Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
It is only after that establishing scene that
the action shifts to Hastings’ convalescent
home, where he is watching the newsreel.
There too London Weekend took a risk. The
black and white footage he and his fellow
patients are watching was controversial at
the time because it showed their fellow
soldiers dying in the trenches, not something
a prime-time television programme would
normally air, as it would be deemed too
distressing for an audience before the nine
o’clock watershed, which could well include
children.
After the newsreel, Hastings encounters
his old friend John Cavendish, who invites
him down to Styles – located in Wiltshire,
rather
than
Essex,
in
Clive
Exton’s
screenplay, though I was never quite sure
why. When Hastings arrives, he meets John
Cavendish’s wife Mary and his younger
brother Lawrence; a girl called Cynthia, a
protégé of Mrs Inglethorp, who works in the
dispensary of the local hospital (another
parallel with Dame Agatha’s life); and Evelyn
Howard, a lady in her forties who works for
the mistress of the house as a general
assistant.
When Mrs Inglethorp suddenly dies an
agonising death in bed – another risk for
ITV, as her death is incredibly graphic in the
film – it is first thought that she has had a
heart attack, but the local doctor quickly
spots that it is murder by poisoning. The
police are called, and, inevitably, suspicion
falls on Mrs Inglethorp’s new husband,
Alfred, who is suspected by the family of
being a bounty hunter, only interested in Mrs
Inglethorp’s considerable fortune.
By the time of the murder, however, Poirot
has only appeared briefly. In my first scene
Poirot is encountered leading a string of his
fellow Belgian refugees through a local
wood, instructing them on the wonders of
the English countryside. The first glimpse of
Poirot is of his spats treading careful through
the leaves – and it is the very first time the
audience hears his theme music gently rising
in the background.
When Poirot first appears in full view, he is
telling his fellow Belgians about one local
plant, the ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’, which, he says,
only opens during a lengthy period of good
weather. Poirot then pauses, and gives a wry
smile. ‘It is seldom seen open in this
country.’
We then see Poirot leading his troop of
Belgians across a river bridge, while
attempting to sing the famous First World
War song ‘It’s a Long Way to Tipperary’,
even though their voices are clearly not up
to it – and Poirot is patently tone deaf.
Nevertheless, it instantly conveys the group’s
attempt to show loyalty to their new
homeland. It is the only time that Poirot
sings in the entire canon of his stories, which
was a great relief, as I would not describe
myself as a singer.
Just two minutes later, Hastings meets
Poirot in the local post office, where the little
man is attempting to persuade the
postmistress to arrange the spices in the
shop to reflect their countries of origin –
those from India to the east, those from
Africa to the south, and so on – only for her
to tell him that she knows exactly where all
the spice jars are, and, besides, they all
come ‘from the wholesaler’.
The postmistress’s reaction pains Poirot
deeply, because not having the jars and tins
lined up in order of their size and placed in
relation to their country of origin offends his
sense of order and method, but there is
nothing he can do. The story reveals that
Hastings and Poirot have met before, when
Hastings worked for Lloyd’s of London, and
while Poirot was still serving with the Belgian
police. Now in his sixties, he has since
retired and is living in exile, because ‘the
Boche
have
rendered
my
homeland
uninhabitable’.
It is not long after their encounter in the
post office that Mrs Inglethorp dies and
Hastings suggests recruiting Poirot to help in
the investigation into her death. He goes to
the cottage where he and his countrymen
are staying and knocks on the door early in
the morning. Poirot is in bed, but gets up
and opens the window to talk to Hastings.
It is to my eternal regret that this is one
occasion when I totally let down the man I
had become so close to. In the film, I open
the window and look out without brushing
my hair before doing so. Now, Poirot, the
man I knew and loved, would never, ever,
have done that. He would have brushed his
hair carefully, no matter how urgent the
knocking on his front door. To this day, I
regret that I didn’t brush my hair before
opening the window. Every time I see that
scene, I feel I’ve let him down.
Not surprisingly, the film’s costume
designer was very anxious that I should look
younger for my introduction in the story –
after all, the action is taking place twenty
years before most of the stories that I had
already filmed – and so I wore a little less
padding, and a bowler hat rather than a
Homburg. I also wore a tie held in place by a
silver ring at the throat, rather than a bow
tie.
But I kept every one of the mannerisms I
had refined during the other films in the
series, including his mincing walk and his
tendency to keep his left hand firmly behind
his back when he moves. ‘That is him,’ I told
myself. ‘It is part of who he is, and has been
throughout his life’.
