Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
we started shooting. Now there were far
more shots using hand-held cameras, more
elaborate exteriors, even grander props; we
were certainly in the world of cinema now –
even if the film was being made for
television.
That was also reflected in the casting.
Michelle and Damien had decided to fill each
new story with well-known actors that the
audience would recognise and identify with,
to underline their determination to make it a
television ‘event’. This meant that, on Five
Little Pigs, I found myself surrounded by
Gemma Jones, famous at the BBC for playing
The Duchess of Duke Street; Dame Diana
Rigg’s daughter, Rachael Stirling; Dame
Maggie Smith’s son, Toby Stephens; the
talented Sophie Winkleman; and the hard-
working and much-admired Patrick Malahide,
even if only for a comparatively brief
appearance as a barrister. There was no
Hugh Fraser as Hastings, no Philip Jackson
as Japp, nor Pauline Moran as Miss Lemon,
as their characters did not appear in Dame
Agatha’s original. The soap-opera element of
the Poirot family was definitely over.
Written in 1942 and published the
following year, shortly before her daughter
Rosalind gave birth to Dame Agatha’s first
grandchild, Mathew, Five Little Pigs was
retitled Murder in Retrospect in the United
States, and was the first of the Poirot stories
in which he is called upon to investigate a
cold case – the murder of a famous, and not
always likeable, English painter named
Amyas Crane, years earlier. Amyas was
killed with Poison, and sixteen years after his
wife Caroline was hanged for the murder, his
daughter Lucy asks Poirot to reconsider the
case and clear her mother’s name. The
British title refers to a well-known children’s
nursery rhyme which begins, ‘This little piggy
went to market, this little piggy stayed at
home . . .’ a passion for which Dame Agatha
attributes to Poirot rather than herself,
although he makes no reference to it
whatever during the mystery.
Brilliantly told in a series of flashbacks,
Five Little Pigs allows Poirot to visit the five
principal suspects in the murder and to
interview each of them in his own distinctive
style. As Kevin Elyot has him say in the
screenplay, ‘My success is founded in
psychology – the why of human behaviour,’
and he demonstrates this superbly in one of
Dame Agatha’s finest and most complex
mysteries. As Poirot confesses, ‘Human
nature has an infinite capacity to surprise.’
The strength of the cast forced me to raise
my game as an actor even further, for not
only was I working with some of the finest
members of my profession, but the budgets
had been raised once again. ITV were
reported to be spending more than £2
million on each of the new films. But beyond
that, my responsibility as the leading actor
had expanded even further, as I had also
been given a new role as the unpaid
associate producer of the new films, which
meant that I had more influence.
This was one of the defining moments in
the history of Poirot and me, because now I
was entrusted with the role of protector and
guardian of my character – and was no
longer simply an actor for hire playing a part.
In fact, I was the only person among the
cast and crew of the new series – apart from
Sean, my driver – who had been in the team
that had gathered at Twickenham in the
summer of 1988.
This really was a whole new world,
because suddenly I was involved in almost
every decision that was taken about the
films. Just to prove it, I was invited to a
make-up meeting about my moustache. The
new production team wanted to make
Poirot’s moustaches look more real – and if
you look at my moustache in Five Little Pigs,
you will see that it was quite different from
the ones from only four years before. It is
thinner, a little wider and it does not curl up
towards my nostrils as it had in the past,
instead it points straight out.
I was also given a whole new set of
padding, which I called my ‘armadillo suit’,
because it had layers that folded up beneath
one another, which allowed me – for the first
time – to wear shirt sleeves rather than a
jacket all the time, and, more important,
allowed me to walk with my head carried a
little more forward, just like the blackbird
that Dame Agatha had once briefly described
in her depiction of Poirot’s posture.
Now, with the added responsibility of
being the associate producer of the series, I
really felt as though Poirot and I were joined
at the hip. I was even allowed to change
Poirot’s words, if I believed that he would
have said something different. I was invited
to ‘tone meetings’ before we started filming
and to view see the early edited versions of
all the films and offer my opinions on the
way they looked to the audience. In fact, I
had a creative say in almost everything we
did. Even though I had no direct influence on
the choice of director and cast, the team
would listen to me if I had a particular idea.
I was no longer simply playing Poirot. That
rapidly became clear on the set itself when
we were filming, as more and more
members of the crew would seek out my
advice. It brought me a voice and influence
that I had never had before, and I relished it,
because it provoked me into committing
myself more and more in front of the
camera, particularly as I was now working
with such fine actors. I was thrilled, for
example, by the way that Toby Stephens
played the scene of his breakdown towards
the end of Five Little Pigs.
