Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
the splendid stately home Luton Hoo, in
Bedfordshire.
Then, in an extraordinary coincidence – or
was it? – the first of the four 75-minute
episodes was broadcast on 11 November
2001, the tenth anniversary of Robert
Maxwell’s death.
The critics certainly seemed to like it.
Peter Paterson, in the Daily Mail, captured
that exactly when he said, ‘The Way We Live
Now looks as though it will be a big success,
not only because it is well-acted and lavishly
produced. For both the title and the subject
matter parallel our own well-remembered
Eighties.’ In a separate feature, the same
paper called the drama ‘an oasis in the
desert of today’s television’. The Times
added that it was ‘pacy and funny and
beautifully acted and we should enjoy it
while it is there’, while the Guardian
concluded, ‘This is one of the winter’s first
must-see dramas,’ and called it ‘a delicious
dollop of Trollope’.
With the American television station
WGBH in Boston involved in the production,
it was inevitable that The Way We Live Now
would quickly appear in the United States,
and it did so on 22 April 2002, to equally
good reviews. The Boston Globe called it ‘a
classic that feels current’, while the San
Francisco
Chronicle
described
it
as
‘melodrama with uncommon intelligence and
depth’, and the Los Angeles Daily News
added that it was ‘witty, filled with intrigue
and richly detailed . . . a scabrous
commentary on the way it seems we will
always live’.
By the time those reviews appeared,
however, I had already finished another role
for the BBC – a drama-documentary about
the British barrister George Carman, a man
arguably just as conflicted as Melmotte, with
a history of alcoholism, domestic violence
and gambling, as well as a glittering career
in the law. Get Carman was broadcast in
April 2002 and featured extended interviews
with Carman’s son, Dominic, who had
recently written a book about his complex
father.
What was most fascinating for me,
however, was that it reconstructed some of
the barrister’s greatest courtroom moments,
including his defence of the Liberal politician
Jeremy Thorpe against a charge of
conspiracy to murder, and his defence of the
comedian Ken Dodd for tax fraud, which
included Carman’s wonderful phrase in court,
‘Some accountants are comedians, but
comedians are never accountants.’
Once again, I was lucky enough to have
the advice of some of his family, including
his third wife, Frances, who kindly wrote to
me afterwards to tell me how odd it had
been for her, having known him so well, to
see him so well characterised.
Even without Poirot, I was suddenly in
demand everywhere. No sooner was the
Carman documentary broadcast, than I was
on my way to play another real figure, this
time the Iraqi Information Minister in 1991,
in a film for the Home Box Office cable
network in the United States, about the
effect news can have on the prospect of war,
called Live from Baghdad. This made-for-
television film was shot just a few months
before the American and British invasion of
Iraq in March 2003, and could hardly have
been more controversial. Directed by an
Englishman living in Los Angeles, Mick
Jackson, the film examined the complexities
of 24-hour broadcast news in the days
leading up to the first Gulf War, and asked
whether news could ever help to avert a
conflict.
I
was
appearing
alongside
three
established film stars, Michael Keaton, who
played the senior CNN producer in Iraq at
the time, Robert Wiener, and Helena
Bonham Carter, as another producer he
meets on his arrival, while I was playing Naji
al-Hadithi, a man who was by turns cynical
and sinister, sharp-witted and seductive. I
enjoyed it enormously. It became one of my
happiest experiences filming in America,
made even more memorable by the fact that
during the filming, I was awarded the OBE
by the Queen in her Birthday Honours list. I
had not told anyone on the set about this,
but on the morning of the announcement, I
found my canvas chair on the set had the
words ‘David Suchet OBE’ painted on the
back. It was very sweet of them.
The next film I made was also in the
United States, in the autumn of 2002, and it
was my second alongside Michael Douglas, a
comedy called The In-Laws. The film offered
me a chance to get away from playing
villains – well, almost. I played an
emotionally insecure arms dealer who tries
to sell Michael Douglas – who is an
undercover CIA agent – all sorts of weapons,
including a Russian submarine. I seemed to
spend a lot of time wearing white trousers
with
matching
sweaters
and
looking
decidedly camp, not something I suspect
Poirot would have approved of entirely.
Shortly after I returned to England, I was
invited to Buckingham Palace for the
investiture of my OBE by the Queen, which
reminded me so much of the mango incident
and how I had learned later that Poirot had
always been one of her mother’s favourite
television programmes. Nine years later, I
was lucky enough to be awarded a CBE,
which was given to me by the Prince of
Wales. By then, it had been two years since I
had last played the little Belgian, and I was
honestly beginning to wonder whether he
would ever see the light of day again when a
bombshell struck. I was on holiday back in
England with Sheila, on our new narrow
boat, when I got a call from Brian Eastman
to tell me that something was going on
about Poirot.
