Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
about it, not a whisper, and I could hardly
believe it. If they were going to cancel after
more than fifty hours of television, forty-five
films, nine of them two hours long, surely
someone from London Weekend or ITV
would have let me know – before anyone
else.
More than a little upset, I rang my agent
and asked her to find out what was going on.
There was no direct answer, just all sorts of
prevarications over the next week or two.
‘A spokesman’ for LWT told the Daily Mail,
‘Talk of the sleuth’s death is premature,’ and
then added, ‘No decision has been made,’
and ‘A new series is being considered but we
are waiting for the go-ahead from scheduling
chiefs.’ The two remaining unscreened films
were left to hang in the air with no fixed
transmission date.
The truth was, of course, that the decision
not to make any more series of Agatha
Christie’s Poirot had been made. Maybe the
drop in viewing figures was one cause;
perhaps the fact that I had decided to do
Oleanna had something to do with it;
perhaps it was that someone at LWT felt
that the series had run its course. I am not
sure, and I have never been told.
To be honest, I never expected any great
‘thank you’ from anyone at ITV, but I did feel
let down – badly. It was not so much the
decision itself, but the way it had been
handled. No one had bothered to talk to me,
and the press had discovered the truth
before I had. It was hurtful.
But I was professional enough to tell
myself, and anyone who asked me about the
decision, that ‘That’s show business . . .
nothing lasts forever.’ I had learnt from bitter
experience over the years that the only thing
you can possibly do as an actor is to close
the door on what you have done in the past,
no matter how proud you are of it, and move
on. For the moment, however, I had to turn
my back on Poirot and get on with the next
part of my life and career – whatever that
might mean. It would be five long years
before I would encounter him again.
I ended up playing an Arab terrorist called
Nagi Hassan in a £40 million Hollywood
action-thriller
called Executive Decision,
alongside Kurt Russell, Steven Seagal and a
gorgeous new young actress called Halle
Berry. To be honest, the first script I saw
was pretty dreadful, but, as always in
Hollywood, it changed all the time, which
meant that my character had at least two
dimensions, even if he was not exactly a
completely formed character by the time I
got to play him on camera. This role meant I
spent the summer of 1995 living in an
extraordinary house just above Sunset
Boulevard in Los Angeles, which belonged to
a rock star, and which I paid for myself.
Sheila and the children remember it because
it had a swimming pool that was sculpted to
look like a rock pool in Shangri-La. None of
us had ever seen anything like it before – in
fact, I am not sure that we ever have since
then. I wondered what Poirot would have
made of it.
The studio limo would arrive every
morning to take me to the studio. It was an
odd experience – there was none of the
family feeling that there had been on our
Poirot shoots. Everyone was very conscious
of their status. Who had the biggest trailer,
who got the special meals delivered, who
was powerful enough to be late on the set –
not like Poirot at all. Executive Decision was
a decent-sized hit around the world, but as I
was almost unrecognisable on the screen, in
very dark make-up and with an Arab accent
that you could cut with a knife (it was what
the studio wanted). I can’t honestly say that
it made a great deal of an impact on my
career.
Back home in Pinner, reality struck. There
were no more Poirots, and that meant I had
to look at all sorts of other opportunities. I
was blessed, however, by my friends in the
theatre. One in particular came to me with
an offer I really could not turn down. Howard
Davies, who had been an associate director
of the Royal Shakespeare Company when I
was there, asked if I would like to play the
part of the henpecked academic George in
Edward Albee’s dramatic masterpiece Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which had been
made into an international hit as a film
directed by Mike Nichols and starring Richard
Burton (as George) and Elizabeth Taylor as
his viciously cruel wife, Martha. Howard had
asked the incomparable Dame Diana Rigg,
star of so many productions, most recently
Medea in London and on Broadway, to play
Martha in this new production for the
Almeida Theatre in Islington, north London.
A brutal commentary on the scarred lives
of a married couple in an American university
who are unable to conceive a child and who
invite an unknowing younger professor and
his wife for dinner, Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf? had premiered on Broadway in
October 1962. At more than three hours in
length, it has gone on to become one of the
seminal works of the American theatre in the
second half of the twentieth century. It won
a Tony Award as best play in 1963, but was
denied a Pulitzer Prize in that same year
because of its use of swearing and overt
sexuality.
I knew it would be a huge challenge to
play George, as there is not a single moment
to relax for an actor during the play’s
mesmerising and cathartic three acts.
George is lacerated repeatedly for his
weakness and stupidity by Martha, but now
and again takes a bitter revenge on her.
