Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
the life I’ve had – and the opportunity to
play such an extraordinary part?’
By then I had played Poirot thirty times in
thirty stories, including two two-hour
specials, a total of thirty-two hours of prime-
time television. What would happen next?
Chapter 9
‘YOU HAVE TO MAKE
SURE THAT NOTHING
GOES TO YOUR HEAD’
As the last Poirot episode I had filmed
was transmitted, all I knew for certain
was that London Weekend had not taken out
an option on me for another series. I looked
forward to playing him again but I was also
aware that my children were growing up and
I had to keep working. I had to try to make
sure I was available in case another Poirot
series was commissioned, but there was also
a life to be lived, and that meant working.
It was my uncertainty about the future,
and my need to work, that encouraged me
to accept what some of my friends thought
was a rather unlikely role – that of the
anarchist and spy Alfred Verloc in a new BBC
adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s dark Victorian
masterpiece The Secret Agent, which was
first published in 1907, but set in 1886.
The script was by the British playwright
Dusty Hughes and the director, another
Englishman, David Drury, had assembled a
terrific cast, including Cheryl Campbell, to
play my wife Winnie, Patrick Malahide as the
assistant commissioner of the Metro-politan
Police, and Warren Clarke as Chief Inspector
Heat, the detective bent on tracking down
the agent provocateur Verloc in London’s
East End.
Verloc was a milestone for me because it
was the first genuinely evil part that I had
played on television, and it was in the
starkest possible contrast to the endlessly
charming, if sometimes irritating, Poirot.
There was no disguising the fact that Verloc
was an evil man, intent on destroying
society, and that it would be hard for any
audience to find much affection for him. But
playing him provided me with a real
challenge: to bring to life one of European
literature’s most malignant souls without
turning him into a monster with a tail and
horns. Indeed, in spite of the material, I
never once allowed myself to be depressed
by his character, no matter how despicable
he might be. I knew that Verloc was an
opportunity to show myself to the audience
in a different light, and that meant a great
deal to me.
By now I was forty-five years old, a time
when most people are pretty settled in their
lives and career. They have a house and
children, as I did, and, if they are lucky, they
also have a fairly predictable future. But no
actor has that luxury – certainly not one
determined to make a career out of being a
character actor, as I was. I had known for a
long time that I had to be more flexible than
that, and take the chances I was offered. But
I could not have managed that without
Sheila’s support, because she understood –
having been an actress herself – exactly
what an actor’s lifestyle meant. It was
always a rollercoaster, with neither of us
knowing what was to come next.
That’s the life you join as an actor, and it
was one reason why Sheila and I trained
ourselves never to look more than six
months into the future – if things went badly,
we were always ready to make a change to
our lives. It was a thought that sustained us
through the good times as well as the bad. If
things went badly, we always told each
other, we would sell the house and move
into something smaller, or even move back
into a narrow boat on the canals, which is
where we started our life together. It was an
attitude that meant we were always ready to
drop everything at a moment’s notice if the
right chance came up, no matter where it
took us.
I had decided, however, that there was
one thing I really could not do while Poirot
remained a possibility – and that was to go
back to work with the Royal Shakespeare
Company at Stratford. But the decision upset
me for I loved the company. In fact, I was
lucky enough to be asked to rejoin them
almost every year, even for just one
production, but I knew that making that
commitment would demand a long period of
my time, and it would also mean that I
would not be available for another Poirot
series if one was recommissioned. Not going
to the RSC was the right thing to do, but it
was very hard to refuse my friends there,
especially the principal associate director
Michael Attenborough, who was always
trying, very gently, to persuade me to go
back to a company I had always treasured.
But even though I turned down the RSC,
the decision did not depress me, because I
have always been a very positive person.
I’ve always felt enormously fortunate to be
an actor, but I have also realised that you
need to keep your feet firmly on the ground
if you are. You have to make sure that
nothing goes to your head – not even the
greatest reviews. And I also believe that the
higher you go up the ladder of success, the
more certain it is that one day it might just
stop. My philosophy was to choose what I
did very carefully, and always to do the best
and most challenging work that I could, and
see where that took me.
Yet beneath all that, I also knew that I
wanted to go on playing Poirot. Some of my
friends would ask, ‘Haven’t you had enough
of him?’
But I would always tell them, ‘The public
love him, and the truth is, I do too.’
That made the uncertainty about whether
I would play him again all the more testing,
but there were consolations – not least the
extraordinary fan letters that I had received
since Agatha Christie’s Poirot began. I had
been used to one or two bits of fan mail in
the past, but suddenly a tidal wave of letters
overtook me, and they came as a
considerable shock. They really did.
