Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
to Boulogne, but disappears in France. The
British government ask for Poirot’s help and
put a destroyer at his disposal to transport
him to France immediately.
That only contrives to reveal Poirot’s fear
of sea-sickness. As he tells Hastings in the
original story, ‘It is the villainous sea that
troubles me! The mal de mer – it is horrible
suffering!’ He is in no hurry to climb aboard
the warship, and insists that he will start his
search for the Prime Minister in England.
Hastings and the Leader of the House of
Commons cannot understand it, but the little
Belgian is unmoved.
Poirot then outlines one of the central
tenets of his attitude to solving a case, one
which he returns to time and again.
‘It is not so that the good detective should
act, eh?’ Dame Agatha had him say in her
original story. ‘I perceive your thought. He
must be full of energy. He must rush to and
fro. He should prostrate himself on the dusty
road and seek the marks of tyres through a
little glass. He must gather up the cigarette-
end, the fallen match? That is your idea, is it
not?’
Poirot fundamentally disagrees, and Dame
Agatha has him say so firmly.
‘But I – Hercule Poirot – tell you that it
is not so! The true clues are within –
here!’ He tapped his forehead. ‘All that
matters is the little grey cells within.
Secretly and silently they do their part,
until suddenly I call for a map, and I
lay my finger on a spot – so – and I
say: the Prime Minister is there! And it
is so.’
It is precisely the technique that Poirot
depends on time after time.
There
is
another
element
in The
Kidnapped Prime Minister that reveals
another of the similarities between Poirot
and me: the question of the English class
system.
Throughout her stories, Dame Agatha was
never afraid to criticise, and sometimes
make fun of, the British upper class and their
habits. As my character note number sixty-
two about him puts it: ‘HATES the English
class system.’ It is not just that Poirot calls
tea ‘the English poison’, it is also that he is
wary of accepting what might be called the
British habit of respecting people of their
own class, regardless of what the reality
about them might be, and I must say I agree
with him.
Although he is a Belgian, a refugee who
arrived during the First World War, he
emulates the British in his clothes and his
manners, considering himself like an English
doctor in Harley Street, and is content to
observe what he regards as their strange
customs. But he does not care, and neither
do I, for the British respect for class, and
what are so often called ‘good chaps’. Time
after time throughout his stories, Poirot rails
against the British tendency to accept
anything someone regarded as a ‘good chap’
says without a moment of hesitation.
I agree with him. It is another area in
which Poirot and I are as one. I don’t know
exactly why that is, but it is absolutely true.
Perhaps it has something to do with my
parents, or my own sense of being an
outsider, even though I was born in London,
but it is there anyway, one more thing that
links Poirot and me.
In fact, it is Poirot’s dislike of the
restrained attitude of the English upper class
that lies at the heart of the last, and most
important, film of my second series as Poirot
– a story that reveals, as my character note
number fifty-five says, ‘Doesn’t like the
English “reserve”. Thinks the English are
mad.’
Chapter 7
‘I FELT THAT I HAD
BECOME THE
CUSTODIAN OF DAME
AGATHA’S CREATION’
The Mysterious Affair at Styles became
our second two-hour television special
at the end of the second series, and was
scheduled to be broadcast to mark the
centenary of Dame Agatha’s birth. Indeed, it
premiered in England on 16 September
1990, exactly one day after the centenary of
her birth in 1890, and almost fifteen years
after her death in Oxfordshire in January
1976.
What made it so significant for me,
however, was that it was a television version
of the very first crime novel Dame Agatha
ever wrote, and the one that introduced the
character of Hercule Poirot. It was a prequel
to everything that I had done before in the
nineteen stories we had already filmed.
There was no doubt that London Weekend
were intent on making it as fine a film as
they possibly could. The script, once again
by Clive Exton, felt like the screenplay for a
feature film rather than a television special,
not least in using a huge number of extras
and vintage vehicles, which were needed to
give a feeling of London in the First World
War. The director was the talented fifty-
year-old South African Ross Devenish, whose
1980 film Marigolds in August had won a
prize at the Berlin Film Festival that year.
Most of all, however, it gave me an
opportunity to establish my Poirot from the
very beginning of his career. The television
audience may have seen the later Poirot, but
they had never seen him as a younger man,
shortly after he arrived in this country as a
refugee from the German invasion of his
native Belgium, forced to come to England to
escape the carnage in his homeland.
But this was not an especially cheerful
Poirot story. This was a serious crime and a
complex mystery, which was downbeat from
the very beginning. One of the early scenes
features a younger Lieutenant Hastings
recovering from his war wounds in a ‘rather
depressing’ convalescent home in England.
