Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
changes – and Poirot’s cold disappears –
when a body is found in the flat two floors
below Poirot’s, number 36B. The victim was
played by the comedienne Josie Lawrence in
one of her first straight television roles.
Most important of all, however, is the fact
that the heroine of the story, played by
Suzanne Burden, makes Poirot a ‘fluffy
omelette’ during his investigation, which only
serves to remind him, and me, of his
repressed love for a young Englishwoman in
his past who once also made him ‘fluffy
omelettes’.
But what did those omelettes mean for a
man like Poirot? I think they were a sign that
he could only love at a distance, at one
remove, rather than as a red-blooded man.
Dame Agatha could not and did not allow
him to cross the barrier and release himself
into a full relationship with a woman
because it would have proved too great a
threat to his personality. Poirot could admire,
even ‘love’, a woman, but it would always be
from a distance, and I understood that
instinctively, although it is not a feeling I
share.
Those omelettes were a symbol of his
remoteness, underlining the fact that Poirot
was well aware of the fact that Suzanne’s
character reminded him of the love he could
never quite have, and that affected me
deeply. Once again, it helped me to
understand his deep regret at never having
truly experienced love, even though Dame
Agatha did allow him a relationship with the
dramatic Russian Countess Rossakoff, but
one which was also destined to disappear
into the wind.
What was so charming was that Suzanne,
and every other actor and actress who came
into the series, were genuinely thrilled to be
in a Poirot story. They all seemed to have
known and read Poirot as a child, whereas I
didn’t know him at all to begin with, even
though I was becoming him more completely
every single day.
The sixth and seventh films in the first
series underlined exactly how much money
London Weekend was spending. Triangle at
Rhodes was set on the Greek island, and the
whole unit was transported there. For the
next, Problem at Sea, everyone stayed in the
Mediterranean, while Poirot took a cruise on
a magnificent 1930s motor yacht, and we
visited another group of beautiful, exotic
locations.
In fact, those two stories reflected Dame
Agatha’s own fascination with travel and
adventure, and helped to set the series far
apart from some of the other British fiction of
the time, most of which seemed landlocked
in Britain.
I n Triangle at Rhodes Poirot uses a little
wooden doll that belonged to a child, who
was one of the characters, while in Problem
at
Sea
he
reveals
an
interest
in
ventriloquism. Both only increased the
pressure on me to make sure that I could
carry those vital scenes at the end of the film
to satisfy every single person in the
television audience.
One thing I knew was that Dame Agatha
always made sure that all the clues were
there for everyone to see – if only they
looked for them. If you did grasp them all,
then you would know who did it; if not, you
would have to wait for Poirot to tell you. It
was one of her greatest qualities as a writer
– she was always honest with her readers –
and I wanted to be equally honest with her
viewers. They had to feel that they might
have reached the same conclusion as Poirot
if they had put all the clues together;
although they knew, in their hearts, that
although they might have noticed one or
two, Poirot saw them all – which was why he
was a great detective.
The Incredible Theft, which was the eighth
film,
demonstrated
yet
again
the
extraordinary lengths that Brian Eastman
and London Weekend went to in order to
find exactly the right backgrounds and props.
The story revolves around a maverick aircraft
manufacturer and his designs for a new
fighter in 1936, because there is ‘so much at
stake for England’ as the possibility of a
second European war looms.
The fact that the producers found so many
vintage planes to illustrate the story was
extraordinary enough, but the cast was
every bit as special, with John Stride as the
maverick millionaire and John Carson as the
politician Sir George Carrington.
I found myself explaining the nature of the
‘theft’ of a critical page of the aircraft’s
design at the denouement, this time in a
wonderful country house. In fact, the Poirot
stories were most often set in the homes of
the landed aristocracy or millionaires,
although The Adventure of the Clapham
Cook demonstrated that he both could and
did work with the rather less affluent.
Nonetheless, Poirot does not take the wealth
of those around him too seriously. He takes
some considerable pleasure in gently poking
fun at the foibles of the English aristocracy,
often ridiculing their insistence on respecting
‘good chaps’.
This is one of the great charms of Poirot’s
investigations, for they reveal a world where
manners and morals are quite different from
today. There are no overt and unnecessary
sex scenes, no alcoholic, haunted detectives
in Poirot’s world. He lives in a simpler, some
would say more human, era: a lost England,
seen through the admiring eyes of this
foreigner, this little Belgian detective. For
me, that makes the stories all the more
appealing, for although the days he lives in
seem far away, they are all the more
enchanting because of it.
