Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
like disguises. Every character actor loves his
costume, which helps him to become
someone else, and Poirot liked not only his
own clothes, which helped to define his
character, but also – from time to time – to
use a disguise to help him achieve his end.
The Veiled Lady, the second film in the
second series, demonstrates that perfectly.
Poirot is asked to meet a mysterious woman
– in a veil – in a London hotel. She turns out
to be Lady Millicent Castle-Vaughan, played
by Frances Barber, who is about to be
married to the Duke of Southshire. The
difficulty is that she is also being blackmailed
over an indiscreet letter she wrote to a
former lover some years earlier, which has
fallen into the hands of an unscrupulous man
called Lavingham, whom Hastings calls a
‘dirty swine’.
Ever anxious to help a lady in distress,
Poirot decides to disguise himself as a
locksmith – complete with elderly bicycle and
black beret – to get into Lavingham’s
Wimbledon home to find the offending letter
and retrieve it, thereby bringing the
blackmail to an end and saving Lady
Millicent’s reputation. All does not go well,
however, and Poirot ends up in the cells,
only to be rescued by Chief Inspector Japp.
The spirited chase involving Poirot, Hastings
and Japp in the spectacular setting of the
Natural History Museum in London, as part of
the story’s denouement, was enormous fun
to do.
The next film to be broadcast, The Lost
Mine, opens with Hastings and Poirot playing
Monopoly in Whitehaven Mansions, with
Hastings winning comprehensively. The
question of money, and in particular Poirot’s
skill with it, is at the heart of the story.
Indeed, their game of Monopoly lasts all the
way through it, until, inevitably, it ends with
Hastings bankrupt and Poirot triumphant.
Along the way, however, Poirot finds his
current account is overdrawn – something
which he would never allow to happen, and
neither would I incidentally – and the
chairman of the bank, played by Anthony
Bate, asks for Poirot’s help.
Once again, there was a rather spectacular
setting, this time including the creation of
Chinatown and a Chinese nightclub in the
studio at Twickenham, which reminded me
again of just how much London Weekend
were spending on this series – certainly no
less than the £500,000 per hour that they
had spent on the first. With a Chinese victim,
Wu Ling, and hints pointing to the opium
trade in the East End of London, there are
also echoes of the Charlie Chan mysteries,
which were hugely popular at the time.
Dame Agatha’s story, with its Chinatown
background, had first appeared in the
American edition of her short stories called
Poirot Investigates in 1925, and the first full-
length Chan novel, The House Without a
Key, appeared in the same year, although
the American author Earl Derr Biggers had
been working on him for almost six years.
Like
Poirot,
Chan
is
an
intelligent,
honourable and benevolent detective, with a
trace of eccentricity. He was to become a
staple of American novels and films for the
next three decades, often played by the
Swedish actor Warner Oland. There are
many
similarities
between
the
two
detectives. Chan is always intensely polite
and unthreatening, while often revealing the
solution to his mysteries in a lengthy speech
at the climax.
In sharp contrast to the exotic locale of
Chinatown, the next film in the series, The
Cornish Mystery, sees Poirot back in England,
returning to the middle-class world of
Clapham Cook. He is visited by Alice
Pengelly, a distinctly nervous, not to say
retiring, lady from Cornwall, who tells him
that she gets stomach pains after every meal
that she eats with her dentist husband
Edward, but none when he goes away.
Indeed, she is very afraid that she is being
poisoned with weed killer, as she has found
a half-empty jar in the house and the
gardener insists that he has never used it.
‘We have here a very poignant human
drama,’ Poirot confides to Hastings when Mrs
Pengelly also tells him that she believes her
husband is having an affair with his
attractive blonde assistant. Hastings and
Poirot travel down to Polgarwith in Cornwall
the next day, only to discover that tragedy
has already struck. Even though the good
Chief Inspector Japp makes an appearance,
and appears to have caught the murderer,
things are not quite what they seem, as
Poirot reveals.
The next three stories to be broadcast in
the second series – though they were not
shot in the order they were broadcast – were
all comparatively slight, and I’m afraid the
truth is that I was never really happy with
Double Sin, The Adventure of the Cheap Flat
a n d The Adventure of the Western Star.
They all seemed a little flat to me, a little
too one-dimensional compared to the others.
Poirot announces his ‘retirement’ at the
beginning of Double Sin, and decides to take
Hastings on holiday to the seaside at
Charlock Bay, where they meet a young
woman, Mary Durrant, who is going to show
a client a case of valuable antique
miniatures.
When they are stolen, Mary asks Poirot to
investigate, but – because of his ‘retirement’
– he instructs Hastings to take over the case,
although he also asks him to ‘tell me
everything’. The lovely Elspet Gray, wife of
Lord ‘Brian’ Rix, played Mary’s wheelchair-
bound mother, and there is rather a fine
denouement in the hotel dining room, but
somehow the film did not quite ‘sing’ in the
way that I wanted it to, in spite of Clive
Exton’s fine script.
