He could have made a career as the Marlboro Man: tall, athletic, charismatic. But Dean Reed turned his back on the U.S. and became an icon in the GDR. Forty years after his death on June 13, 1986, the “Red Elvis” remains one of the most contradictory figures of the Cold War.
To this day, rumors persist that the Stasi murdered him following his alleged suicide in 1986. GDR historian Stefan Wolle, however, does not believe this: “I don’t think the Stasi would have done that. That just wasn’t their style,” the scientific advisor to the GDR Museum told the German Press Agency.