Privately, I was very glad I’d already
filmed so many Poirots, for they gave me the
confidence I needed to bring him alive in his
first story. Had I filmed Styles first, I wonder
if I would have had that same certainty
about his character and his mannerisms. But
my remaining true to the little man was
made all the easier by Ross Devenish’s
direction. He was a delight because he took
an enormous interest in Poirot. He would
come to my caravan on the set after we’d
finished filming and sit for hours, talking to
me about him.
‘Tell me who he is,’ Ross would say. ‘How
does he feel? How does he think? How can
we best bring him to life?’
Now, I fully accept that it was becoming
difficult for some of the directors who had
come to work on the second series to deal
with me. There is no denying it; I had
become an actor who was desperate to hang
on to what he believed was the only correct
view of his character. I felt, by then, that I
had become the custodian of Dame Agatha’s
creation, and I was not going to allow
anyone to dilute or alter anything that I felt
strongly about. That made it difficult for
some directors to deal with me – but that
wasn’t the case with Ross, who only ever
wanted to help me serve Poirot and his
creator.
I think that makes our version of The
Mysterious Affair at Styles very special, for
although it reveals Poirot’s eccentricity, his
egotism, his extraordinary knowledge and
his ironic sense of humour, it never once
allows him to topple over and become a
caricature. Ross and I wanted him to be as
human as we possibly could make him.
In the wake of Mrs Inglethorp’s death,
Poirot
accepts
Hastings’
invitation
to
participate in the investigation without a
moment’s pause, not least, he tells Hastings,
because ‘she had kindly extended hospitality
to seven of my country people, who, alas,
are refugees from their native land . . . We
Belgians will always remember her with
gratitude.’
It is at precisely this moment in the
original story that Dame Agatha first
describes Poirot, in some detail:
‘He was hardly more than five feet,
four inches, but carried himself with
great dignity. His head was exactly the
shape of an egg, and he always
perched it a little on one side. His
moustache was very stiff and military.
The neatness of his attire was almost
incredible; I believe a speck of dust
would have caused him more pain
than a bullet wound.’
It was a description that I knew almost by
heart, just as I remembered that when he
first goes to Styles Court to inspect Mrs
Inglethorp’s bedroom, the scene of her
death, Dame Agatha describes him as having
‘darted from one object to the other with the
agility of a grasshopper’. That phrase too
was forever in my mind.
Two other qualities that define him also
appear in Dame Agatha’s first novel – her
reference to Poirot’s ‘little grey cells’ and his
assertion to Hastings: ‘I am not keeping back
facts. Every fact that I know is in your
possession. You can draw your own
deductions from them.’
It is left to the then just Inspector Japp,
who appears from London to participate in
the investigation, to give us a little of
Poirot’s background by introducing him to a
local police superintendent by saying that
they
had
worked
together
on
the
‘Abercrombie forgery case’ (in the novel, that
is indentified as taking place in 1904) and
adding that ‘we nailed him in Antwerp –
thanks to Monsieur Poirot here’. The
superintendent looks distinctly unimpressed
by this odd-looking little man with a strange
accent and a rather peculiar walk.
Poirot is undeterred. He positively relishes
what is a complicated investigation, capable
of several different solutions, and which calls
on him to examine the exact nature of
strychnine poisoning. But it also contains
many of the elements that Dame Agatha
used time and again in her stories. There is
a large country house, with the servants
necessary to maintain it, complete with a
tennis lawn and stables to allow the guests
to ride in the mornings, while the grooms
look after the horses.
There is a sense in the story, and in our
film, that those days of British Edwardian
grandeur are fading as the impact of war
introduces a new and different world, one in
which old traditions and habits are ever
more difficult to maintain. Poirot catches this
when he describes one of the older female
servants, Dorcas, in the novel by saying: ‘I
thought what a fine specimen she was of the
old-fashioned servant that is so fast dying
out.’
There is also the hint – in the murder of
Mrs Inglethorp – that the time has suddenly
arrived when young men are becoming
increasingly impatient for their inheritance,
no longer prepared to wait their turn under
what they see as the ‘yoke’ of their elders.
Dame Agatha is quietly drawing attention to
the materialism that she sensed was
creeping into the world around her when she
wrote the novel in 1916.
Nevertheless, all the essential ingredients
of an Agatha Christie Poirot mystery are
there, including a typically expansive
denouement in which he seems to suggest
that almost every single resident of Styles
Court could have been guilty of poisoning
Mrs Inglethorp, before finally revealing the
killer. Yet the more he weaves his magical
spell and unravels the story’s many puzzles,
the more the story’s characters and the
audience comes to love him. As Cynthia, Mrs
Inglethorp’s protégé, puts it, ‘He is such a
dear little man!’ Poirot may leave the
fictional Cavendish family in tatters in the
novel and the film, but that does not detract
for a moment from his audience’s delight in
him.
It is a delight that remains to this day. I