Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
which talks about ‘the dreadful hollow behind
the little wood’ which lies beneath a field
whose ‘red-ribb’d ledges drip with a silent
horror of blood’. But she was also inspired by
the Surrey home of the formidably double-
chinned, London-born actor Francis L.
Sullivan, who had played Poirot for her in the
1930s, but is probably now best remembered
for playing Mr Bumble in David Lean’s 1948
film of Dickens’ Oliver Twist . Sullivan and his
wife had a house in Haslemere called The
Hollow and Dame Agatha’s book is dedicated
to them, ‘with apologies for using their
swimming pool as the scene of a murder’.
Once again, the new production team
were determined to provide the film with
actors of the highest quality, and so, to play
Sir Henry Angkatell, we were lucky enough
to have my dear friend from Stratford
Edward Hardwicke, son of the famous
English film star Sir Cedric Hardwicke, and
probably best known for playing Doctor
Watson to Jeremy Brett’s Sherlock Holmes
for eight years in ITV’s series about the
famous detective.
Lady Angkatell, the catalyst in Dame
Agatha’s story, who invites the guests to her
house party at The Hollow for the weekend,
was to be played by the legendary film
actress Sarah Miles, who had made her
name in Term of Trial in 1962, alongside
Laurence Olivier, and had then gone on to
appear in David Lean’s Ryan’s Daughter, for
which she was nominated for an Oscar.
Famously unconventional, Sarah does very
little television, but had been tempted to do
a Poirot with me.
The Angkatells’ butler, Gudgeon, was
played by another film star, Edward Fox,
forever remembered by me as the assassin
in Fred Zinnemann’s film The Day of the
Jackal. The appearance of not one but two
iconic movie stars alongside me was almost
overwhelming, and I talked to Edward about
filming Jackal whenever I could.
Meanwhile, Sarah enjoyed herself more
and more as the shooting progressed, and
would arrive on the set in the morning and
say to me – rather embarrassingly – ‘You’re
him. You’re him reborn.’ I was not quite sure
what she meant until I realised that she was
comparing me with Laurence Olivier.
I thought to myself, ‘I should be so lucky.’
I also loved being with my old friend
Edward Hardwicke. We had both been at the
Royal Shakespeare Company, although at
different times, and he had appeared beside
me in my first major television role, in
Oppenheimer. Between takes on the set, we
would tell each other stories about the
wonderful times we had had together all
those years ago. It all helped to make The
Hollow one of the most memorable Poirots
for me.
Sadly, the film itself did not quite live up
to the cast. Even though Nick Dear wrote a
terrific script, it could not quite save it. As
w i t h Sad Cypress, Dame Agatha herself
admitted that the story was not really a case
for Poirot – and it shows. No matter how you
look at it, he seems a little out of place. In
her autobiography, she admitted, ‘The
Hollow was a book I always thought I had
ruined by the introduction of Poirot. I had got
used to having Poirot in my books, and so
naturally he had come into this one, but he
is all wrong there. He did his stuff all right,
but how much better, I kept thinking, would
the book have been without him.’
In fact, when Dame Agatha came to turn
her book into a play in 1951, just six years
after it was first published, ‘out went Poirot’,
as she put it herself, and in came Detective
Inspector Colquhoun from Scotland Yard. She
believed that Poirot would have drawn the
audience’s attention away from the other
characters, whereas a blander policeman
would focus attention on them. It would also
be fair to say that she had not always
enjoyed the various stage Poirots who had
appeared in the first years after she created
the character.
Nevertheless,
I
think
our
two-hour
television version, under Simon Langton’s
direction, worked pretty well, and I believe it
stands up now, looking back. But it certainly
does not bear comparison with the fourth
and final film in our new series, a reworking
of one of Dame Agatha’s classic stories,
Death on the Nile. That was in a rather
different class.
But the honest truth is that all four of
these new films are very dear to me, and I
am exceptionally proud to leave them behind
as a legacy to Dame Agatha. I only wish that
she had been there to see them, because I
think she would have enjoyed them all, and
especially our new version of Death on the
Nile, which we shot mostly on location in
Egypt, from a new script by Kevin Elyot, and
directed by Andy Wilson. She would certainly
have enjoyed the fact that, for the SS
Karnak, we used the same river-steamer
that had appeared in Peter Ustinov’s all-star
film version of the story in 1978, starring
Bette Davis, David Niven and Mia Farrow,
among many others.
First published in 1937 and written during
one of her many trips to Egypt with Max
Mallowan in the first years after their
marriage, Death on the Nile is one of her
very finest, and most popular, stories. She
herself was to say later, ‘I think myself that
the book is one of the best of my “foreign
travel” ones. I think the central situation is
intriguing and has dramatic possibilities, and
the three characters, Simon, Linnet, and
Jacqueline, seem to me to be real and alive.’
In the eight decades that have passed since
then, I doubt anyone would disagree.
