Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
Norma Restarick, particularly caught the eye.
Her character arrives at the flat in
Whitehaven Mansions and confesses that she
thinks she ‘might have murdered someone’
to George, Poirot’s manservant, and then to
Poirot himself. Two years later, I was
delighted to find her playing alongside me on
the West End stage, in Arthur Miller’s great
play All My Sons.
The jewel in the crown of the four films in
this series, however, was the one that we
filmed last, Appointment with Death, one of
Dame Agatha’s most popular Poirot stories,
and one which, to my great delight, was to
be filmed abroad. It was always wonderful
for me to go on location outside Britain; it
brought me a sense of freedom, even though
I knew only too well that it makes Poirot
himself feel more than a little uncomfortable.
He is always uncomfortable in the heat,
hates getting dust on his suit, and is less
than enthusiastic about sleeping in a tent. I
suspect that he is never quite as much at
home in foreign parts as he is in Britain,
even though I knew that he travels regularly
in Dame Agatha’s stories, particularly to the
Middle East.
Dame Agatha set her original story,
published in 1938, in Petra in Jordan, but
because of the political uncertainty in the
Middle East, we actually filmed our
archaeological dig near a ruined eighteenth-
century French fortress, located in the dusty
countryside about an hour’s drive from the
Moroccan port of El Jadida, and two hours
from Casablanca. Once again, it was inspired
by an expedition that she made with Max
Mallowan. And this time, Dame Agatha
added a splendid set of characters, led by
the flamboyant Lord Boynton, who is
determined to locate the head of John the
Baptist, which he is convinced is to be found
somewhere in the area, and has spent years
trying to locate it. He has invited Poirot, who
is, of course, a Catholic, to witness what he
thinks will be his great triumph.
Written by Guy Andrews and directed by
Ashley Pearce, who had done Mrs McGinty’s
Dead the previous year, it boasted another
superb cast, including Tim Curry as the ever-
emotional Lord Boynton, Cheryl Campbell as
his wife, John Hannah as a psychiatrist, Mark
Gatiss, who had written Cat Among the
Pigeons for us, and the lovely American
actress Elizabeth McGovern as Dame Celia
Westholme, who, according to Dame Agatha,
is ‘much respected and almost universally
disliked’, and who is often said to be based
on the first British female MP, Lady Astor.
Filming was a joy. Sheila came with me,
and so many of the cast seemed to enjoy
themselves, in spite of the heat of the desert
in May. John Hannah, who is as keen an
amateur photographer as I am, tried to
persuade me to switch from my Leica to a
modern digital camera – without much
success, I should add, as I am still using my
Leica. Tim Curry also seemed to be having a
wonderful time, and there was also an
emotional reunion for me with another
member of the cast, Paul Freeman. I
remembered only too well arriving at the
Gateway Theatre in Chester in England in
1969 as a young actor and being in the cast
when Paul played Becket in T. S. Eliot’s
Murder in the Cathedral. I was so happy to
be with him again.
Once again, Guy Andrews had gone
deeper
into
Poirot’s
character,
and
strengthened his commitment to his faith,
with a scene in which he reads his Bible,
holding his rosary, and confirming his stern
moral compass when he describes one
character as ‘an evil woman’. These essential
elements had become ever more central in
my own portrayal of Poirot, which had
developed over the previous three series.
They meant that I now played Poirot with
considerably more seriousness than I had
done twenty years before. There was
humour in him still, but now there was an
added and deeper sense of faith and
conviction.
But there was also a sense, during the
filming, that this might, just might, be the
very last of my Poirots. I do not know where
the rumours came from, but people suddenly
kept asking me whether it would be, and I
kept on saying that I really did not know. I
did realise that this was a very expensive
film to shoot, with so many characters and
so many extras in the desert, and that there
was some feeling within ITV that perhaps it
was all costing too much to be justified in a
world of much cheaper ‘reality’ shows.
Certainly, there seemed to be a huge
question mark hanging over the future – and
one which was echoed at the end of the film.
The final scene of Appointment with Death
has Poirot present a crucifix to the lovely Zoe
Boyle, playing the orphaned young woman
Jinny, reminding her, as he does so, that
‘nothing cannot be repaired’ providing one
trusts in the hand of ‘Almighty God’. With
that, Poirot walks across the garden towards
the exit of the hotel, where he is captured in
silhouette. Jinny looks down at the crucifix in
her hand, and when she looks up, a moment
later, Poirot has disappeared.
There were many people among the cast
and crew who thought they might well have
seen Poirot’s final moments on film at that
moment, and I confess that I thought so too.
Chapter 17
‘YOU’RE NOT GOING TO
WEAR THOSE
HORRIBLE HAIRNET OR
MOUSTACHE-NET
THINGS, ARE YOU?’
