Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
decision came through while I was filming
The Secret Agent, and I was thrilled.
The success of the two-hour versions of
Dame Agatha’s Peril at End House and The
Mysterious Affair at Styles had apparently
helped to convince executive producer Nick
Elliott that there was an appetite for longer
films, not least because the American
audience seemed to like them. So he
decided, in the first months of 1991, that
they would film three two-hour specials later
that year, and that, once again, he would
ask Brian Eastman to produce them.
So, in the summer of 1991, three years
after that lunch with Rosalind Hicks and her
husband, I went back to Twickenham Studios
to film three two-hour Poirot films. There
were to be one or two changes, however. My
old friend Hugh Fraser was only to appear in
the first of the three stories as Hastings,
though Inspector Japp was in them all. The
indefatigable Miss Lemon, so neatly played
by Pauline Moran in the first three series,
was also missing from two of the new films.
The absence of two of my three allies
made me a little sad, but the cast that Brian
Eastman assembled for each of the three
new films was so good that it almost made
up for it, and the attention to period detail
that he and London Weekend had been
honing throughout the first three series was
now on full display. The new films were
going to look as good as British television
could possibly make them – in our eyes, the
equal of anything that the American
networks might do.
The first of the three was Dame Agatha’s
c l a s s i c The
ABC
Murders,
called
a
masterpiece by many of her admirers, which
features murders that are announced before
they have even taken place, in letters to
Poirot signed ‘ABC’. The first murder is in
Andover in Hampshire, the second in Bexhill
in Kent, the third in the fictional town of
Cherton, possibly in Devon, and the fourth is
destined to happen in Doncaster in South
Yorkshire, but Poirot is determined that it
will never be allowed to happen. Beside the
body of each of the victims lies a copy of the
English ABC Railway Guide.
The original story began its life as a
serialisation in the Daily Express in England,
but the novel itself was published in both
Britain and the United States in the first
weeks of 1936. It was so strikingly good that
it became an instant worldwide hit, and had
even been made into a feature film in 1966,
with the American Tony Randall as Poirot
and the British actor Robert Morley as
Hastings. There was even a rumour that the
American comedian Zero Mostel was to have
played the little Belgian in that production,
but Dame Agatha, who took a great interest
in any depiction of her character on the
screen, objected strongly when the film’s
original screenplay called for Poirot not only
to have a love interest, but also a love
scene. In the end, it had neither.
Our new film had no such problems –
there was not a trace of a love scene. The
script was once again by the wonderful Clive
Exton, and the director was Andrew Grieve,
now both veterans of the series who exactly
understood the character I was determined
to portray.
In fact, ABC is a delight, perhaps even my
favourite Poirot film. It begins with Hastings
returning from a trip to the Orinoco Delta in
Venezuela, bearing a stuffed crocodile as a
present for Poirot, which stands – decidedly
uncomfortably – on the sideboard at
Whitehaven Mansions when the first of the
‘ABC’ letters arrives. Poirot is very pleased to
see his old friend, and insists he stay with
him in the flat while Hastings finds himself
somewhere to live, but the little man also
confesses to him that he has not been very
busy: ‘The little grey cells, they have the
rust.’
The cast was terrific, with Donald Sumpter
particularly good as the travelling stockings
salesman Alexander Bonaparte Cust, who
becomes the prime suspect for the murders.
For me, the scene that Donald and I played
together in a jail cell is one of the highlights
of all the Poirot films that I have made.
When you have actors of his quality
alongside you in a piece, it improves the
work of everyone, and the better everyone
one is, the happier I am, because it also
makes me raise my own performance to
match theirs. There is no competition
between us as actors, just the pleasure of
seeing one actor’s performance bringing out
the best in all of us. It certainly did on ABC.
The second film was Death in the Clouds,
which Dame Agatha wrote in 1935, the year
before ABC. Called Death in the Air in the
United States, it is a prime example of one
of her favourite plot devices: the victim and
the potential murderers all isolated in a
single location – be it in an English country
house, on a train journey, on an isolated
archaeological excavation in the Middle East,
or – as in this case – on a flight from Le
Bourget Airport in Paris to Croydon Airport to
the south of London.
It was to be directed by the actor Stephen
Whittaker, who had played alongside me in
Blott on the Landscape for the BBC, but had
now turned director. Stephen had never
directed any of our films before, and indeed
nothing on quite this scale, and I think he
found it quite a challenge. He was also
working with a script from another
newcomer to the series, the experienced
British screenwriter William Humble, who
had started his career writing Emmerdale.
Nevertheless,
Brian
Eastman
had
surrounded them with another excellent
cast, led by Sarah Woodward, daughter of
the actor Edward Woodward, who was –
effectively – my Hastings for the story.
