Authors: David Suchet,Geoffrey Wansell
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts
twelve original stories, called The Capture of
Cerberus, where she is running a London
nightclub called Hell, guarded by an
enormous dog. But in this new version, she
is simply staying in the hotel in the Alps with
her daughter Alice. Orla Brady took over the
part of the Countess from Kika Markham,
who had played her in The Double Clue,
which had been broadcast no less than
twenty-two years earlier. Orla was joined in
the cast by actor and writer Simon Callow,
now rightly famous for his one-man shows
portraying the life and works of Charles
Dickens.
In the best Poirot tradition, Guy gave
everyone in the Swiss hotel some kind of
guilty secret, which they are protecting when
Poirot arrives, and the denouement is
distinctly more dramatic than in some of the
earlier stories. It even includes a struggle
with a gun, but Andy Wilson, who directed
the film and had done both Death on the
Nile and Taken at the Flood in the past,
made sure to keep the touch primarily light
throughout, in spite of the drama of the
ending. After we had finished it, I found I
had enjoyed it more than I had expected to,
being so aware how very different our
version was to Dame Agatha’s original.
Somehow, I do not think she would have
objected too much to what we had done, as
we had included so many of her trademark
twists and turns. Indeed, it was almost as if
we were now following in her footsteps,
aware of her looking over our shoulders.
Then, towards the end of May 2013, came
the moment that I had been preparing
myself for quietly since the filming of Curtain
at the end of 2012. We started to film our
very last Poirot film, and the reality of what
life might be like after the little Belgian and I
finally parted became a stark reality. Not
that I had much time to think about that as
we began; there was so much to do, and so
little time to do it in. The shooting schedule
demanded that we were finished by the end
of June, so that the programmes could be
broadcast later in the year, and so I did not
have much time to reflect as we gathered
together at Pinewood again to make Dead
Man’s Folly.
Not one of Dame Agatha’s Poirot
masterpieces, it was published in 1956, the
year she was awarded a CBE in the New
Year’s Honours by the new young Queen
Elizabeth II – it was not until 1971 that she
became a dame. Dead Man’s Folly has many
typical Poirot characteristics. There is a
country house, an aristocratic family intent
on bickering, some dysfunctional friends from
the ‘county set’, and a former owner who
may bear a grudge, while, to add a little
piquancy, there is also the reappearance of
her favourite fictional crime writer Ariadne
Oliver. When it first appeared, the critic
Maurice Richardson, in the Observer, called it
‘Nowhere near a vintage Christie, but a
pleasing table read.’
The story opens with Mrs Oliver invited to
a country house to help organise a ‘murder
hunt’ (instead of a ‘treasure hunt’) at the
village fete, held in the grounds of the
fictional Nasse House on the banks of the
fictional River Helm in Devon. It is owned by
Sir George Stubbs and his young wife, Lady
Hattie. Part of Mrs Oliver’s idea is to have
the ‘body’ found in the boathouse on the
edge of the river, but as she is planning what
to do, she senses that something is
dreadfully wrong and sends a telegram to
Poirot, urging him to come down at once.
Our new version – there had been a
television film made from the story in 1986,
with Peter Ustinov as Poirot – was written by
Nick Dear and remained absolutely true to
Dame Agatha’s original story. To my delight,
Zoë Wanamaker was back again, to play
Ariadne Oliver; it was such a treat to have
her with me for this last film in the series. It
was the seventieth Poirot television film I
had made since that summer morning in
Twickenham a quarter of a century earlier.
As we started shooting, I was not quite
sure what to expect. Would the memories of
the past twenty-five years ambush me every
day, the ghosts of so many stories and so
many characters stalk me as I climbed back
into my padding and spats for the final time?
I really did not know, but one thing I was
certain of: I was determined to make this
last film a true celebration of the whole
experience of being Poirot. I knew I would
mourn him when he was gone – I thought
millions of other people would too – but I
was not going to allow him to depart without
the most joyful experience I could bring to
him. This was my final chance to show just
how much I loved and admired the little
man.
There would even be one last chance for
Poirot to reveal something of his firm moral
compass. At one point, he tells the former
owner of Nasse House, Mrs Folliatt, played
by the Irish-born actress Sinéad Cusack –
wife of actor Jeremy Irons – that she knows
who the killer is but is not prepared to say
so, because she thinks that would be ‘wrong
– even wicked’. At that point, Poirot
struggles to keep his temper: ‘As wicked as
the killing of a fourteen-year-old girl?’ he
demands. When she replies that the matter
is ‘over and done’, Poirot attacks her as
fiercely as he did the passengers trapped in
the Orient Express. ‘It is never finished with
a murder. Jamais!’