Albee’s was not a play to be taken lightly,
but it was a wonderful opportunity to play a
tremendous part in a truly memorable
portrait of marital savagery steeped in
hatred, blood and alcohol. Not only could I
not refuse, I jumped at the chance. The
struggle was to bring this beautifully written
part off the page of Albee’s text and onto the
stage.
Albee did not make that straightforward. A
famously tight-lipped playwright, who never
used more words than he absolutely had to,
he had come over from the United States to
see the rehearsals, and came up to me after
one of the final run-throughs.
‘Why are you playing George that way?’ he
said quietly.
‘What way?’ I asked.
‘The way you’re playing him.’
‘Well, my interpretation is that I really do
believe that you have written a love story
rather than a play about two people hating
each other.’
There was a silence from Albee.
‘People think George is a drunk, but I think
you only give him two drinks in the entire
play. But it is he who pours everyone else
drinks,’ I went on. ‘He is the puppet master,
and he is doing what he does in order to
save his marriage, to save his relationship
with Martha.’
Another silence from Albee, before he
finally murmured, ‘That’s what I wrote,’ and
walked out of the theatre.
I think, and hope, I had found the
poignancy and humour that he had written
into the play, but which had not always
emerged before. Whatever the truth, the
prospect of the first production of the play in
London for more than two decades attracted
an enormous amount of attention, and the
run at the comparatively small Almeida was
sold out before the first night. As a result, it
had been decided to transfer it to the larger
Aldwych
Theatre
in
central
London
immediately after it closed in Islington at the
end of October 1996. Thankfully, the reviews
at the Almeida fully justified the move. They
were incredibly supportive.
In the Daily Telegraph, Charles Spencer
was kind enough to say that I matched
Diana Rigg’s volcanic performance ‘every
inch of the harrowing way’, adding, ‘The
sense of buried pain and humiliation is
palpable.’ The Times Literary Supplement
even added that the production ‘must rank
among the best’.
The wave of enthusiasm for Who’s Afraid
of Virginia Woolf? among theatregoers did
not wane for one moment when we
transferred to the Aldwych on 30 October
1996. With quotations on the advertising
saying, ‘One of the theatrical sensations of
the year’ and ‘Masterpiece’, we were to play
there for almost five months, to incredibly
receptive audiences.
Time magazine even came over from the
United States in February 1997, to say that
we brought out ‘all the lacerating power and
poignancy of Albee’s depiction of the blasted
American dream’. My performance won me
the Critics’ Circle Award for best actor and
saw me nominated for the Evening Standard
Theatre Award for best actor. By the time we
finally closed on 22 March 1997, I was
exhausted.
Several potential film projects fell apart
around me, but that allowed me to spend
the school summer holidays with Sheila,
Robert and Katherine, the first time I had
managed to do that in what seemed like
years, as I had been filming Poirot in the
summer so often. Then I was offered the
leading role in a drama for Scottish
Television, another part of ITV, separate
from London Weekend, though it had been
commissioned by my old Poirot colleague
Nick Elliott. It was a part that could not have
been further away from the little man.
In a three-part drama called Seesaw, that
was to be broadcast in the early spring of
1998, I was to play an affluent and
successful north London husband and father,
Morris Price, in a contemporary drama which
sees
his
seventeen-year-old
daughter
kidnapped. Morris had made his money
selling security equipment, while his wife
Val, to be played by my old friend Geraldine
James, who had appeared with me in Blott
on the Landscape, had been an interior
designer. Written by Deborah Moggach, who
adapted her own original novel, the story
has my character being asked to pay
£500,000 in ransom for the return of his
daughter, Hannah.
It was as close a role to me in reality as I
had played in many years – Morris was about
my age, fifty-two, had a wife and two
children, as I had, and there was to be no
padding, no beard, wig or funny moustache.
It was the first time in many years that I had
appeared on television without wearing
some kind of disguise. It also forced me to
confront my own worst fears. What if it had
happened to my own daughter, Katherine,
who was then just fourteen? I only knew one
thing: that I would give up my life for my
child. Morris decides not to tell the police
and sells his business to pay the ransom.
In fact, I had first been offered the role
while I was playing Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?, but it had taken some time to pull
the production together, and so we did not
actually film it until six months or so after I
had finished in the West End. I was very
flattered because I had heard that when
Geraldine was offered the role of the wife,
she said she would only do it if I played the
husband, which, thank goodness, ITV had
already decided that I should. It was a
delight to work with her again so long after
Blott, where I played her cook, chauffeur and
handyman – although we ended up getting
married. This time, we were married from
the start, which we both found incredibly
easy and straightforward. After all, we had
done it before.
Seesaw played on successive Thursday
evenings in March 1998 and both the
audience and the critics seemed to like it.
But I hardly had a moment to notice, as I
was whisked off to Los Angeles immediately