Mind you, our new version may have
startled Dame Agatha just a little, as it
opens with a young couple making love, not
something ever found in one of her novels –
no matter how much that possibility might
have been implied. It tells the story of a
spoiled, unlikeable, rich young socialite,
Linnet Ridgeway, who steals the handsome
but broke Simon Doyle from her best friend
Jacqueline de Bellefort, and then marries
him. The couple go to Egypt for their
honeymoon, only to be followed there by
Jacqueline, but when they try to escape on a
cruise down the Nile by boat, she follows
them again. It is on the steamer that Linnet
is killed and the mystery begins.
The other passengers on the cruise are
among some of Dame Agatha’s finest
characters, including an American grande
dame and her mousy companion, a lady
novelist and her daughter, a fierce young
socialist (who turns out to be an English
peer), Linnet’s shady American attorney, and
a senior officer in the British Secret Service,
Colonel Race, who arrives, in our version,
riding a camel out of the desert, in a suitably
mysterious manner.
While no match for Ustinov’s cast, ours
boasted some exceptional actors, including
James Fox, brother of Edward, whom I had
just played alongside in The Hollow, as
Colonel Race. There was also the English
actress Frances de la Tour, the American
David Soul, best known for his role in the
television series Starsky and Hutch, and the
beautiful Emily Blunt as Linnet. Our new
version, which we finished in the early
autumn of 2003, is one of my favourites of
all my Poirots. I remember the experiences
as though they were yesterday, and I am
very proud of it indeed.
One memory that sticks in my mind,
however, is that every single member of the
cast and crew were struck down at some
point during the shoot with a rather severe
stomach upset – everyone, that is, except
Sheila and me. Sheila had come on the trip
with me, as the children were no longer even
teenagers. Perhaps our good health had
something to do with the fact that we never
ate anything that had not been cooked, not
even salad or fruit, throughout our time
there. But I did not escape entirely. No
sooner had I finished filming and flown back
to London, than I was struck with the worst
form of ‘Montezuma’s revenge’. Unwisely,
after my abstinence, I had eaten some fresh
fruit salad on the plane, and that had taken
its toll. Thankfully, it was my only bad
memory of the shoot.
Death on the Nile also gave me an
opportunity to deepen my portrait of Poirot,
and underline his particular sense of
vulnerability and loneliness. There is one
scene, in particular, where he is standing at
the stern of the steamer, looking into the
falling dusk. I believe that it conveys
something of the sadness and loneliness that
Poirot feels because he has never had a
domestic life, nor had ever been able to love
a woman with such intensity.
Looking back, I think these four films were
one of the turning points in the years of
Poirot and me, for somehow they helped us
to grow even closer, with me as his protector
and guardian, and he relishing the chance to
reveal more and more of himself to the
watching
audience.
They
were
very
important to both of us.
There is one other rather remarkable thing
that occurred to me as we finished shooting
that tenth series, and it is this. At home in
Pinner, I discovered a picture of my
grandfather on my father’s side, who was
always known as the best-dressed man in
Cape Town, in South Africa, where he lived.
Taken in about 1895, he is dressed in a
brimmed hat, a three-piece suit, and he is
carrying a cane. It is uncanny – you really
would think it was Poirot.
Chapter 15
‘EASILY THE WORST
BOOK I EVER WROTE’
The British critics certainly seemed to like
the new-style Poirot, and, true to their
word, ITV made a considerable splash with
the four new films, not least by broadcasting
the first two in the peak viewing days of
December: Five Little Pigs went out on
Sunday, 14 December 2003, and Sad
Cypress on Boxing Day Sunday 2003 at the
prime time of nine in the evening.
The critics noticed at once that the whole
series had been renewed in a very particular
way. Peter Paterson captured it exactly, in
t h e Daily Mail, when he commented, ‘This
first of a new series of four Poirot stories was
slick and expensive enough to quieten those
who think that ITV has been performing
under par for far too long,’ and he described
Five Little Pigs as ‘entertaining and classy’. It
was a view that Sheila and I shared, as she
was particularly impressed by it when we
watched it together on that Sunday evening.
I n The Times, Paul Hoggart was equally
complimentary, and he too had caught on to
the stronger production values, commenting
on the strong cast and ‘the intriguingly edgy
quality of Kevin Elyot’s script. It was visually
adventurous too.’
In the Daily Express, Robert Gore-Langton
added, ‘The thing with Poirot is you can
watch it with the whole family and have a
sweepstake on whodunit’ and went on to
give me ‘a lot of credit’ for the show’s
success – kindly adding that I was ‘perfect’
as the detective.
Sad Cypress was every bit as well
received, though I felt personally that it was
not quite appropriate viewing for Boxing
Day. It is a fine story, but it is also hardly a
festive Christmas television treat. I worried
that this might affect the audience’s
enjoyment, but I was in no position to do
anything about the scheduling, as that was a
matter for ITV. In the end, the viewing
figures were very good indeed, and so I
clearly need not have been concerned.
The network then gave our new version of