fleeing after being accused of murdering a native. He dodged bullets and bombs as a reporter in the Spanish Civil War; he was a skilled yachtsman; he relished brawling; he was a drinking partner of Fidel Castro; and there were also allegations that he was a Nazi spy.
Yet it is for his incredible sexual exploits that Flynn will most be remembered. He had, in the words of biographer David Bret, “a quite staggering appetite” for sex.
“I know if I touch the arm of a girl or woman who fires me I have got to go as far øas she will let me, ” he confessed. “In like Flynn” became a popular saying.
His obsession with sex was probably a reaction to his mother – whom he detested – trying to drill into him her belief that sex was “disgusting” and “dirty”.
Flynn decided to have sex whenever he could and with whomever he fancied. He was 12 when he lost his virginity to his parents’ maid, who was promptly dismissed.
From his early days Flynn was set upon a hedonistic approach to life.
“I believe I’m going to front the essentials of life to see if I can learn what it has to teach and, above all, not to discover when I come to die that I have not lived,” he wrote in his journal at the age of 23.
But his sexual career could very nearly have come to a premature end when he was knifed by an irate rickshaw boy in Colombo, Ceylon. The knife narrowly missed emasculating him.
After becoming established in Hollywood Flynn assembled a coterie of close pals who joined in with his sexual adventures.
One was the young British actor David Niven, a co-member of the Hollywood Cricket Club.
The pair rented a house where they shared lovers, sometimes several in one night. Flynn was still married to his first wife at the time and would leave the orgies about twice a week to visit her.
Later Flynn and Niven shared another bachelor pad in Malibu, nicknamed “Cirrhosis-by-the-Sea” on account of the huge amounts of alcohol consumed.
Flynn also held sex, alcohol and cocainefuelled parties on his boat. Women would be shared between Flynn, the crew and friends.
His home at Mulholland Farm in the Hollywood Hills, where he moved in 1941, was designed with his favourite pastime in mind.
The bathroom was full of aphrodisiac potions. His bedroom had a huge circular mirror on the ceiling above the bed, as did the main guest room.
But what Flynn’s guests didn’t know was that the mirror was two-way so Flynn and his pals could enjoy watching their activities in the room above.
According to David Bret, Flynn’s sexual conquests included men.
Bret claims one male lover was actor Ross Alexander, who played his sidekick in Captain Blood.
Another was Tyrone Power, who is said to have fallen passionately in love with Flynn but the affair floundered because for Flynn the relationship was purely physical.
Yet his alleged bisexuality was hotly disputed by his surviving wives and friends.
Olivia De HavillandOne actress who did not end up in his bed was Olivia De Havilland, his co-star in eight films.
Olivia De Havilland admitted she and Flynn did fall in love but “his circumstances at the time prevented the relationship from going further”.
Flynn’s shenanigans often landed him in trouble.
In 1942, in a case that stunned America, two underaged girls accused him of statutory rape. Robin Hood Accused Of Rape was one headline but Flynn was acquitted at trial.
“Rape to me meant picking up a chair and hitting some young lady over the head with it and having your wicked way.
I hadn’t done any of those things, ” he wrote.
Flynn’s war record was also controversial. In a 1980 biography it was claimed he was a Nazi sympathiser who had spied for Germany while reporting on the Spanish Civil War and that he had wanted to enlist the IRA’s support for the Axis cause.
The case rested on Flynn’s close association with Austrian fascist Dr Herman Erben but no concrete evidence to support the claims has ever emerged.
On the contrary, in 2000 it was revealed that the Home Office possessed documents detailing how the actor offered to help Britain’s security services.
Flynn had been keen to join up to fight in the war for the Allies but was ruled out on health grounds.
Even though still in his early 30s his hard-living had taken a heavy toll.
In 1941 he collapsed in an elevator and a specialist gave him only five years to live, telling him his heart and lungs were irreparably damaged. But Flynn refused to change his ways.
For a period in the early Forties
dicted to opium, believing the drug would heighten his sexual pleasures.
In 1943 he married wife No2, redhead Nora Eddington, 20, who ran the tobacco kiosk at the Los Angeles courthouse and who had caught Flynn’s eye when he had been on trial.
Flynn had no intention of becoming a faithful husband. He installed his wife – and new child – into a home of their own so he could continue his sexual adventures unhindered.
FLYNN explained: “This was the only way I would be married to anybody. Separate house, separate lives, separate people. The Christian concept of monogamy is to me nothing more than a travesty of human nature. It doesn’t work, never will.”
Flynn revelled in his reputation for being the world’s most famous womaniser.
Co-star Robert Douglas recalled going to Flynn’s dressing room and seeing the star naked in his armchair, with one woman on top of him and another waiting for her turn.
When Flynn’s father visited Hollywood for the first time and turned up unannounced at his dressing room he was shocked to see his son making love to a naked young woman against the wall.
Yet Flynn’s womanising and film success did not seem to bring lasting contentment.
“I could have anything money could buy. Yet I found that at the top of the world there was nothing. I was sitting at the pinnacle with no mountain under me”.
As he approached his half-century Flynn was a physical wreck.
Bloated and overweight he was unrecognisable from the slim young actor. But there was still some adventure to come.
In 1959 Flynn travelled to Cuba to make a film on its revolution and befriended rebel leader Fidel Castro. “He will rank in history with some of the greats, ” he predicted.
Even in his final years Flynn, now living in Jamaica, was still addicted to sex.
He embarked on a relationship with a 15-year-old blonde called Beverley Aadland, whom he called his Wood Nymph. He started writing his “‘kiss and tell” autobiography My Wicked Wicked Ways (Flynn had wanted to call it In Like Me but the publisher refused).
His co-writer Earl Conrad was shocked that the actor would get pimps to supply him with under-aged native girls.
He would go upstairs for five to 10 minutes with them, then return to carry on with the writing.
Flynn died of a heart attack in October 1959 just four months after his 50th birthday.
True to form he was buried with six bottles of whisky in his coffin. Shortly before his death Conrad asked Flynn if he had any regrets. “Just the one, sport – that I never learned to play the piano”.
Flynn was a man who lived the life he had set out to lead from an early age and accepted the consequences with magnanimity. There have been lots of Hollywood hellraisers but there was only one Errol Flynn.
BY MOVIES