These changes were confirmed in the
second two-hour film we did as part of this
ninth series, Sad Cypress. Once again, we
had a terrific cast, led by the Liverpool-born
Paul McGann, part of an acting dynasty and
famous for his roles in the cult film Withnail
and I and the BBC’s controversial series The
Monocled Mutineer. There was also Diana
Quick, the first female president of the
Oxford Union Dramatic Society and famous
for her role as Lady Julia Flyte in the 1980s
television version of Brideshead Revisited,
and Rupert Penry-Jones, who went on to
make his reputation in the BBC spy series
Spooks almost immediately after he finished
filming with us.
Originally published in 1940, Sad Cypress
took its title from Shakespeare’s Twelfth
Night: ‘Come away, come away, death, and
in sad cypress let me be laid . . .’ Indeed,
much of its focus is on the indignities of old
age, but it also contains one of the few
courtroom dramas in a Poirot story – one
which rotates around a miscarriage of justice
which Poirot tries to avert. Directed by David
Moore and with a script by David Pirie, both
of whom were new to Poirot, it was darker
and more brooding than many of our other
Poirot films, and was distinguished by
another brilliant performance, this time by
Elisabeth Dermot Walsh as Elinor Carlisle,
the woman accused, and convicted, of
murder.
Dame Agatha had reservations about the
story, saying, in 1965, that it ‘could have
been good, but it was quite ruined by having
Poirot in it. I always thought something was
wrong with it, but didn’t discover what until I
read it again sometime after.’ Fortunately,
many people disagreed with her, and I felt
our version of the story – though a touch
gloomy at times – worked extremely well.
We filmed many of the exteriors at a Sue
Ryder hospice in Surrey, which was filled
with elderly ladies and gentlemen, most of
whom turned out to be fans of Poirot, which
meant that I was invited to visit them on the
wards dressed in my costume. It was the
first time I remember realising how much
pleasure people got from meeting him.
I was very aware, as I went round, that
most of the ladies and gentlemen living
there related to me only through Poirot, so I
made sure to remain in character, answering
their questions as Poirot would, and keeping
his walk and all his mannerisms. I was also
aware that most of the residents would not
be going home again, and I could not help
but be reminded, as I went from bed to bed,
of my own dear father’s final days in a home,
when he did not always remember exactly
who I was when I went to visit him.
Meeting the hospice residents in full
costume was a great deal easier for me then
being recognised as Poirot when we were
not filming – although that had its
extraordinary moments. There was one
particular moment that happened around
this time which I will never forgot.
I was coming into London on the Tube
from our house in Pinner one morning for a
meeting, quietly reading and minding my
own business as the Tube wound its way
through Metroland and into town, when all of
a sudden – quite out of the blue – someone
in the carriage yelled at the top of their
voice, ‘It’s Poirot!’
I looked up to discover that the shout had
come from a nun, dressed in full habit, who
was now running down the carriage towards
me. She proceeded to sit down directly
opposite me, squeezing herself between two
other unsuspecting passengers, and then
reached out, grabbed my hand and shook it
vigorously, saying how pleased she was to
meet me. I smiled as best I could, and
nodded politely.
Things did not end there, however. The
nun explained to me that she had just ‘come
out of silence’ and could not wait to express
her joy at seeing me. She then went on to
tell the entire carriage, pretty much at the
top of her voice, that she and the other nuns
at her convent liked to watch Poirot after
dark on Sunday evenings, even though the
rules of the convent did not really allow
them to do so.
‘It is one of our forbidden secrets,’ she
chortled, with a broad smile on her face. ‘It
is quite wonderful.’
By now I was as red in the face as a
beetroot, and wanted nothing more than for
the carriage floor to open up and deposit me
on the track beneath – anything to escape –
not least because I began to feel rather as
though I had become a star in a blue movie
which showed every Sunday evening at the
convent.
I managed to wish the nun a cheery
goodbye as I stepped off the train at Baker
Street and disappeared into the crowd, with
my cap pulled firmly down over my eyes.
But, looking back, it serves to remind me
just how lucky I am to have so many
different kinds of fans around the world, all
of whom seemed thrilled by Poirot. I learnt
recently that the series was almost the only
English-language
programme
that
was
allowed on East German television before
the fall of the Berlin Wall – all the others
were censored. What is it that makes him so
loved? It is a question that came to absorb
me more and more.
Back on the set, things were rather
calmer. The third film in the new series, The
Hollow, was written at the end of the Second
World War and published in 1946, becoming
one of Dame Agatha’s great successes,
selling more than 40,000 copies in hardback
in its first year, even in those times of
austerity. She herself called it ‘rather more of
a novel than a detective story’, and there is
no doubt that she peopled her book with
some of her most engaging characters – not
least Sir Henry and Lady Angkatell, whose
country house is called The Hollow.
In fact, Dame Agatha partly took the title
from Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem ‘Maud’,