In fact, when we first encounter him,
Hastings and his fellow patients are
watching a black and white newsreel about
the latest battles on the Western Front,
which is then followed by a brief item about
the Belgian refugees that are flooding into
England.
It is just one of the many echoes in The
Mysterious Affair at Styles of Dame Agatha’s
own life as a young woman, as she had seen
Belgian refugees billeted near her home
town as the war began to take its toll.
The story makes it worth recalling just a
little about her upbringing. Born in the
English seaside town of Torquay in
September 1890, Agatha Miller started to
write stories as a girl, during a bout of
influenza, when her mother suggested that
instead of telling stories – which she enjoyed
doing – she should write them down. She
did, and never lost the habit.
Then, when Agatha Miller was a teenager,
she and her elder sister Madge were
discussing a murder-mystery they were both
reading when Agatha announced that she’d
like to try her hand at writing a detective
story. Madge challenged her to do it, while
suspecting privately that she would never be
able to. It was a challenge that the teenager
never forgot.
By the time she was in her very early
twenties, however, the young Miss Miller had
one or two other things on her mind, not
least the fact that she was being pursued by
a number of young men with offers of
marriage.
Indeed,
she
even
became
engaged to one in 1912, at the age of
twenty-two, only to break it off when she fell
in love with the dashing Lieutenant Archibald
Christie, the son of a judge in the Indian Civil
Service and then serving with the Royal Field
Artillery.
Less than eighteen months later, Agatha
Miller married Archie, now Captain Christie,
who had joined the newly formed Royal
Flying Corps. The ceremony took place on
Christmas Eve 1914, and war with Germany
had begun just four months earlier. Captain
Christie went back to the Western Front just
two days later, while his new wife went to
work in Torbay Hospital in Torquay, nursing
some of the first casualties to come back
from Flanders.
After eighteen months, she transferred to
the hospital’s dispensary, where she would
acquire the extensive knowledge of poisons
that would eventually appear in her novels –
not least in The Mysterious Affair at Styles. It
was during the quieter periods in the
dispensary, in 1916, that the new Mrs
Agatha Christie started writing what would
be her first detective story, about that affair
at Styles.
To do so, she drew on her new husband’s
experiences of the war, and on her own, as a
nurse on the home front, treating the
wounded, while also being well aware that
England had provided a new home for some
Belgian refugees – a colony had been
billeted near her home in the parish of Tor in
Torbay.
Why not make one of them her fictional
detective, the young Mrs Christie thought to
herself. Perhaps he could be a retired police
officer from the Belgian force, not too young.
So Hercule Poirot was born, and the new
Mrs Christie allowed the then still thirty-year-
old Hastings to encounter Poirot – whom he
had met before the war in Belgium, while
working in insurance – during a trip away
from his convalescent home. Hastings is
invited to stay at a country house belonging
to the family of his boyhood friend John
Cavendish, Styles Court, a mile or so outside
the fictional village of Styles St Mary in
Essex.
The house is owned by John Cavendish’s
stepmother, who, although she is over
seventy,
has
recently
re-married
the
distinctly shady Alfred Inglethorpe, twenty
years her junior. He is an ‘absolute bounder’,
according to John Cavendish, because he has
‘a great black beard and wears patent
leather shoes in all weathers’. So the
mystery begins.
Written and set during the ‘war to end
wars’, The Mysterious Affair at Styles was
eventually published in London in 1920, to
quite extraordinary success, launching its
author’s career as the ‘Queen of English
crime fiction’ in the twentieth century. More
important for me, it also launched Hercule
Poirot as a fictional detective who would
come to rival the great Sherlock Holmes in
the public’s affection around the world.
To my mind, the story and the screenplay
o f The Mysterious Affair at Styles are both
Dame Agatha and Clive Exton at their very
best. It was no accident that the book was a
huge best-seller, because it contains an
extraordinary number of ingenious puzzles
and a remarkable set of characters who live
on in the memory.
But, as I said, The Mysterious Affair at
Styles is not exactly a conventional Poirot.
There is rather less of a twinkle in his eye
t h a n in some of the other stories. The
background of the war makes it sombre in
tone, and Poirot’s attempt to settle into a
new land is no laughing matter. He and his
fellow Belgian refugees are struggling to
understand the ways of their adopted
homeland.
In television terms, it is even more
unusual, because Poirot does not appear
until eleven minutes of the film have passed.
The old movie adage of ‘putting the money
on the screen’ by making sure the leading
actor appears as close to the opening as
possible was completely ignored. Indeed, to
establish it as something quite different from
the rest of the series, The Mysterious Affair
at Styles does not even begin with the series
titles
and
Christopher
Gunning’s
unmistakable theme music. Instead, it opens
like a feature film, with wounded soldiers
near Parliament Square in London, nurses
ushering them to and fro, and a military
band marching past.