Brian was reticent on the phone. ‘I’m not
sure what’s happening,’ he told me. I asked
if there was anything I could do, and he said
no, but that he would keep in touch.
Not long afterwards, he called me again
and told me that the powers that be at
Chorion, who represented the Agatha
Christie estate and had been partners with
the Arts & Entertainment network for the last
four films, wanted to make some dramatic
changes to the Poirot format, changes that
he feared would not involve him, in spite of
all he had done to create and foster the
show’s success. I promised that I would do
everything I could to help, but I knew in my
heart that I was an actor for hire and had no
real control over the direction of the series.
I was at a crossroads. I owed Brian an
enormous amount for giving me the
opportunity to play Poirot, and for supporting
me when I insisted that I alone really
understood all his foibles and idiosyncrasies.
It was Agatha Christie’s family, and in
particular her daughter Rosalind, who had
first thought of me to play the role and
suggested it to Brian, who had then helped
to make the series a triumph in so many
countries around the world, but now I had to
decide whether I wanted to go on without
him at my side. It was a tremendously
difficult decision, because there was also a
part of me that could not bear the thought of
never playing Poirot again, never fulfilling my
dream of playing him in every single story
that Dame Agatha wrote for him.
After a series of meetings, it transpired
that Granada Television, part of ITV, wanted
to go ahead with four new Poirot films, but
they also wanted a far greater input into
how they looked and felt than London
Weekend had done in the past, when Brian
had been the producer. Significantly, they
were also prepared to spend many millions
of pounds to make them.
There were to be two new executive
producers on behalf of Granada and ITV,
Michelle Buck and Damien Timmer, who had
distinct ideas about how Poirot should
evolve. In particular, they wanted each new
Poirot to be a two-hour television special,
with all the production qualities and cast of a
feature film.
They did not want the almost ‘family’ feel
of the original one-hour versions, with
Hastings and Miss Lemon fussing over Poirot
at Whitehaven Mansions. In fact, they did
not want to force either character artificially
into any of Dame Agatha’s stories in future
(as we had sometimes done in the past).
Instead, they wanted to be as faithful as
they could to the originals. Out would go the
opening titles of the train and Christopher
Gunning’s music. Instead, each film would be
a standalone drama, titled Agatha Christie:
Poirot, and would claim its place in the
television schedules on its own merit, rather
than as part of a series. To put it simply, the
new team, led by Michelle and Damien,
wanted to make each of their Poirot films a
special event on ITV.
Exactly why Brian was not to be involved
is a mystery that I have never been able to
solve; all I know is that Michelle and Damien
invited me to tea at the Ritz Hotel in London
to explain their plans. They were incredibly
welcoming and extremely enthusiastic,
telling me that they wanted to give Poirot a
new atmosphere, as they sensed the series
had become a bit formulaic, but that their
brief from the estate was also to remain true
to Dame Agatha’s original stories and
character. I was charmed, and excited, but
there was still the issue of Brian at the back
of my mind.
What should I do? Could I go on without
him?
In the end, Sheila asked me the most
sensible question of all, ‘Do you want to go
on playing Poirot?’
The answer, of course, was yes.
‘Well then, I think you have to do it,’ she
said gently. ‘Brian will understand.’
And he did. When I telephoned him to say
that I was going ahead with the new series
and the new team, he was incredibly
understanding.
‘Of course you want to continue,’ he told
me. ‘It has nothing to do with our friendship.
You must do it.’
It was incredibly generous of him, but I
was very upset to lose him, because we had
spent fourteen years together, some of the
most dramatic years of my professional life.
But there were still four new films to be
made. What I did not know at the time was
that they would turn out to be the turning
point in the relationship between Poirot and
me.
In the years that have passed since then,
Brian has always been very friendly
whenever we have met. He and his wife,
Christabel, come and see me whenever I am
in a West End play, and even took me out to
dinner when I was filming in Los Angeles. I
am still enormously grateful to him for giving
me the chance to play Poirot.
ITV officially announced the new films in
November 2002, focusing on their decision to
make a new version of Dame Agatha’s
famous Poirot mystery Death on the Nile,
while at the same revealing that they had
also taken over her Miss Marple series from
the BBC.
We started work on the first of the new
Poirots early in 2003, as ITV had decided
that they would like to broadcast two of
them at Christmas that year. The first of the
films was to be Five Little Pigs, directed by
Paul Unwin, who had directed me in NCS:
Manhunt for the BBC. The screenplay was by
a newcomer to Poirot, Kevin Elyot, who
would go on to write the last Poirot film
Curtain.
Five Little Pigs was a very different Poirot
from those early days at Twickenham. The
new film had a distinctly feature-film feel to
it, and that was clear from the moment that