Part of me was still convinced that my
Poirot had disappeared forever as the
first of our latest films, Mrs McGinty’s Dead,
was broadcast by ITV on 14 September
2008. After all, I was sixty-two. It had been
twenty years since we had started back at
Twickenham Studios, in the summer of 1988,
and this was the sixty-second film. Why
should it go on?
Looking back, I could hardly believe the
years of uncertainty and yet of extraordinary
delight. There was no question that the
British and American television audiences
still seemed to be enjoying them. They had
grown familiar with my little Belgian, and
they seemed happy to see him again. But it
was not only Britain and America. As the
years had passed, many other countries had
joined his fan club, with the series playing
across Europe, Russia, India, Japan, China,
Australia and New Zealand, not to mention
Brazil, Argentina and South Africa.
One of the things that made the series so
successful was that the audience seemed to
love Poirot and me by now. As one of the
press previews in England put it, when Mrs
McGinty’s Dead was shown, ‘The great
delight with Poirot is that you always know
what you are going to get – a cast jammed
with well-known names, high production
values, and of course the inimitable Suchet
as the possessor of those astonishingly
efficient little grey cells.’
Not
that
everyone
was
quite
so
complimentary, however. One reviewer
described it as ‘blissful, high-camp, settle-
down-on-the-sofa-with-a-bottle-of-wine-and-
turn-your-brain-off-stuff’, with a ‘Vaseliney
glow’ on the lens and ‘silly accents’.
I still liked Poirot a great deal, even
though I was prepared to admit to one
interviewer,
when Mrs
McGinty
was
screened, that he could be a bit of a pain. ‘I
find him irritating sometimes, with his
unforgiving view of life and pernickety
attitudes, but there you are; that’s him!’ I
explained.
But I still desperately wanted to film the
last stories and complete the entire canon. It
was my greatest ambition, even though I
knew that not everyone at ITV agreed with
me. We had completed sixty-five of Dame
Agatha’s stories about him, but there were
still five to go, including the story of his
death. If I could reach that landmark, it
would mean that I had filmed every single
Poirot story. There was nothing that I
wanted to do more. It would allow me to say
goodbye to him properly.
Cat Among the Pigeons was transmitted
on the following Sunday, and The Third Girl
the Sunday after that, and once again, the
critics were nothing if not kind, while the
audiences had grown again. It was so nice to
see Zoë Wanamaker, Harriet Walter and
Jemima Rooper grace these three films, just
as it was a joy to see David Yelland enjoying
himself playing George and serving Poirot
crème de menthe in the new Whitehaven
Mansions flat.
But it was to be fifteen months before
Appointment with Death, the fourth film in
that eleventh series, would eventually be
broadcast. ITV were very proud of it, and
wanted to give it the best possible
transmission date, on Christmas Day 2009,
but I wondered if there was a subliminal
message in their delay. Were they quietly
implying that this might indeed be Poirot’s
final bow?
I certainly had no idea of what their
intentions were, but neither was I going to
sit at home worrying about it. Just before
Christmas 2008, I got a telephone call out of
the blue from the American actor Kevin
Spacey, who had been acting as artistic
director of the Old Vic for the past six years.
He wanted to ask a favour – would I be
prepared to step in at the very last moment
to play an American lawyer called Roger
Cowan in a new play called Complicit, by the
Pulitzer-prize-winning author Joe Sutton. It
explored the question of press ethics and
whether
reporters
were
prepared
to
cooperate with the authorities to overlook
the torture of terrorist suspects.
Kevin Spacey was going to direct the play
himself, and it would not be a long run,
about five weeks between late January and
late February 2009. There were to be only
two other actors in the cast, Elizabeth
McGovern, who had appeared with me in
Appointment with Death, and the Hollywood
legend Richard Dreyfuss, star of Jaws, Close
Encounters of the Third Kind and The
Goodbye Girl, which won him an Oscar as
best actor. My part as Dreyfuss’s lawyer was
going to be played by another actor, but he
had been forced to pull out at the last
moment.
I could not resist the challenge. I wanted
to work with Kevin Spacey, whom I much
admired, and the play was about an
interesting and important moral issue –
whether investigative journalists should be
forced by law to reveal their private sources.
The play’s hero, played by Dreyfuss, had
written – in the wake of the 9/11 attacks on
New York – a powerful opinion piece
advocating the use of torture in the ‘war on
terror’, but had then undergone a change of
heart, in the wake of the American
government’s
apparent
disregard
for
international law and alleged military
brutality. A government source had provided
him
with
documents
that
apparently
supported his new opinion, but as a result,
he is summoned before an American grand
jury, who want him to reveal his source. If
he refuses, he risks a prison sentence.
It was a strong subject, and I enjoyed
playing it, but sadly it did not seem to
capture the imagination of the London
audience at the Old Vic. To my delight,
however, shortly after the run of Complicit
was
finished,
ITV
confirmed
that
Appointment with Death was certainly not
going to be the last Poirot. They announced
that they intended to make another four