The Spy Decade
The 1960’s was the Decade of the Spy. The first James Bond novel, “Casino Royale”, was published in 1952, but it wasn’t until the 1960’s that they became hugely popular with the release of the first movie, “Doctor No”, in 1962, leading to the movie franchise that continues to this day. This popularity did not go unnoticed by the various movie and TV producers and networks: England had the very British TV shows like “The Avengers” and “Danger Man” / “Secret Agent”, while “MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE” and “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” ran on American TV (which also re-broadcast the British TV shows.)
“The Man From U.N.C.L.E.”
The United Network Command for Law and Enforcement was a fictional global organization, mainly created to confront multi-national criminal organizations such as THRUSH but also an assortment of left-over Nazis, the odd mad scientist, and other threats to world peace and order. Agents Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn) and Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum) were the organization’s top field agents, commanded by Mr. Waverly (Leo G. Carroll), the head of the organization, from their New York City headquarters.
As would be expected, given that these programs often mixed the fantastic with the mundane, they had several fantastical hypnosis and mind control episodes, which will be dealt with later.
But could there be a mundane, real-life hypnotic spy? Moreover, could there be proof of one? The answer is, surprisingly, yes.
“The Man From U.N.C.L.E.‘s ABC of Espionage”
The series’ popularlity engendered a wave of spin-off merchandise: tie-in novels (but no actual novelizations of any of the episodes) and short story collections, compilation movies, toys 1 and some non-fiction books, and one such non-fiction book in particular: “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.‘s A B C of Espionage”.
Rita, the Beautiul Spy Who Hypnotized Me
 “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.‘s A B C of Espionage” (1966) was written by John Hill. 2 At first glance, this might look like just a quickly-written attempt to take advantage of the popularity of the TV series, but, in fact, it is very researched, especially in describing how the Soviet spy system trained its spies and operated during the Cold War.
“The Man From U.N.C.L.E.‘s A B C of Espionage” (1966) was written by John Hill. 2 At first glance, this might look like just a quickly-written attempt to take advantage of the popularity of the TV series, but, in fact, it is very researched, especially in describing how the Soviet spy system trained its spies and operated during the Cold War.
Fantastic? It’s all true. Here’s the book that introduces you to the world’s master spies, from Richard Sorge to Madmemoiselle Germaine: here’s where you’ll discover that what Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin do on TV is only what real spies do — everyday, everywhere!
(The inside flyleaf lists four books from this publisher: two Girl From U.N.C.L.E. novels, one John le Carré novel, and “Goldfinger”: the circle is now complete.)
One chapter titled “How to Look After Yourself” contained the section ‘Rita, the Beautiul Spy’. Rita Elliott was a Soviet spy and hypnotist. Her cover was that of a circus performer, which allowed her to meet her targets socially.
The charming, good-looking woman found comparitively easy to attract men. … they accepted invitations to her apartment. There she offered drinks into which she had mixed drugs that temporarily affected each victim’s will. She then hypnotized the man and suggested he was speaking to his superior. Expertly questioned, the man spoke freely … The importance of this method was that before bringing the hypnotized man back to normal, she ordered him, upon awakening, to forget everything he had said, to remember only that they had been drinking together.
This seems a little far-fetched, given what is known about hypnosis: that level of amnesia or cooperation is difficult to achieve without a great deal of preparation and lack of distrust, so I would surmise that whichever combination of drugs made the whole thing possible. Still, I considered this was a fictional story, created for the purposes of the book. Still, I checked every book on spies I found, to see if they also had this story.
And I found one.
“Women Spies: Who They Are and How They Operate Today”
Much, much later, I found “Women Spies: Who They Are and How They Operate Today” (1971) by J. (Joseph) Bernard Hutton. This is a book on exactly that: stories of famous, infamous, and unfamous female spies during the Cold War. Hutton wrote several books on espionage, including “School for Spies: The ABC of How Russia’s Secret Service Operates” and “Women in Espionage: The Role of Female Agents Including the Workings of Eastern and Western Secret Services”, which may be this book under a different title.
‘Rita, an Unusual Variety Artiste’
Rita was a Soviet spy in Australia in the 1950’s with an unusual espionage method: hypnosis. Her cover story allowed her to meet people, invite them to her apartment for drinks, where she would drug and then, under the drug’s influence, hypnotize them and interrogate them. She would also induce amnesia so her subjects wouldn’t realize what she did. It sounds fantastic, but the official report stated:
There she plied her guests with drinks in which she mixed a drug, temporarily converting them into a will-less object. She could then easily hypnotize the subject and suggest they were making a report to his superior.
The book’s chapter relates she was operating for at least five years, until she went dark when the Australian spy agencies suspected her. She later disappeared into East Asia.
Okay, good, good. But is this good enough to confirm the story? After all, the second book was printed five years after the first book. There is always the possibility that the second book just lifted the story from the first, since there is no attribution in either to show where the story came from.
Confirmation?
After some Intenet sleuthing, I think I found the original source of this story: a New York Times newspaper article entitled “Composite Portrait of a Soviet Spy” from February 16, 1964.
The techniques employed by the Soviet woman spy today are far in advance of anything practised in the last war. One is to doctor her victim’s drink with a particular drug that virtually destroys his will to resist her questioning. She then hypnotizes him into a trance, in which he thinks he is making a report to a superior officer. Under her expert interrogation, he usually answers with the utmost candor. Before he comes out of his trance, she orders him to forget what has happened and to remember nothing more than their having a social drink together.
A Russian woman who went by the name of Rita Elliott recently employed this technique in Australia to find out what was going on at the Woomera range and atomic research stations. She posed as a circus artiste, and eventually, feeling she was under suspicion, she left the country in a touring cabaret, making her way back to the Soviet Union via India and Afghanistan.
The article itself has no byline, so it appears that the information in the article derives from H. Montgomery Hyde, who served in British Intelligence in World War II. His book “Room 3603: The Incredible True Story of Secret Intelligence Operations During World War II” has a forward by one of his co-workers in the Intelligence service, Ian Fleming. The article details the process of training Soviet spies that was also included in the Man From U.N.C.L.E. book.
So, is the story confirmed? I would say, yes.
So, are spies using the same technique, today? I would say, maybe.
Addenda
This post is based on two posts on BlueSky:
