Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
after the filming had finished, and before it
was broadcast, to play the lead detective in
a remake of Frederick Knott’s famous stage
play Dial M for Murder, which had been so
memorably filmed by Alfred Hitchcock in
1954, starring Grace Kelly and Ray Milland.
This time, the stars were to be Michael
Douglas and Gwyneth Paltrow, while I was
to play the part originally made famous by
the great British character actor John
Williams. In the original play and film, the
plot took place in London, but this time the
husband’s scheme to commit the perfect
crime by killing his wife was to take place in
New York. The producers had also decided it
should be called A Perfect Murder.
The
experience
of
making Executive
Decision in 1995 and now A Perfect Murder
convinced me that making movies in
Hollywood is not quite like anything else.
The new movie’s producers invited me to
New York, where we had breakfast together.
Without any warning, they announced,
almost in unison, ‘We’re so pleased that you
can speak Arabic.’
I was a little puzzled. ‘What makes you
think that?’ I said, as I sipped my orange
juice.
‘Well, you spoke it so brilliantly in
Executive Decision.’
When I told them that I was terribly sorry
but I did not, in fact, speak any Arabic at all,
they paused for a moment.
‘You don’t? Gee. Well, at least you look
Arabic.’ I was left pretty much speechless.
The Hollywood reality is that it is the stars
that sell the tickets. There famous adage
‘Put the money on the screen’ means that if
the audience pays to see Michael Douglas,
then they want to see as much of him in the
film as they possibly can, from the very
opening scene until the end, because that
way, they are getting what they paid for.
It is the perfect reflection of that other old
Hollywood adage, ‘The thing about show
business is that the second word is business.’
Stars bring in an audience, and so they are
the vital ingredient for moviegoers, wherever
they may be in the world. They keep the film
business flowing. For a British character
actor brought up in the democratic traditions
of the Royal Shakespeare Company, that can
be a hard lesson to learn, but it is an
important one.
Making A Perfect Murder proved it to me.
Even though my part as the lead detective
was vital to the plot – and I shot any number
of scenes to prove it – when the final version
of the film emerged, I seemed to have
disappeared onto the cutting-room floor. But
then came an unexpected consolation. When
the studio tested a first cut of the film at
previews in the United States, they
discovered that the audiences there wanted
to see rather more of my character. So, four
months after shooting was finished, they
flew Gwyneth Paltrow and an entire set over
from the States, erected it at Pinewood in
England, and filmed the final scene in the
film as it was eventually released.
After that, it was with some relief that I
went back to work in the theatre, to play the
family patriarch and gentleman’s outfitter
Don Peppino Priore in the Italian Eduardo de
Filippo’s splendid comedy Saturday, Sunday,
Monday at the Chichester Festival Theatre in
Sussex, for a six-week season. My wife was
to be played by the Irish actress Dearbhla
Molloy. Entirely set in my character’s house
in Naples, and one of the great plays of the
Italian theatre in the twentieth century, it
was a joy after the darkness of both Oleanna
and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? It put a
positive spring in my step throughout the
spring and early summer of 1998.
But then, over the horizon, came the
faintest sight of the little Belgian who had
not been a part of my life for the past three
years. Rumours started flying about that
London Weekend and ITV were thinking of
reviving Poirot for some two-hour specials, to
be filmed in 1999. In my heart, I had never
buried him, and now he might actually be
coming back.
Chapter 13
‘I HAD FORGOTTEN
HOW HARD HE WAS TO
FIND IN THE FIRST
PLACE’
Before Poirot could make his
reappearance in my life, however, the
theatre intervened once again. The producer
Kim Poster came to me with a proposal that
I appear as the Viennese composer Antonio
Salieri in a new production of Amadeus,
Peter Shaffer’s masterpiece about the life of
Mozart. It tells the story of Salieri’s jealousy
of Mozart’s extraordinary talent when he
arrives at the court of Emperor Joseph II of
Austria in 1781. Salieri tries everything in his
power to thwart the young man’s success,
and does so from a mixture of pride, envy
and greed.
Peter Hall had been the play’s first director
in 1979, when it had its world premiere at
the National Theatre in London, and then
transferred to the West End with Paul
Scofield as Salieri and Simon Callow as
Mozart. After transferring to Broadway, it
was then turned into a film in 1984 by the
Czech director Milos Forman, which not only
won him the Oscar for best film of the year,
but also won F. Murray Abraham the Oscar
for best actor for playing Salieri.
I did not hesitate. I accepted Kim’s offer,
not least because Peter Shaffer felt that
there was a great deal that could be added
to the play now. Before rehearsals began I
went to Peter to ask him how he wanted the
audience to feel about my character Salieri.
