Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
at the heart of the final film in the series that
I started in the summer and autumn of 2009,
arguably Dame Agatha’s best-known Poirot
story, Murder on the Orient Express. Filming
began in January 2010. The notion of
retribution is at the heart of what – to my
mind – was one of her most disturbing
stories, though that had never truly surfaced
in the 1974 film. No one could ever gainsay
that movie. It was simply wonderful film-
making, though Dame Agatha herself had
never been utterly certain about it. Most
important of all, however, was the fact that
there were very significant elements of her
original story which were simply never
covered in the film. In particular, it had
never addressed Poirot’s deeply held
conviction that murder can never be
justified, and should always be punished.
When I first heard that we were going to
do a new version of the story, I read and re-
read the book, to remind myself how just
serious it was, and how directly it addressed
the core of Poirot’s faith and beliefs. After I
had finished, I was more determined than
ever that we should be true to the tone of
the novel in our new version and bring that
conviction into the script, and therefore into
my performance. There are no jokes in
Murder on the Orient Express. It is an essay
in brutal murder, and I wanted to reveal that
fact. It is not about a Poirot who is famous
for his pernickety behaviour, or his funny
hair-and moustache-net; it is a story about
evil, and whether it can ever be justified.
In the original novel Dame Agatha never
wrote about Poirot wearing a hairnet or a
moustache-net, as he did in the original film,
never gave him little sly asides, never once
made him funny. Instead, she portrayed him
as a man confronted by a murder most foul,
but who then, in solving it, presents himself
with a dilemma that racks his conscience. I
remembered clearly her daughter Rosalind’s
words to me before I started our very first
film: ‘We must never, ever, laugh at him,’
and she then went on, ‘You’re not going to
wear those horrible hairnet or moustache-
net things, are you? My mother never wrote
about them.’
There was nothing whatever to laugh
about in Dame Agatha’s magnificent story,
for it confronts Poirot, a committed Catholic,
with a desperate dilemma, by solving a
premeditated murder based in revenge,
which some might be tempted to justify on
the grounds that it dispensed with the life of
a man who took pleasure in destroying other
people for his own selfish satisfaction.
That dilemma is what I wanted to bring
out, and I was delighted when the director,
Philip Martin, and the screenwriter, Stewart
Harcourt, who had just written The Clocks,
arrived at my flat in London and told me that
they wanted to do exactly that – to reveal
Poirot’s anger at the murder and his agony
at what his conscience would allow him to do
once he had uncovered the truth.
That is why Stewart’s screenplay started
by demonstrating to the audience Poirot’s
dark mood, with a scene in which a young
British officer shoots himself in front of him,
spattering his face with spots of blood, and
then a brutal scene of a woman being stoned
to death. This was not a comfortable country
house murder-mystery, where Miss Scarlet
may have committed the crime with the
candlestick in the billiard room. This was a
story about murder most foul, set at a time
when killing led to the hangman’s noose.
Written by Dame Agatha while on an
archaeological dig with Max Mallowan in
what is now Iraq in 1933, Murder on the
Orient Express was published the following
year. It was dedicated to her second
husband, who is said to have suggested the
solution. The book was retitled Murder in the
Calais Coach for the United States, because
it appeared just two years after Graham
Greene’s first major success, his novel
Stamboul Train, which had been renamed
Orient Express in the United States. The
publishers were afraid there might be
confusion between the two.
Dame Agatha had travelled on the Orient
Express several times on her way back from
archaeological sites before she wrote the
novel, and when she came back in 1933,
with the story all but completed, she used
the opportunity to check some of the details
on the train, to be sure they matched her
novel. The train was part of her inspiration.
In 1929, just a year after she had first
travelled on it, the Orient Express was
caught in a snowdrift following a blizzard in
Turkey and was unable to move for six days.
Two years later, in December 1931, she
herself was trapped on the train for twenty-
four hours, following flooding and a landslide
that washed part of the track away.
The other part of Dame Agatha’s
inspiration was, of course, the Lindbergh
kidnapping in the United States in 1932. The
American aviator Charles Lindbergh, who
had made the first solo crossing of the
Atlantic in 1927, had his infant son
kidnapped and killed just five years later, in
1932. A maid was suspected of involvement
in the crime, and after being harshly
interrogated by the police, committed
suicide. Some of the elements of that crime
lie at the very heart of Murder on the Orient
Express.
The book was certainly well received after
its publication. In the Daily Mail, the novelist
Compton Mackenzie called it ‘a capital
example of its class’, while Dorothy L.
Sayers, no mean hand at crime fiction
herself, described it as ‘a murder mystery
conceived and carried out on the finest
classical
lines’
in
the Sunday Times.