Nothing was lost by the transformation; in
fact, it was a marvellous change for me to
have a lady with a sharp mind as my
companion rather than the ever-loyal
Hastings.
At this stage, I had no say in who was to
write or direct any of the films, but I had
great faith in Brian Eastman’s judgement as
a producer. By now, he had a well-earned
reputation for making high-quality television
drama, which meant that not only did actors,
writers and directors want to work with him,
they also wanted to work on the Poirot
series. It was his vision, and his ability to set
the tone for what we were doing, that
provided one of the cornerstones of the
success of Agatha Christie’s Poirot. I do not
believe anyone else could have ensured the
production quality that Brian did, especially
when it came to the cast, locations and
props – not least the vintage aeroplanes and
cars – or matched his eye for an interesting
background to add a little glamour to the
story.
Set largely in France, which demanded a
French crew alongside our English one,
Death in the Clouds focuses on the death of
Madame Giselle, a mysterious French
moneylender, who is discovered dead during
the plane’s journey from Paris to London. Not
surprisingly, it also features Poirot’s fear of
flying, which means that he is asleep,
possibly from taking a sleeping draught,
when the murder takes place. There is even
a little Dame Agatha joke, as the plane’s
passengers include a ‘mystery writer’ called
Daniel Clancy, who becomes one of the
suspects, as well as being Inspector Japp’s
favourite author.
Filmed against the backdrop of the French
Open tennis championship for men in Paris in
1935, which was won by the British amateur
Fred Perry, the story makes a great deal of
the appetite for gambling among the plane’s
occupants, particularly Lady Cicely Horbury,
who is seen repeatedly losing in the casino,
but it is the mystery of who killed Madame
Giselle on the plane that brings the story its
distinctive charm. How was she murdered,
and by whom? It is one of Dame Agatha’s
most intricate plots. I like working on the
longer films like this one because it gives me
an opportunity to develop the character, but
even more than that, I thought it was
wonderful that a series like ours was now
capable of going to Paris, even if only for a
few days. I kept pinching myself to make
sure it was true. This was also the first time
that I ever visited the French sculptor
Auguste Rodin’s house in the Rue de
Varenne, which helped me to understand the
art of sculpture more completely. Ever since,
I have always gone to Rodin’s house
whenever I am in Paris.
The last film in the fourth series was One,
Two, Buckle My Shoe , which was, in some
ways, the strongest of the three. It was the
first of Dame Agatha’s stories to use a
nursery rhyme as its inspiration – an idea
she was to return to time after time in the
following thirty-five years. Written just after
the outbreak of the Second World War in
1939, it reveals a changing world, where
nothing is now quite as cosy and stable as it
had been before the war intervened. There
is revolution in the air, with references in the
book itself both to the ‘Reds’ of the Soviet
Union and ‘our Blackshirted friends’ of
Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists.
Both appear in Clive Exton’s script for the
film, which was directed by Ross Devenish,
who had made such an excellent job of The
Mysterious Affair at Styles two years before.
Once again the story displays one of
Poirot’s pet hates, this time of going to the
dentist, as well as his suspicion of dentistry
as a profession. It opens with a dentist’s
death in his Harley Street surgery, only a
matter of minutes after Poirot has left the
chair. At first, the death looks like suicide,
but it quickly transpires that international
politics could be involved as Poirot and Chief
Inspector Japp begin to investigate. A
second death follows shortly afterwards, and
not long after that, the character of Frank
Carter, who seems to support the Fascist
movement, appears.
Carter was played by a new young actor
called Christopher Eccleston, then just
twenty-seven, who had made his reputation
in the profession a few months earlier in the
Peter Medak film Let Him Have It, about the
1953 hanging for murder of the illiterate
teenager
Derek
Bentley,
played
by
Eccleston. Formidably talented, Chris only
had a small part in One, Two , but he was so
good I could never forget him. I knew at
once that here was a future star. So it
proved, for he went on to confirm his
reputation on television in Cracker and
Doctor Who, in films with Shallow Grave and
28 Days Later, and at the Donmar
Warehouse and the National Theatre. It
gives me great pleasure to think that Poirot
was there at the beginning.
A shoe buckle certainly plays its part in
Dame Agatha’s story, which also serves to
remind the audience just how excellent a
detective Poirot can be, as well as being
someone who is exceptionally considerate
towards everyone he meets, be they the
English aristocracy or their servants. That
allowed Clive Exton to provide Japp with a
little joke at Poirot’s expense when he says,
‘You always did move in exalted circles,
Poirot.’ Poirot brushes the remark off, even
though he knows that it is true. Clive also
allowed Poirot to confirm his principles as a
detective, when he explains, ‘I am
methodical, orderly and logical,’ before
adding forcefully, ‘and I do not like to distort