Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
country mansion in England. He has
summoned his dysfunctional family to a
reunion, while at the same time inviting
Poirot to join them because he believes his
life is in danger.
Lee’s family are at each other’s throats,
and there is the scent of blood – even
murder – in the air, which is not always the
case in the build-up to Dame Agatha’s
mysteries. On Christmas Eve, Lee is found
with his throat cut in the locked study of his
house and Poirot begins an investigation in
earnest, although he decides to do so with
the help of Chief Inspector Japp, who is
spending his Christmas not far away, across
the border in Wales, with his wife’s Welsh
family. That is another of the elements that
sets this story apart from some others of
Dame Agatha’s. Not only is there more blood
– a brutal killing with a knife, rather than her
more familiar poison – but Japp, rather than
Hastings, plays Poirot’s assistant, away from
his formal job at Scotland Yard. Indeed,
Hastings plays no part whatever in the story,
which is not in the slightest bit ‘Christmassy’.
Philip Jackson enjoyed himself hugely
making the film, not least because Clive
Exton had given him the opportunity to flesh
out Japp’s character, providing him with a
set of hearty Welsh relations, who insist on
celebrating Christmas by singing endlessly
around the piano in the parlour, revealing
Japp’s sense of melancholy humour which is
not always visible in the other stories.
Another joy for me was to appear
alongside John Horsley, one of the great
stalwarts among English character actors,
who played Simeon Lee’s faithful but elderly
butler, Edward Tressilian, who plays a crucial
role in unravelling the mystery. The
denouement, which takes place on Christmas
Day, slightly foreshadows her famous stage
play, The Mousetrap, which began its life as
a short story and radio play called Three
Blind Mice in 1947, in that the least likely
suspect is revealed to be the murderer.
The second film in the new series was one
of Dame Agatha’s better-known stories, and
another with a nursery rhyme in its title,
Hickory, Dickory, Dock , which had first
appeared in England in 1955. The story
opens with the usually faultless Miss Lemon
making not one but three mistakes in a
single letter she is typing for Poirot in
Whitehaven
Mansions,
much
to
his
annoyance and amazement. It transpires
that the good Miss Lemon’s sister, Mrs
Hubbard, who manages a hostel for London
University students in Hickory Road, has
been suffering a string of inexplicable petty
thefts. Out of loyalty to the invaluable Miss
Lemon, Poirot offers to help, only for the
thefts rapidly to turn into not one but three
murders.
When the novel itself was first published,
it was not greeted with the universal acclaim
that Dame Agatha usually garnered. Frances
Iles, reviewing it for the Sunday Times in
London, suggested, ‘It reads like a tired
effort. The usual sparkle is missing,’ while
the novelist Evelyn Waugh, one of Dame
Agatha’s greatest fans, recorded in his diary
that one of ‘the joys and sorrows of a simple
life’ was a new Agatha Christie story. This
one, however, he recorded sadly, began well
enough, which was a joy, only for sorrow to
take its place as the novel ‘deteriorated’ one
third of the way through into what he
described – rather unfairly – as ‘twaddle’.
Our film version was certainly not twaddle.
The director, Andrew Grieve, who had
worked with me so often in the series
before, made a wonderful job of it, adding
the visual theme of a mouse running beside
a clock – a reference to the nursery rhyme
itself – and recruiting a stunningly good cast
that included the then twenty-three-year-old
Damian Lewis, almost straight from the
Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and
long before his successes in Band of
Brothers, Life and Homeland on international
television. As so often, I was aware that
here was a young actor who was going to
have an extraordinary career. It was not just
his performance – in a relatively small part –
but the fact that the camera loved him. I
could see that myself, and so could Poirot,
who was never wrong. We could both always
spot real talent when we saw it.
Andrew not only recruited a terrific cast,
he was also fortunate enough to benefit from
Brian Eastman and London Weekend’s
determination to provide our four new films
with the best possible props and locations –
which in this case included the regular use of
a vintage London Underground train.
On top of that, Anthony Horowitz, who
wrote the screenplay, decided to set Poirot’s
investigation against the background of the
October 1936 march from Jarrow, six miles
from Newcastle-upon-Tyne in the north-east
of England, to London by 207 unemployed
men and women to protest against
unemployment in Britain and the extreme
poverty that had seen their communities all
but destroyed by the country’s economic
depression. The march meant that no
policeman could take any kind of holiday,
which leaves the redoubtable Chief Inspector
Japp marooned in his office, only too eager
to help Poirot.
I think our film revealed just how good
Dame Agatha’s original story really was and
redeemed it from some of its original
negative reviews. The adaptation was
excellent and the locations stunning. The
one strange thing was that I never actually
saw our mouse on the set – all the scenes
with it were shot by Andrew Grieve after my
performance was over, which meant that the
first time I saw it was in the final version. I
thought it was beautifully done, and added
something special to the story.