Those letters made me realise that I had a
responsibility to the audience to keep up the
quality of everything I did on the series, to
surround myself with the very best people
and the finest scripts. It was something I had
tried to do throughout my career, but now it
became even more important. I simply could
not let the letter-writers down, and so I
replied to them all, and found myself taking
on a part-time secretary to help.
The letters came from all sorts of people,
and each and every one of them was
touching in its own way. Mind you, it did not
entirely escape my attention that the
majority of them came from women.
One elderly lady of almost ninety years of
age, who lived alone, wrote to thank me for
making her Sunday evenings a treat. She
told me she drew her dining table up in front
of her television set before each episode, so
that she could have supper with me.
Then a young woman in her twenties
wrote to ask me if I would come and meet
her in a park one day, dressed as Poirot, so
that she could know what it would be like to
be treated like a lady. I am afraid I declined
the invitation, but it revealed just how much
Poirot meant to everyone that watched him.
One lady from Northern Ireland wrote to
tell me that she had never before watched
films that included Poirot because he had
always seemed a little unbelievable to her,
and a little repellent.
She told me that it was only because she
had seen my Caliban for the RSC at Stratford
that she had even turned on her television
set to watch the Poirot series. To her
amazement, she found him a credible
character. She told me that she could see
the person shining through, and asked me
whether this was the fascination of acting.
Deeply moved, I replied to her letter,
though I am far from certain whether I
answered her question. In fact, I am not
altogether sure if I could define exactly what
the fascination of acting is, beyond that I
love doing it.
Another lady, this time from Scotland, said
she had felt compelled to write to
congratulate me on my portrayal, and went
into considerable detail about exactly why.
She explained that she had always
considered Poirot to be such a unique and
complex character that it was impossible to
bring him to life without turning him into
some kind of music-hall turn. She was kind
enough to tell me that, for her, my
performance had come as a great surprise
and a great relief. To know that these
members of the audience had understood
what I had been trying to do was
tremendously heartening.
Not all the letters were from ladies.
One gentleman from Rhode Island in the
United States confessed, ‘I have not had
much experience in writing fan letters, so
please excuse the awkwardness of this
letter. I just want you to know that you have
many fans in America. I am happy to say I
am one of them . . . but I am not an
impressionable young girl, or a yuppie or
some groupie. I am a sixty-four-year-old
black American, a former postal worker now
retired . . . a happily married man of thirty-
nine years, to my first and only love. Father
of three children – two boys and a girl – and
last, but not least, a grandfather of ten.’
This delightful gentleman particularly liked
Poirot’s banter with Hastings – and
especially over our game of Monopoly – just
as he enjoyed his impatience with the other
guests during the denouement in Peril at End
House, which he called ‘vintage Poirot’. But
what he admired the most was the single
fact that had preoccupied me the most:
distilling the true humanity of the little man
into my performance.
‘No one has so captured the essence of
Poirot as you have,’ he wrote. ‘Even though
you reveal his vanity, his conceits, he is in
some ways a ridiculous little man, you still,
like no [other] actor convey his sweetness,
his innate kindness and his tenacity. It is just
wonderful.’ He ended by wishing me ‘much
success in your future’ and concluded with a
sentence that touched my heart. ‘I hope that
my letter means something to you.’ It most
certainly did.
The letter that meant the most to me,
however, did not come from a fan but from
Rosalind Hicks, Dame Agatha’s daughter,
who had subjected me to that ordeal when
we had met for lunch back in the summer of
1988, before the first series had even started
filming, when she reminded me firmly that
we must never laugh at Poirot – only with
him.
‘Dear “Poirot”,’ she was kind enough to
write. ‘Your appearance and mannerisms,
the warmth and humour and occasional
touches of impatience and fussiness – it is all
just right . . . Agatha Christie’s Poirot, you
certainly are. I’m sure she would have been
delighted.
‘The order and method and the little grey
cells are all there to see. The moustaches
could have been a little more magnificent,
but I do understand what you feel about this
sensitive point!’ She ended by saying simply,
‘With many thanks and congratulations from
us both.’
It brought back the memory of my terror
that my Poirot might not match the ideal she
had in mind. It was an enormous relief to
hear that it did.
I think Rosalind Hicks’ support for me may
have been one of the factors – as well as the
audience figures in this country and the
show’s success in the United States – that
finally persuaded London Weekend to go on
with a fourth series. After all, they were
perfectly within their rights to stop, but – to
their eternal credit – they did not. The