The last stories for the first series were
The King of Clubs, about the death of a film
producer, which starts with Poirot visiting a
film set – which, of course, was created at
Twickenham Studios, next to our own set –
a n d The Dream, about a famous pie
manufacturer who is killed in a locked room
in his flat above the factory. The cast were
as tremendous as they had been throughout,
including Niamh Cusack as a film actress in
the story about the movie mogul, and my old
colleague from the Royal Shakespeare
Company
Alan
Howard
as
the
pie
manufacturer. His daughter was played by
the delightful Joely Richardson, in one of her
first television appearances.
The Dream was the last to be shot, and
we finished just a few days before Christmas
1988. By then, I had discovered that London
Weekend had scheduled the films to start on
the Sunday night exactly two weeks after
Christmas Day, on 8 January 1989. The ten
we had shot that year were to go out every
Sunday evening thereafter at 8.45 p.m.,
ending on 19 March.
I honestly had no idea how they were
going to turn out. In fact, I was privately
rather frightened that they might be boring. I
remember thinking to myself that these films
were
not
action-packed
like The
Professionals or The Sweeney, both hugely
successful in their time, nor were they
comparable to the more recent Morse and
Wexford series. Were they going to be
entertaining enough for an audience in
1989?
‘I’m afraid they’re going to be too tame, or
too eccentric,’ I thought to myself.
At that end of the final day of shooting in
December 1988, we had a party for the crew
and regular members of the cast at
Twickenham. Brian Eastman made a little
speech, and then so did I. What I said
precisely reflected my private uncertainty.
‘I really have no idea whether Poirot will
work,’ I told everyone that evening. ‘Possibly
it won’t, and so there might never be
another series, which is why I want to say
thank you to everybody here for all you’ve
done to make it such a wonderful
experience.’
What I did know, however, was that I had
never been more tired in my acting career. I
walked off the set on that final night utterly
exhausted. I was barely off the screen
throughout almost 500 minutes of prime-
time television – working fourteen-and
fifteen-hour days, and I could hardly think.
Sean took me home to our new house in
Pinner, and I all but collapsed. Christmas
was not quite cancelled, but it was jolly close
to it, though I made every effort not to show
it for the sake of the children. But Sheila
knew.
All we had to do now was to wait and see
what the reaction would be.
Yet, in my heart, I was afraid that no more
films were going to be made, and that
meant that I was going to have to say
goodbye to the little Belgian whom I had
grown so incredibly fond of. We had become
so close that the pain of losing him would be
almost too much to bear.
Chapter 5
‘IT WAS LIKE BEING
HIT OVER THE HEAD
WITH A MALLET’
We had a family Christmas. Robert and
Katherine were still quite young, and
both my parents, as well as Sheila’s mother,
were still alive, so there was plenty to keep
us occupied. But in the back of my mind, I
could not stop thinking about Poirot. I was
gradually recovering from the strain of
filming, but I still wondered what the
audience would think.
The publicity for the series started
immediately after the holiday, and I
suddenly found myself doing interview after
interview about playing the role, without
really knowing whether it worked on the
screen. I was fascinated to know what the
audience were being told about the nature of
my work, and what the journalists I was
meeting thought about the films themselves,
as they’d seen at least the first episode in a
preview, as they usually do. Thankfully,
many of them were kind enough to tell me
how good they thought it was.
That came as something of a relief, as I
had not seen any of the films in their
entirety. Brian Eastman had shown me bits
of the filming here and there, when there
was something we specifically needed to
discuss, but the schedule was so tight that
there was no time for me to sit down and
look at every film as it was completed.
Nevertheless, as the days passed, and the
first showing came ever closer, I got my first
clue about how Agatha Christie’s Poirot had
turned out.
On the Friday morning of 6 January 1989 a
piece by the veteran entertainment writer
David Lewin appeared in the Daily Mail
which said, very flatteringly, ‘David Suchet
has become Britain’s first character actor star
on television.’ He had been one of the first
people I talked to during the run of publicity
after Christmas.
David then went on to compare me to Sir
Alec Guinness, who was more famous for the
characters he played than for his own
personality – not least in the great Ealing
comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets and David
Lean’s Bridge on the River Kwai. It was a
great compliment, as I had always been an
admirer of Guinness and his work, but to be
mentioned in the same breath was a little
overwhelming.
But when Sheila and I sat down together
to watch The Adventure of the Clapham
Cook go out on that Sunday evening in
January 1989, we still really did not know
what I would be like, how the series would
look, or what the reaction would be. Even
after we watched it, I wasn’t exactly sure
whether the audience would like it.
‘What do you think?’ I asked Sheila.
‘It’s wonderful,’ she said. ‘And so were you.
It will be a tremendous success.’
I’m not sure I believed her. After all, this
was only my second outing in a high-profile
television