Sadly the same was true for The
Adventure of the Cheap Flat, which starred
Samantha Bond in one of her early television
roles, six years before she became Miss
Moneypenny to Pierce Brosnan’s James
Bond. The plot revolves around two of
Hastings’ friends, the Robinsons, who cannot
believe their good luck in renting an
expensive flat in a fashionable block for a
tiny sum per month. Poirot is so intrigued
that he decides to rent a flat in the same
block himself – only to encounter an
undercover FBI agent in pursuit of some
secret plans for a submarine that may have
been stolen by the Mafia. The FBI man
pushes Chief Inspector Japp from his office
at Scotland Yard, but it is Poirot who solves
the mystery.
The Adventure of the Western Star is
another of Dame Agatha’s trifles. The
beautiful Belgian actress Marie Marvelle –
whom Poirot much admires – has received
threatening letters demanding the return of
a spectacular diamond known as the
Western Star, which is reputed to have once
been the left eye of a Chinese god.
Meanwhile, the wife of an English aristocrat,
Lord Yardley, who owns a similar diamond,
known as the Eastern Star, has also received
threatening letters demanding the return of
their stone.
Poirot travels to meet Lord and Lady
Yardley, but fails to prevent a daring
robbery, and then races back to London, only
to find that the Western Star has also been
stolen. Engaging enough, and with a
delightful portrait of Poirot becoming ever
more excited about meeting Marie Marvelle,
it depends on another of Dame Agatha’s
magical subterfuges. Poirot may have
enjoyed the chase to find the diamonds, but
I cannot say I was very happy with my own
performance.
Western Star did, however, give me an
opportunity to demonstrate Poirot’s passion
for cooking, when he serves Hastings supper
and watches him eat with ill-concealed
delight, all the while explaining the
importance of exactly the right ingredients.
It was my one opportunity in the story to
bring out his humanity. For the rest,
however, I felt uncomfortable and rather too
near a parody in my desire to do Poirot’s
passion for Miss Marvelle justice.
Some people tend to see Poirot as one-or
two-dimensional, but those who do so are
almost always the ones who have never read
the books. If you do read them, you realise
at once that there are certainly three
dimensions to his character. And every time I
played him, I tried to bring those extra
elements of Poirot’s character to the surface,
reflecting the different dimensions revealed
in Dame Agatha’s own stories about him.
Andrew Grieve, who directed the two
remaining one-hour films in the second
series, The Disappearance of Mr Davenheim
and The Kidnapped Prime Minister, and who
would go on to become a stalwart, positively
revelled in Poirot’s complexities, and has
always been a delight to work with. It made
Prime Minister one of my favourite Poirots of
all, because the little man proves that no
matter how idiosyncratic he may appear, he
is exactly right, proving everyone else –
particularly the British political establishment
– wrong. Andrew had clearly read both
stories, and wanted to talk to me at length
about Poirot. He allowed me to explore the
nuances in his character. There is no denying
t h a t Mr Davenheim is a quite delicious
mystery, which opens with Hastings, Japp
and Poirot at a theatre on location, watching
an illusionist (another of Dame Agatha’s
magicians) – and the theme of illusions
remains throughout the story. Banker
Matthew
Davenheim
disappears
one
afternoon on his way to post a letter, after
he gets home from his office, and Poirot tells
Japp that he will solve the mystery before
the police – without even leaving his flat.
In the story, Poirot delights in teaching
himself magic tricks, as well as building a
spectacular
house
of
cards,
while
comfortably
ensconced
at
Whitehaven
Mansions. As he explains to Hastings, ‘Non,
mon ami, I am not in my second childhood. I
steady my nerves – that is all. This
employment requires precision of the fingers.
With precision of the fingers goes precision
of the brain.’ An expert was brought in to
help me hone my skills in manipulating
cards, which was rather fun, though I don’t
think I would make a good magician.
The only irritation on the horizon is that he
is also looking after a rather talkative parrot,
a
bird
that
Poirot
hates.
Hastings,
meanwhile, is indulging his appetite for
driving fast cars at Brooklands race track in
Surrey. The delicious script was written by
David Renwick, who would go on shortly
afterwards to write the hugely successful
BBC television comedy One Foot in the
Grave.
I n The Kidnapped Prime Minister Andrew
allowed me to expand on Poirot’s supreme
confidence in himself. The story first
appeared in a London illustrated weekly, the
Sketch, in April 1923, as part of a series of
twelve, but was quickly included in the
collection of Dame Agatha’s stories, Poirot
Investigates, which was originally published
in the United States.
Set against the background of the
Versailles Peace Conference in the wake of
the ending of the First World War, it opens
with the kidnap of the British Prime Minister,
who is on his way to address a League of
Nations disarmament conference near Paris
and is intent on stopping any possibility of
German re-armament. Alone with his
chauffeur, the Prime Minister boards a ferry