Sean Flynn(1941-1970)
- Actor
- Cinematographer
American actor and journalist. Born to famed swashbuckling movie hero
Errol Flynn and actress
Lili Damita, Sean Flynn was the object of
contention between the divorced couple for his entire life. Raised
primarily by his mother, he was alternately ignored and fought for by
his father, who engaged in a years-long custody battle with Damita.
Sean grew up in Palm Beach, Florida and attended Palm Beach Private
School and prep school Lawrenceville. Summers he spent with his father
in Jamaica or on the elder Flynn's yacht. He enrolled at Duke
University, but soon thereafter accepted a contract to appear in a
sequel to his father's hit film
Captain Blood (1935),
The Son of Captain Blood (1962).
He made a few more films in Europe, in all of which he was
extraordinarily handsome but not particularly skilled or at ease before
the camera. He became bored with acting and then went to Africa in
1965. There he worked for a time as a game warden and hunter in Kenya.
The Vietnam war was heating up, and in 1966 Flynn went to cover the war
as a photographer-correspondent for Paris-Match. He was wounded in the
knee in March. He left Vietnam long enough to appear in a final film,
Singapore, Singapore (1967),
and to cover the Arab-Israeli war of 1967. He then returned to Vietnam
in 1968, where he sold photographs and news stories to most of the
major news organizations and made plans for a documentary film on the
war. His exploits and those of his colleagues made them somewhat
legendary figures in military and journalism circles. In April, 1970,
while covering the widening of combat to the border areas of Cambodia,
Flynn and colleague Dana Stone disappeared. They were presumed captured
by elements of the North Vietnamese, the Viet Cong, or the Khmer Rouge
.. Although some reports indicated they may have survived as prisoners
for as much as another two months, Flynn and Stone were never
definitively heard from again after April 6, 1970, and were almost
certainly executed by captors.