Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
marvellous actor Alex Jennings, who I
believe could become a theatrical star to
rival the late Sir John Gielgud. But it was my
relationship with Zoë, and Poirot’s with
Ariadne, that seemed to overshadow almost
everything else. We were on the screen
together even before the titles appeared,
and never looked back.
Cards on the Table is one of Dame
Agatha’s most original crimes, which our
script reflected, with a denouement that is
beautifully devised – even though, as she
explains at the start of her novel, the
murderer is one of only four suspects.
Deepening the audience’s understanding
of Poirot’s character took another step
forward in the fourth and last of this tenth
series of films, Taken at the Flood , which
was published in both Britain and the United
States in 1948. Originally set in post-war
Britain, where the delight of victory in
Europe has been overshadowed by austerity,
we decided to set it in the 1930s. But it
would be fair to say that it still reflects its
origins in those difficult years after the
Second World War. There is a sense of
sadness in it, and it takes its title from
Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, from Brutus’s
speech in Act IV: ‘There is a tide in the
affairs of men, / Which, taken at the flood,
leads on to fortune.’
The story, and our film version of it,
reveals yet another of Poirot’s psychological
qualities: his moral beliefs, and, in particular,
his Catholicism, which the screenwriter Guy
Andrews brought out in his script. I had
always
known
that
Poirot’s
religious
convictions were intensely strong, and,
indeed, had added this to my list of notes on
his character so many years before. He read
from his prayer book and Bible every night
before he went to bed with his hot
chocolate, and held his rosary while he was
doing so.
For me, an essential part of what made
Poirot the man he was lay in his conviction
that God had put him on this earth so that
he could rid the world of evil. That was the
raison d’être at the heart of every single one
of his actions. As the films had developed, so
my conviction that this was the case had
grown even stronger. It was to reach its
height in Murder on the Orient Express, in
which Poirot is faced with a terrible moral
dilemma, but it is also very clear in Taken at
the Flood, where Poirot confronts his attitude
to abortion and is seen praying with his
rosary in his hand. It is one of the most
striking moments in the film.
The production was based at Shepperton
Studios, with Andy Wilson as the director,
and another great cast, including Jenny
Agutter, Celia Imrie and Nicholas Le Prevost.
There was also Tim Woodward, son of
Edward, and, of course, David Yelland as
George, to look after the new Whitehaven
Mansions flat. The story once again focuses
on a battle over a will carried out in an
English country house.
Indeed, the house in Dame Agatha’s
original story was based on Warmsley Heath,
Archie and Dame Agatha’s house near
Sunningdale golf course, which did not hold
the happiest of memories for her, which may
help to account for some of the darkness in
the story and our film. In a review of the
novel,
the
writer
Elizabeth
Bowen
complimented Dame Agatha by saying, ‘Her
gift for blending the cosy with the macabre
has seldom been more evident than it is
here.’ It was a quality that was certainly
reflected in our film.
During the filming, I was asked to
contribute to one of those ‘behind the
scenes’ documentaries, which was to appear
on the DVD when it was released. I greatly
enjoyed doing that, and I confessed to the
interviewer that 2005 had been ‘my happiest
year of all’ on Poirot, and I meant it. The
little man and I had revealed to one another
a depth and companionship that was very
special indeed.
Chapter 16
‘WHY-WHY-WHY DID I
EVER INVENT THIS
DETESTABLE,
BOMBASTIC, TIRESOME
LITTLE CREATURE!’
No sooner had I finished Taken at the
Flood, in the autumn of 2005, the last
of Dame Agatha’s Poirot stories in the tenth
series, than I was in rehearsals for Moss Hart
and George Kaufman’s great 1930s comedy
Once in a Lifetime, at the National Theatre
in London. And just as I had done twenty-six
years before at the Royal Shakespeare
Company, I was playing the grotesque, but
hugely
funny,
movie-mogul
Herman
Glogauer. It was about as far away from
Poirot as it was possible to imagine. There I
was, brandishing massive cigars, wearing the
loudest
and
most
vulgar
suits
and
swaggering all over the stage. It was
tremendous fun.
In fact, the following year, 2006, was to be
an interesting year for me. Immediately after
I finished at the National, I made a television
movie for ITV called The Flood, about a
storm surge in the Thames that threatened
to overwhelm London, alongside Robert
Carlyle and Sir Tom Courtenay. Filmed in
South Africa, and crammed with special
effects, I was playing the Deputy Prime
Minister, in charge of the crisis because the
Prime Minister was out of the country – just
part of a character actor’s life, you might
say.
