Bernard Samson

Bernard Samson
First appearanceBerlin Game
Last appearanceCharity
Created byLen Deighton
Portrayed byIan Holm
In-universe information
OccupationSIS agent
SpouseFiona Samson
NationalityEnglish

Bernard Samson is a fictional character created by Len Deighton. Samson is a middle-aged and somewhat jaded intelligence officer working for the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) – usually referred to as "the Department" in the novels. He is a central character in three trilogies written by Deighton, set in the years 1983–1988, with a large gap between 1984 and 1987. The first trilogy comprises the books Berlin Game, Mexico Set and London Match, the second comprises Spy Hook, Spy Line and Spy Sinker, and the third and final trilogy comprises Faith, Hope and Charity. The plot of the entire trilogy of trilogies revolves around Samson's wife Fiona, also an intelligence officer, and which side she is really working for, after she has defected to the East Germans in the first trilogy, leaving a distraught Bernard with their two children. Her defection also causes some of his superiors to question his loyalty.

Samson undergoes sacrifice in his duties and is often ignored by his superiors, being passed over for promotion or sent to Berlin during Christmas. This is especially true in the first trilogy. Like Deighton's earlier unnamed spy character ("Harry Palmer" in the film adaptations), Samson is cynical and has a disrespect for his superiors and any ambitious colleagues.[1]

Bernard's description appears in Berlin Game:

My photo stared back at me from its silver frame. Bernard Samson, a serious young man with a baby face, wavy hair and horn-rimmed glasses, looked nothing like the wrinkled old fool I shaved every morning.

— Len Deighton, Berlin Game[2]

Bernard Samson is also the name of a Swiss Franciscan seller of indulgences, who was denounced by Zwingli in 1516.[3]

  1. ^ Woods, Brett F. (2007). Neutral Ground: A Political History of Espionage Fiction. Algora Publishing. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-87586-535-5.
  2. ^ Deighton, Len (1983). Berlin Game. Hutchinson. p. 172. ISBN 0-09-154190-5.
  3. ^ Lindberg, Carter (1996). The European Reformations. Blackwell Publishing. p. 172. ISBN 1-55786-575-2.