He felt that the audience should feel he was
cruel to Mozart but also feel sorry for him
that he could not control his jealousy
towards the young composer, no matter how
hard he tried. In the original version, Salieri
was a delicious part in a superb play about
the beauty of great music and the dark
passions that so often lie behind it, but
during our rehearsals Peter continued to
rewrite and added a sense of humour,
almost of pathos, to Salieri.
The fiercely Welsh young actor Michael
Sheen, then just twenty-nine, who would go
on to make an international reputation on
film and television playing the British Prime
Minister Tony Blair and interviewer Sir David
Frost, was to play Mozart opposite me. The
idea was that we would do a short tour of
the British Isles in September and early
October 1998, before bringing the play to
London. When Amadeus opened at the Old
Vic on Wednesday, 21 October 1998, the
national critics seemed impressed. Michael
Billington, in the Guardian, called it ‘highly
theatrical, superbly directed by Peter Hall’.
But some had their reservations about Peter
Shaffer’s rewrite. Charles Spencer, in the
Daily Telegraph, said, ‘This is a play that
takes a profound subject but has very little
profound to say about it: a second rate
drama, in fact, about what it feels like just to
be second rate,’ although he added that it
was a ‘cracking night out’.
Kim Poster wanted to build on our British
success by taking the play to Broadway
immediately, but by then, Brian Eastman had
come back to me with a firm plan to make
two two-hour Poirot films, and I had
committed to them. Kim kindly agreed that
s he would wait for me to finish the Poirot
filming, and would then take our Amadeus to
Broadway as soon possible afterwards.
After the run ended in London I went to
Spain to play Napoleon in a film, but once
that was over I was free to return to England
and Poirot, and so, almost five years to the
day after the joys of Dumb Witness, in the
early summer of 1999, I walked back onto
the set in my spats and homburg hat, to
appear in a new two-hour television version
of one of Dame Agatha’s most famous Poirot
stories, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.
The production team had changed a little.
The American Arts & Entertainment network
had come in to replace London Weekend as
the major production company putting up
the money and then selling the programmes
to ITV, but Brain Eastman was still there as
the producer, and Clive Exton was still
writing some of the screenplays. Hugh Fraser
and Pauline Moran were not there, because
neither Hastings nor Miss Lemon appeared in
the story, but Philip Jackson was there again
as the indefatigable Inspector Japp.
No matter how pleased I may have been
to return to playing Poirot, I had
nevertheless profoundly underestimated how
much I needed to remind myself about him
after five years away. I had forgotten how
hard he was to find in the first place – his
walk, his mannerisms, how he thinks, and so
on. In the first seven years that I played him,
he had gradually become more and more
like a comfortable glove that I could slip on
and off whenever I wanted to. But now, after
a five-year break, the glove had got a bit
stiff in the cupboard and did not slip on quite
so easily.
To make sure I recaptured him exactly as
he had been, I watched several hours from
the previous forty-five Poirot films we had
made before I set foot on the set of Roger
Ackroyd. I wanted to make absolutely sure
that the audience did not detect any
differences. And as I watched them, I was
reminded
of
his
vain,
pernickety,
idiosyncratic – and sometimes infuriating –
habits, as well as his natural charm and
kindness, particularly to servants and those
less capable of defending themselves.
The experience sharpened the feeling that
had been growing within me for some time,
that I really wanted to complete every single
one of the Poirot stories on film, all the way
until his final story, Curtain, in which he dies.
Wisely, Brian Eastman and Clive Exton had
decided to make the most of Poirot’s
absence from the screen for so long by
starting this first film after five years with
him growing marrows in the garden of his
small cottage in the English village of King’s
Abbott. He had not been at Whitehaven
Mansions for some considerable time, and
was, theoretically at least, in retirement. I
must say, I had one or two reservations
about the pretty silly gardening clothes I had
to wear in my first appearance on the screen
with the marrows. I was sure Poirot would
never have dressed that way, but I kept my
own counsel for once – it was only one
scene, after all.
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd is a
wonderful story, and the one that firmly
established Dame Agatha as a best-selling
crime writer, while at the same time
ensuring that Poirot became one of the
leading fictional detectives of the time. She
wrote it in 1925, at the age of thirty-five,
and it was published in the spring of the
following year to considerable acclaim,
although some readers felt she had ‘not
quite played fair’ with them in her choice of
murderer in the plot. They felt it was a little
underhand, but Dame Agatha herself firmly
disagreed.
Roger Ackroyd became Dame Agatha’s –
and Poirot’s – first major success, selling
more than 5,000 copies in hardcover in
Britain alone in its first year. One reason for
this, I suspect, is that it assembles one of
the most ingenious group of suspects in all
h e r murder-mysteries, and even has the
murderer narrate the story, without giving
his or her identity away. It was an idea said
to have been given to Dame Agatha by Lord
Louis Mountbatten, although she also
credited her brother-in-law, James Watts,
with coming up with the same idea – of a
murderer describing the crime.