Episode 1
The Legendary Kit Kat Club of Cairo The Kit Kat Club in Cairo was not a mere bar; it was a state of mind. It was a place where the complexities of war were not just tolerated, but celebrated. The name itself was a joke, a parody of the exclusive, male-dominated London society of the 18th century. The original Kit-Cat Club had been a place of Whig politicians and literary giants, a place of serious debate and patronage. The Cairo version was a place to kick up one's heels. Here, in the 1940s, the lines between friend and enemy were blurred. British officers, German spies, Egyptian nationalists, and an assortment of foreign agents all drank at the same bar, watched the stage show from the same tables in the same room. It was a neutral zone, a place where only the war was not admitted –if only for a night. The club's origins were sketchy, but its reputation was notorious. It was the hub of the "Rebecca Affair," the place where Johannes Eppler and Hans-Gerd Sandstede had ...