Meanwhile, the New York Times commented,
‘The great Belgian detective’s guesses are
more than shrewd; they are positively
miraculous,’
and Time magazine added,
‘Clues abound. Alibis are frequent and
unassailable. But nothing confounds the
great Hercule . . .’
It is another closed-room mystery, though
this time one set on a stationary train
trapped in a snowdrift, rather than a country
house. We chose to recreate the train itself
in a studio at Pinewood, to give the cast the
same feeling of claustrophobia that the
characters would have felt on the train itself,
and I think that worked tremendously well.
We also benefitted from an extraordinarily
good script, and the director, Philip Martin,
made the whole piece far darker and
moodier than perhaps the audience had
been expecting.
In particular, Philip decided to use a lot of
close-ups of my face to underline the nature
of the dilemma Poirot was facing, and how
perturbed he was by it. Philip shot me in a
way that I had never been shot before as
Poirot, with so much emphasis on my face,
and repeatedly told me not to rush and to go
inside the character in search of how Poirot
was truly feeling. As a result, it became one
of the most exciting experiences with a
director that I have ever had. It was
challenging every single day, and it was very
brave of him to do it, because from it
emerged the face of a Poirot trapped in a
personal agony, and that was what Philip
wanted to shoot. I do not believe I smile
once in the entire film; to do so would have
been inappropriate to the story, to me, and I
was desperate, as I always was, to serve
Dame Agatha’s vision in her original novel.
Once again, ITV had provided a simply
wonderful cast, including Toby Jones as the
victim of the crime, Dame Eileen Atkins,
David
Morrissey,
Sam
West,
Hugh
Bonneville, the American actress Barbara
Hershey and the recently twice-Oscar-
nominated (for The Help and Zero Dark
Thirty) Jessica Chastain. They all gave
tremendous performances.
The miracle was that we got it done in just
twenty-three shooting days, and, to this day,
I am not sure quite how we did it, because
there is such a lot of dialogue. Poirot’s
summing-up speech in the dining car is one
of the longest and most difficult that I have
ever had to learn and deliver, not least
because he rages at those who would seek
to overturn the ‘rule of law’ by taking
matters into their own hands. It was so
testing that Sheila came down with me to
help me get through it, and even sat in an
adjoining railway carriage during the
denouement, to help me get the lines right
and make sure I did not lose my way.
For me, Poirot is fighting both his Catholic
faith and his moral reasoning as he confronts
what should be done at the end of the story.
His faith tells him firmly that man should not
kill, but he also knows that the Bible
instructs that man should love his neighbour
and forgive their sins. He wants to please
God and stay true to his belief that part of
his role in life is to defeat evil wherever it
may be, but that faith contradicts what his
moral reasoning suggests: that sometimes
people deserve to be forgiven.
The contradiction finds him trapped in
confusion and anger, a most unusual place
for him to find himself, and helps to account
for the torment that he seems to find himself
in throughout the story. I am convinced that
when he returns to his compartment after
the denouement, to consider exactly what he
should do, he spends his time alone there
not only praying for God’s guidance, but also
painfully aware that he may not be able to
follow it.
In the end, Poirot reaches his decision, but
it does not sit easily with him, and I made
sure that the last time we see him in the
film, he is walking away with his back to the
camera, but with his rosary clearly to be
seen in his hand. He is carrying the pain of
going against his Catholic faith, but at the
same time is conscious that sometimes there
is no alternative other than to do so.
Now, I realise that the darkness of this
choice means that some people who had
only seen the 1974 film, and had never read
Dame Agatha’s original novel, might not be
quite as enthusiastic about our version.
Indeed, I suspect it may never be quite as
popular as the earlier film, but the director,
the writer and I were trying as hard as we
could to stay true to the tone and depth of
Dame Agatha’s original, and I think it shows
exactly what I always mean when I say that
my role as an actor is to serve my writer.
I did not know it at the time, but it was to
be more than two years before Poirot and I
would be together again. In fact, I again
feared, as we finished shooting, that I might
never finish the entire canon of Dame
Agatha’s Poirot stories for television. Yet, by
a strange turn of events, the next time I
climbed back into his waistcoat, spats and
gloves, I was to play his death in her final
story of his life, Curtain.
Chapter 18
‘IT IS NEVER FINISHED
WITH A MURDER.
JAMAIS!’
The shoot for Murder on the Orient
Express ended in February 2010, but it
was not broadcast in Britain until Christmas
Day the following year, rather confirming my
suspicion that I might never actually
complete the last five stories Dame Agatha
had written for Poirot. There was no doubt in
my mind that the very best ones had been
done already, and although there were four
gentle and engaging stories left, there was
only one jewel in the crown of what
remained: Curtain, Poirot’s final case, which
had never been filmed.