Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
in David Lean’s Brief Encounter, although
this time it is the woman who is leaving the
country for a new life, while Poirot is left
standing on the station platform, alone with
his thoughts of what might have been.
In the next film in the series, Poirot
confronts menace rather than love.
The Mystery of the Spanish Chest first
appeared in Dame Agatha’s collection of
short stories The Adventure of the Christmas
Pudding in 1960, which hardly sounds
threatening at all. Yet it is one of the most
frightening stories she wrote. It was actually
an expanded version of one of her earlier
stories, The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest,
which first appeared in a collection called
The Regatta Mystery in the United States in
1939, but was not published in Britain until
1960.
Chilling from the very start, it opens with a
ferocious fencing match involving the
mysterious
Colonel
Curtiss,
who,
it
transpires, might just be a British spymaster.
He was played by another extraordinary
actor John McEnery, then in his late forties
and capable of conveying malice in the most
dramatic way. An old friend, he was a former
member of the National Theatre and had
made his name in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1968
version of Romeo and Juliet.
When John held a sword to my throat
during the filming of The Spanish Chest, it
was one of the few times when both Poirot
and I felt truly frightened, for he made it so
realistic that there was a moment when I
almost convinced myself that he would
actually plunge the blade into my throat. It
shows on the screen.
Set once again among the English upper
classes, Poirot is hired by Lady Abbie
Chatterton because she is afraid that her
friend Marguerita Clayton may be killed by
her husband Edward, who has a violent
temper. As a result, Poirot is invited to a
party to meet Clayton, who – mysteriously –
fails to appear. His body is found the
following day, hidden in a chest. He has
been stabbed through the eye.
With a terrific script from Anthony
Horowitz, and directed by Andrew Grieve, it
allowed another of those special moments
when Poirot and I came together.
‘I was lucky, that is all,’ Poirot says near
the end of the story, and then adds, with a
slight twinkle in his eye, ‘It is more English,
yes, the humbleness.’ There is a pause
before he concludes, with his tongue in his
cheek, ‘No one shall match Hercule Poirot for
his humility.’
Like Poirot, I too believe in humility, but
there is a twinkle in both of us, for there is
also an element of confidence, perhaps even
vanity, which we both share. How could we
do what we do if there were not?
John McEnery was not the only old friend
to grace the new series. The eighth film, The
Adventure of the Royal Ruby, featured both
the late Freddie Treves and Stephanie Cole,
both of whom I had known for a long time.
Freddie served in the merchant navy during
the Second World War, and was awarded the
British Empire Medal for bravery, which
somehow led him to play a series of military
officers after training at RADA. Stephanie, on
the other hand, seemed to have been
playing elderly ladies from her late thirties,
not least in the BBC television series Tenko
and Alan Bennett’s Talking Heads . Both
helped the story of The Royal Ruby a great
deal, and I was delighted that such fine
actors wanted to be in the series.
Originally called The Adventure of the
Christmas Pudding when it was first
published in Britain in 1960, The Royal Ruby
opens with Poirot delighting in being able to
spend Christmas alone with a specially
selected box of his favourite Belgian
chocolates. But his plans are upset when he
is asked by the British government to
investigate the theft of a priceless stone that
belongs to Prince Farouk, a member of the
Egyptian royal family. Poirot discovers the
Prince has given it to a mysterious young
woman, and follows her to the country home
of a noted Egyptologist, played by Freddie,
with Stephanie as his wife.
My very favourite moment comes when
everyone sits down to dinner on Christmas
Eve and Poirot demonstrates exactly how to
prepare and eat a mango. In fact, I asked for
the scene to be put into the film and I must
explain why.
In April 1990, just a few weeks before we
were to start filming Poirot again, I received
a letter from Buckingham Palace inviting me
to a ‘private’ lunch with Her Majesty on 2
May, which was my forty-fourth birthday.
Both Sheila and I were astonished, and I
even asked her, partly as a joke, whether
she thought it might be a hoax. But when
Sheila rang the number in the letter, it
turned out to be absolutely true.
And so it was that I found myself having
lunch with the Queen and the Duke of
Edinburgh on my birthday that year. There
were twelve guests in all, and I discovered
that Her Majesty likes to invite people from
all walks of life that she finds interesting.
During lunch, I was deep in discussion with
Prince Philip, who was sitting three chairs
along from me on my side of the table,
opposite the Queen, when I heard someone
whisper in my left ear, ‘Would you care for
some fruit, sir?’
Without looking round, I nodded and put
my hand into the giant fruit bowl that was
being offered and I picked up something and
put it on the plate in front of me. Then I
looked down in horror. Without knowing it, I
had picked a mango. I was horrified – I did
not have any idea at all about how to peel it,
or eat it, in ‘polite company’.
Suffering from an acute attack of nerves, I
turned to the Duke and confessed, ‘Sir, I find
myself in a most embarrassing situation – I
wonder if you could help me. I am most
terribly sorry, but I’m afraid I don’t have the
slightest idea how to deal with this mango.’
