Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
in London with exactly the same name, and
where exactly the same group of characters
that had been in Buenos Aires are reunited.
The story includes another of Dame
Agatha’s poisonings, and takes place almost
entirely in the restaurant, which also
features a cabaret with a singer, just as the
original short story did, though she does not
sing the lines written for her by Dame
Agatha.
Thinking about The Yellow Iris now, it
reminds
me
that
her
greatest
fans
sometimes object when we depart from her
original story in the television films – and
they write to tell me so. I always reply by
telling them that I am terribly sorry, but not
all of her stories adapt easily to the small
screen, they are simply too slight, which is
why we describe them as ‘based on’ her
originals. I think her die-hard fans forgive us
for the adaptations, but I do understand how
they feel.
The next two films, The Case of the
Missing Will and The Adventure of the Italian
Nobleman, were both stories that originally
appeared in the Daily Sketch and were later
published in Poirot Investigates, in 1924.
Neither were tremendously strong stories,
and both needed more than a little
adaptation to make the transition to
television.
What was most interesting to me about
these stories was that, at this point in
Poirot’s history, Dame Agatha was carefully
developing his character, not only to allow
her readers to discover his foibles, but also
for them to grasp a sense of his beliefs. This
is true of The Case of the Missing Will in
particular, where one of the characters is a
staunch feminist who believes that women
should have the right to a university
education, something Poirot wholeheartedly
agrees with.
When I first started reading Poirot, I relied
on these early stories to help me to
understand him better, which was lucky for
me, for as time went by and her audience
grew to know him better, she reduced the
amount of time she spent revealing his
idiosyncrasies. By then, her audience had
come to know them only too well.
The sixth film was one of my favourites,
and remains so to this day. The Chocolate
Box, which was originally known as The Clue
of the Chocolate Box, first appeared in the
Daily Sketch in 1923 and was then collected
i n Poirot Investigates. It is a simply
wonderful story about Poirot’s return to
Brussels with Inspector Japp – the Scotland
Yard detective is to receive a grand award –
which reminds Poirot of a case when he was
still an officer in the Belgian detective force.
In the original story, Poirot’s reminiscence is
told in flashback, and the screenwriter,
Douglas Watkinson again, had Philip Jackson
and I travel to Brussels together to launch
the story.
That made it very special for me. It was
wonderful to go to Belgium, because I truly
felt that I was returning to my homeland as
Poirot. By then, I had discovered that he was
born in the town of Spa in the principality of
Liège, sometime between 1854 and 1856,
and the film gave me the opportunity to
unveil his character as a younger man and
reveal something about his past. Just as
exciting was the fact that I was to be
dressed in a police uniform for the flashbacks
in the 1890s, which allowed me to escape
my padding, and even to renounce the walk
I had used for so long playing him as an
older man – remember, he was in his middle
sixties when he was first discovered in The
Mysterious Affair at Styles.
The story also gave me the chance to
show Poirot’s emotional side, for as part of
the film, he loses his heart to a young
woman, Mademoiselle Virginie Mesnard, who
asks him to investigate a case of what may
be murder, but is being called a natural
death by the doctors. Virginie was played by
the lovely Anna Chancellor, then still just
twenty-seven, the year before she leapt to
prominence as Henrietta, or ‘Duckface’, as
she was known, in Richard Curtis’s award-
winning film Four Weddings and a Funeral .
Then still in her bohemian period, Anna was
quite superb in our film, bewitching the
younger Poirot completely, and presenting
him with the tiny silver vase for his lapel that
he wore filled with wild flowers from that day
onwards.
In fact, that never happened in Dame
Agatha’s original story, but was another
example of the screenwriter allowing Poirot
an opportunity to display rather more of
himself to the audience on television than he
did in the original story. Filming it made me
truly happy, for there was Poirot as a
younger man, pursuing the case against the
wishes of his superiors, losing his heart to
Virginie, even running through the streets of
Brussels – not something the older Hercule
Poirot would ever have allowed himself to
do. It was a breath of fresh air, and a joy to
do.
Anna’s was not the only memorable
performance in The Chocolate Box, for the
director, Andrew Grieve, also had the
incomparable Rosalie Crutchley playing an
elderly matriarch. Then in her early
seventies, Rosalie was a legend of both
British films and television, having played
Acte alongside Peter Ustinov’s Nero in the
1951 epic Quo Vadis and Madame Defarge in
the 1958 version of A Tale of Two Cities ,
alongside Dirk Bogarde. She had even
played Henry VIII’s sixth wife, Catherine
Parr, in not one but two television series in
the early 70s.