But then I went on to participate in a
project that truly touched my heart. I was
invited to make a documentary about
animals facing extinction, and was asked
which one I would like to choose. There was
not a moment’s doubt in my mind – I wanted
to make a film about the threat to the
existence of giant pandas. As an animal
lover, they have always held a special place
in my heart, and I have always been
horrified by how precarious their existence
has always seemed to be. The Chinese
emperors of the past considered them so
magical that they kept them in their palaces
to protect members of their dynasties from
evil spirits.
Sadly, those days are gone. Giant pandas
are now being hunted and their ability to
survive is being eroded. Their black and
white markings are no camouflage against
hunters – because they stand out like a sore
thumb against the green bamboo – and their
forest habitat is being decimated, as China’s
population and economy expands at such a
rapid rate. They also sleep for sixteen hours
a day, have a terribly troubled love life and
have such sorrowful eyes that I cannot resist
them.
ITV,
who
were
making
the
documentary, suggested I visit the Wolong
research centre in south-west China for a
week, to find out more about them.
When I got there, it was extraordinary.
The first time I saw a giant panda in China,
it stood so still that I thought I was looking
at a model. I got a terrible fright when it
moved. Yet it looked so vulnerable, as it
padded slowly along, and when it turned to
look at me with its wonderful black and
white clown face – which must surely have
been an elaborate practical joked played by
God – my heart melted. There are so few
giant pandas left in the world, but it is not
too late for us to prevent their extinction.
That was the message I wanted to convey
in my documentary. But what also struck me
while I was there was how, even in China, I
could not escape Poirot. At one point, as I
was filming the documentary, a group of
Japanese tourists arrived to see the pandas.
Suddenly, and I really do not know how, one
of the group recognised me and a great
shout went up: ‘It’s Hercule Poirot!’ The
pandas
were
forgotten,
and
I
was
surrounded by smiling Japanese tourists,
terribly anxious for me to sign autographs
and have my picture taken with them. It was
very flattering, but a little embarrassing, as I
believed the pandas were far more
important – and interesting – than I was.
But, yet again, it reminded me of the
extraordinary affection Poirot is held in by all
kinds of people from around the world.
When I got back from China, there was no
sign of another Poirot series, but I was
offered what was to become one of the most
interesting roles in my television career so
far – to play the controversial newspaper
and publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell, owner
of the Daily Mirror and a British MP, who had
disappeared from his yacht off the Canary
Islands in suspicious circumstances on 5
November 1991, at the age of sixty-eight.
His body was later found floating in the
Atlantic, an apparent suicide, as there was
no evidence of foul play, though rumours
abounded as to whether he had been
assassinated. He was given what amounted
to a state funeral in Israel, and the BBC
wanted to make a documentary-drama
about the final months of his life.
I had of course used ‘Captain Bob’
Maxwell’s career as part of my inspiration to
capture Augustus Melmotte in Anthony
Trollope’s The Way We Live Now , and here I
was being asked to play the man himself. It
was a wonderful opportunity to convey his
extraordinary, serpentine charm, which was
always mixed with touches of paranoia, in a
script by Craig Warner called simply Maxwell.
I relished the chance to play a robber-baron:
the real Robert Maxwell.
There was a problem, however. I was
neither as tall nor as broad as the six-foot-
three, twenty-two-stone Maxwell. But I
decided that I did not want to be padded up
to look bigger, or to wear lifts in my shoes; I
simply wanted to capture his voice. For me,
that was the true entry point into his
character, not his size, because his voice
came from deep down within him. It was an
expression of his power, his self-assurance
and his incredible self-confidence – no small
feat for a man who had not even owned a
pair of shoes until he was nine years old. I
had also been lucky enough to meet
Maxwell’s wife, Betty, when I was playing
Melmotte, and had the greatest respect for
her and the way she had coped with her
husband’s excesses with such dignity and
grace. It was another reason to portray him
as a complicated man, rather than as a
caricature.
The critics seemed to like the result. The
Independent said that ‘Maxwell’s lethal
arbitrariness was beautifully conveyed,’ while
The Times accepted that although it ‘took
about a minute to forget that the real Bob
was twice his weight and size . . . his voice,
uncannily near Maxwell’s own, occupied the
space that his girth failed to’.
Immediately after filming Maxwell, I joined
the cast of a British crime movie called The
Bank Job, loosely based on an event in
September 1971, when thieves tunnelled
into the vault of a bank in Baker Street,
London, and stole millions of pounds’ worth
of jewellery and cash from a string of safety-
deposit boxes. The robbers were never
caught, and the film suggested that the
reason for this may have been that the
boxes also contained details of police
corruption, as well as evidence that a female
member of the royal family had been caught
up in a sex scandal. Written by Dick Clement
a n d Ian La Frenais, creators of the
unforgettable
comedy Porridge starring
Ronnie Barker for BBC television, and
directed by the Australian Roger Donaldson,
it was a caper from beginning to end. But it
gave me the chance to play a sleazy porn