That provoked an enormous laugh from
Prince Philip, who replied immediately, ‘Well,
let me show you.’
The Duke proceeded to take another
mango and show me exactly what I should
do. He took a sharp knife and put the tip into
the mango until he could feel the pip at its
centre. Then he went round the fruit, with
the tip of the knife still held against the pip,
until the mango was effectively in two
halves, though still attached to the pip.
He then removed the knife, and placed a
dessert spoon through the cut until he could
feel the pip. He then used the spoon to
loosen the pip from one side, and then
repeated this on the other.
‘Once you’ve done this,’ he told me with a
smile, ‘you will be able to twist the two parts
of the fruit apart. You then remove the pip
altogether and cut across the soft fruit in the
centre of both parts with a sharp knife.
‘Once you have done that, you can turn
each half inside out with your thumbs, so
that the skin of each half is on the plate with
the fruit uppermost. Then you can eat the
mango.’
I was tremendously relieved that I wasn’t
left floundering and was now able to eat the
mango in front of me.
Sean was driving me that day, and when I
got back into the car after lunch, I
immediately rang Brian Eastman to tell him
the story and say that we simply had to
include it in the dinner that formed part of
the story of The Royal Ruby.
There is even a little joke about it in the
film itself. When one of the dinner guests
asks how Poirot knows how to treat a
mango, the screenwriter Anthony Horowitz
wrote the line, ‘A certain duke taught me.’
We sent a copy of the finished film to
Buckingham Palace on DVD, and I’m thrilled
to say that it became the late Queen
Mother’s favourite film. Indeed, whenever
I’ve met the Duke of Edinburgh since that
lunch, he always calls me ‘the mango man’.
I remember being tremendously pleased
by the production values on display in the
penultimate film of the series. The Affair at
the Victory Ball, for example, needed a
lavish set for a fancy-dress extravaganza to
which every guest is supposed to come
‘dressed as someone famous’. Poirot insists
that he is quite famous enough to go as
himself, though, in a little joke, Hastings
decides to go as the Scarlet Pimpernel. The
opening shots of the film focus on a set of
beautiful pottery figures of the characters
from the Italian Commedia dell’Arte. When
two of the guests, who are dressed as
characters from the Commedia, are found
dead, Poirot finds himself helping Japp to
reveal the murderer. At the end of the shoot,
I was given the mock porcelain figures as a
present, which I still have.
Part of the story of The Victory Ball takes
place in a radio studio – and includes a little
joke when one character in Andrew
Marshall’s script insists, ‘Actors never know
when to stop.’ In fact, the denouement is
held in a studio and broadcast live to the
listening audience, with Poirot reconstructing
what happened at the ball. Yet, no matter
what the script may have suggested, Poirot
knows exactly when to stop, no matter the
temptation of a studio and a microphone.
The last story broadcast in the third series,
The Mystery of Hunter’s Lodge, is set during
a grouse shoot on a moor in Yorkshire. It
originally appeared in Dame Agatha’s first
collection
of
short
stories, Poirot
Investigates, in 1923, a collection that came
into existence after being commissioned by
the editor of the London-based illustrated
weekly the Sketch. The stories appeared
weekly before they were published in book
form, much as the Sherlock Holmes stories
had done in the Strand Magazine nearly
thirty years earlier.
The shoot itself was cold, very cold. The
temperature on the Yorkshire moors was
freezing, and I kept falling off the shooting
stick Poirot was supposed to be sitting on,
because the ground was so soft after a long
period of rain that my stick would not stay in
place. On one occasion, it took the
production team twenty minutes to clean me
up again, as Poirot must never appear to be
dirty, of course. In the film, Poirot catches a
cold – just as I inevitably did. That happened
many times over the years that I played him.
I always seemed to catch whatever it was
Poirot was supposed to have, and this was
one of those cases. I remember it as one of
the coldest shoots I had ever been on –
there was snow on the ground and I was
shivering, in spite of taking the precaution of
wearing thermal underwear under my
padding.
In the end, Poirot retires to bed in his
hotel to recover, leaving Hastings and Japp
to track down the murderer of the wealthy
landowner of Harrington Place, who is
holding the shoot on his land. But Poirot and
I recovered sufficiently to uncover the killer
in a denouement in front of the family living
at Hunter’s Lodge.
The shoot for the third series came to an
end shortly before Christmas 1990, and the
first film was due to be broadcast by London
Weekend on Sunday, 6 January 1991. Yet
again, it was an astonishingly quick
turnaround for such complicated films – the
last of the ten was to go out on 10 March –
and the decision to televise them so quickly
after we had finished filming meant that we
always seemed to be rushing to finish one
before immediately starting the next.
I remember thinking, as Sean and I drove
back to Pinner, ‘How many actors have had