With her olive complexion and sad, dark
eyes, Rosalie was capable of commanding
the screen while doing almost nothing. As an
actor, you simply could not ignore her
strength, which communicated itself to the
audience almost subliminally. She was
superb in our film, though sadly she was to
die only five years later, at the age of just
seventy-seven. One of the delights of the
filming was that I managed to photograph
both Rosalie and Anna during breaks in the
shooting, as I had begun to return to my old
hobby of photography in what few spare
moments I had.
Sadly, the last two films of our fifth series
were not quite of the same exquisite quality
as The Chocolate Box.
Dead Man’s Mirror was a long short story
that had first appeared in book form in a
collection called Murder in the Mews in 1937,
although it was, in fact, an expanded version
of another of her stories, The Second Gong,
which was first published in the magazines
Ladies’ Home Journal and the Strand in
1932. A locked room mystery – another of
Dame Agatha’s favourite plot devices – it
centres on a rather pompous collector of Art
Deco who outbids Poirot for a mirror at a
London auction and then asks to consult him
because he suspects that he is being
defrauded by his architect. Poirot visits him –
only for the collector to be found dead, in
what looks like suicide, locked in his study.
The striking of the gong which calls the
house guests down to dinner plays a
significant role in the denouement, but it is a
gentle story rather than one to set the blood
racing.
The same could also be said for Jewel
Robbery at the Grand Metropolitan, another
of the short stories from the Daily Sketch to
be collected for Poirot Investigates. The
original title was The Curious Disappearance
of the Opalsen Pearls, which is a rather more
accurate indication of the story, as it focuses
on a theatre producer who purchases some
expensive jewels at auction for his wife, who
is an actress, to wear in his production of a
new play called Pearls Before Swine. Poirot
only gets involved because he has been
forced to take a holiday due to overwork and
finds himself in Brighton, staying at the
Grand Metropolitan Hotel, together with the
producer and his wife, at the time the play
has its premiere. The jewels go missing,
encouraging Poirot to overcome his illness to
recover them.
In the original story, the pearls were
purchased by a rich stockbroker ‘who made a
fortune in the recent oil boom’, but the
screenwriter, Anthony Horowitz, turned him
into a theatrical producer, thereby allowing
the denouement to take place in a theatre, a
place that Dame Agatha used several times
in her stories, although not in this one in its
original version. Filmed in Brighton, it used
another of her favourite devices – how the
pearls could have disappeared from a locked
box when the maid who was guarding them
never let the box out of her sight. Another
slight story, it lacked the energy and force of
The Yellow Iris and The Chocolate Box.
Perhaps it had something to do with the
death of my mother, I cannot be sure, but by
the time we came to the end of the series, I
was not entirely happy with what I had
done. The stories worked, of course,
especially The Chocolate Box, but I had a
sinking feeling. I was not sure they were as
quite as good as I could have made them. I
was satisfied with my performances, but felt
as though perhaps – like Poirot in the last
film – I needed a break.
In this reflective mood, I went back to
Pinner for a rest. I was not sure what to do
next; nor, for that matter, exactly what I
wanted to do. I certainly was not ready to
give up Poirot, but there was something
troubling me. Yet again, there was no
indication from London Weekend about the
future. My agent had given them a deadline
in February 1993, by which they had to tell
me their Poirot plans for the coming year,
but they had not taken out an option for me
to play the role again. That was familiar
enough. The only option that they had ever
taken out was for me to do a second series
after the first. Since then, I had been left in
limbo every year. But this time I was
restless, not completely happy with myself,
and was waiting, waiting, waiting to discover
what would happen to Poirot and me.
With nothing firm on my horizon, I
accepted the role of the flamboyant
Viennese business man Rudi Waltz in English
director Jack Gold’s film The Lucona Affair, a
fictional account of a huge Austrian political
scandal. It was based on the bombing of the
cargo ship Lucona in the Indian Ocean in
1977, which had been chartered by my
character, who then tried to claim £13
million in compensation for the loss from an
insurance company. It set off one of the
great financial and political dramas in
modern Austrian history. In reality, the
Austrian Minister of Defence committed
suicide after it was discovered that he had
allowed the bomb onto the ship, and several
other ex-ministers were imprisoned for
covering up the affair.
My co-star was the Italian Franco Nero,
who had made his reputation in the 1970
version of D. H. Lawrence’s novella The
Virgin and the Gypsy, and had famously
fallen in love with Britain’s Vanessa
Redgrave in the 1960s, in the wake of her
divorce from director Tony Richardson.
Franco’s career had continued apace. In
1990 he had even appeared in the
Hollywood blockbuster Die Hard 2, alongside
Bruce Willis, although most of his work for
the cinema was produced in Europe rather
than in the United States. The Lucona Affair
was a European production, with a large
German and Austrian cast and crew, in spite
of the presence of Jack Gold and me
representing England.
Poirot was still there in the background,
however. I simply could not ignore the little