But I also felt the film demonstrated the
confidence that we all now felt in the
character of Poirot on the screen, which had
been growing steadily since the series had
begun five years earlier. By now, he no
longer had to prove that he was interesting
to the audience by displaying his foibles. He
could just be himself, idiosyncratic, polite
and a fully realised person that everyone –
both behind and in front of the camera –
could understand, and perhaps even love.
The third film was Murder on the Links,
which is set principally in Deauville in France,
where Poirot is being taken on holiday by
Hastings – the first story in the new series to
feature Poirot’s old friend. It too had a script
by Anthony Horowitz and was directed by
Andrew Grieve, but – just as important to me
– it was also a story that gave me an
opportunity to explore Poirot’s inherent
loneliness.
Significantly, this was Dame Agatha’s
second Poirot story, published in 1923, just
three years after he was introduced in The
Mysterious Affair at Styles, and, as she
explained in her autobiography, in 1977, was
influenced by Gaston Leroux’s classic French
detective story, The Mystery of the Yellow
Room, which had appeared not long before
she had started writing.
Just as importantly, it was also the novel
that proved to her that she was ‘stuck with
Poirot’ and how wrong she had been to
create his character ‘so old’ at the very
beginning. As she put it herself, ‘I ought to
have abandoned him after the first three or
four books, and begun again with someone
much younger.’ I can only say that I am
delighted that she never did.
Dame Agatha did, however, provide
Hastings with a love interest in Murder on
the Links – in fact, she was even thinking of
marrying him off, as she was ‘getting a little
tired of him’, as she put it. She also created
what she called a ‘human foxhound’ for the
story in the shape of Inspector Giraud of the
French police, who regarded Poirot as ‘old
and passé’, to use her own words. In the
end, Poirot and Giraud face up to each other
with a wager that means that the Frenchman
will present Poirot with his beloved pipe if
the Belgian solves the mystery before he
does, while if the Frenchman succeeds in
solving the case first, Poirot will be obliged
to cut off his moustache.
I loved being in France, and Brian Eastman
kindly brought Sheila and the children over
to stay with me during the half-term holiday
for a few days. We seldom spent much time
filming out of the country because of the
cost.
The film itself was not quite the success I
had hoped, however, as I seemed to be
struggling to keep Poirot human against the
rather more caricatured portrait of Inspector
Giraud. But it did give Poirot the opportunity
to reveal his affection for his old friend, when
he reunites Hastings and his love interest at
the end of the story, while Poirot himself
returns to England alone, and obviously
rather lonely.
For me, the final two-hour film in this
series was the most delightful. Dumb
Witness, which was first published in 1937, is
one of the best-loved of all Dame Agatha’s
stories, not least because it contains a wire-
haired terrier called Bob, who is the dumb
witness of the title. In fact, the original novel
was dedicated to her own wire-haired terrier
– ‘To dear Peter,’ it read, ‘most faithful of
friends and dearest of companions: A dog in
a thousand.’
I felt exactly the same way about the
terrier in our film. He captivated me from the
moment I set eyes on him. The little dog,
whose real name was actually Snubby,
became my dear friend, and even managed
to capture Poirot’s heart, no easy task, as my
little Belgian did not care for dogs, regarding
them
as
rather
smelly
and
dirty.
Nevertheless, Bob allowed Poirot to show
some
affection
for
animals,
without
compromising his natural suspicions about
dogs.
Directed by Edward Bennett, from a script
by Douglas Watkinson, the film was set in
the Lake District, which was another reason I
found it so wonderful to do. The scenery was
spectacular and the cast were excellent,
especially the unforgettable Muriel Pavlow as
one of two spiritualist sisters, an actress I
had spent my childhood admiring in the
cinema. The special effects were equally
impressive, especially when showing, in a
kind of haze, the death of Emily Arundell, the
lady who has invited Poirot to investigate in
the first place. And, of course, there was
Bob, complete with his trick of sending a
tennis ball bouncing down the stairs and
running down past it to catch it in his mouth
at the bottom.
The shoot was a joy from beginning to end
– fresh air and wonderful locations,
especially the cottage on Lake Windermere,
which was so dear to me because of my own
love of water and narrow boats. I simply
could not have asked for anything nicer. I
love the Lake District, and have done since I
went on a hiking holiday with Sheila and the
children, before Poirot. I can vividly
remember carrying Robert around as a small
boy and loving every minute of it. I think all
this helped my performance, as I felt more
relaxed and more at home than I had
sometimes done in the past couple of series.
Certainly, my now ever-expanding fan club
wrote to tell me how much they enjoyed it,
and, so they also told me, the sales of wire-
haired terriers shot up exponentially after it
was shown for the first time in March 1996.
I was lucky that I had enjoyed Dumb
Witness so much, however, for no sooner
were the four new films finished in the late