That was the voice of the Poirot who had
grown in depth and complexity with me over
the years of filming, that was the Poirot who
could rage at the foolishness of people who
thought they were above the law, and who
thought that they could – literally – get away
with murder, because they had every right to
do so. That was the man whom I had always
fought to protect, the man who wanted to
save the world, and the innocent, from evil,
the man who had grown to be so much a
part of me.
The filming was particularly personal and
poignant for another reason – far beyond
even Poirot’s character. The second most
significant thing about Dead Man’s Folly ,
beyond the fact that it was the last film in
the series, was that the fictional Nasse
House was so clearly inspired by Dame
Agatha’s own magnificent Georgian house,
Greenway, on the banks of the River Dart in
Devon, which she and Max Mallowan had
bought in 1939 for £6,000. They remained
there after the outbreak of war, but then it
was requisitioned to be used first as a
nursery for children evacuated from London,
and then as accommodation for men from
the United States Navy.
After they left Greenway, the Mallowans
moved to London, where they remained for
the remainder of the war, only returning to
Greenway for the summers after the war was
over. It was to become one of three houses
they had, along with one in Chelsea in
London – where Dame Agatha always
insisted she felt it was ‘easier to write’ – and
another in Wallingford in Berkshire. But the
one she loved the most was Greenway.
So, in some strange twist of fate for Poirot
and for me, we were to shoot the final
sequences of Dead Man’s Folly at Greenway
itself in the last days of June 2013, sending
Hercule Poirot to Dame Agatha’s own home.
It would be the first time that the fictional
character of Poirot arrived at the home of his
creator. What would it be like? How would
he feel? How would I feel? I could not get
the thought out of my mind.
Chapter 19
‘BUT MOST OF ALL, TO
YOU ALL, AU REVOIR
AND MERCI
BEAUCOUP!’
The afternoon’s summer sun is glinting
off the River Dart below me as I am
sitting in the back of a vintage car driving
towards the square white front of Greenway,
Dame Agatha’s three-storey Georgian house
on the banks of the river in Devon. I am in
full Poirot costume – black patent leather
shoes, spats, three-piece suit complete with
waistcoat and watch chain, light overcoat,
Homburg hat, moustache and, of course,
carrying Poirot’s favourite silver-handled
cane – when I climb out of the car and walk
towards the front door.
It feels distinctly strange. For this is the
first time that Poirot has ever visited the
home of the woman who created him, the
first time that her fictional detective has set
foot in the house that she bought with her
second husband Max Mallowan in 1938.
Greenway is now very much the spiritual
home of the woman who went on to become
the biggest-selling novelist the world has
ever known, with two billion books to her
name.
As I put my hand out to reach for the
handle, there is a moment, a single, piercing
moment, when I am not truly sure who I am.
Am I an actor, who has played the role of
Poirot for a quarter of a century in seventy
television films, or have I actually become
this little man that the world, and I, love so
much? Where do I stop, and where does he
begin? It feels as if I am in a dream,
watching me being me, and yet playing
Poirot.
It is only when Tom Vaughan, the director
of this very last film in the thirteenth and
final series of Poirot films, shouts, ‘Cut’ at the
top of his voice that I snap out of my reverie
and back into the reality of the final five days
of shooting of Dead Man’s Folly , the last
Poirot that I will ever make.
But apart from a kind of strange confusion,
there also a sense of achievement, because I
know how fortunate I am to have had the
opportunity to play such an astonishing
character over all these years, and to see
him blossom so dramatically around me, to
see his exploits dubbed into more than fifty
languages and broadcast in almost every
country around the world. It is amazing,
humbling, and the greatest present that I
could ever have been given.
Yet on this summer Sunday afternoon in
June 2013, I also know only too well that it
is the beginning of the very end. In four
days’ time, I will take off my armadillo
padding for the final time, take the pocket
watch from my waistcoat, the little silver
vase from my lapel, and the moustache from
my face for the last time.
But even though a part of me is sad at the
thought or letting go of Poirot, there is
another part of me that is enormously elated
that he has finally been done justice on the
screen – I have brought every one of his
stories, with the exception of a tiny short
story called The Lemesurier Inheritance, to
the television audience.
I never expected it, never – certainly not
when we started shooting the first films at
Twickenham Studios on 1 July 1988. By a
strange coincidence, we will finish shooting
the final film on 28 June 2013, almost
exactly twenty-five years later to the day. It
has been the most extraordinary journey,
but it feels entirely appropriate to finish it by
filming in the grounds of Greenway, haunting
the gardens and grounds where Dame
Agatha imagined Poirot for so many of her
stories.
Certainly she was fascinated by him.
Indeed, I have been told, though I cannot
say whether it is true, that she twice
reported actually having seen him alive
during her life – so real was he in her
imagination. He is the extraordinary gift that
she passed on to me, one which I can never
thank her for, because she died a dozen
years before I first played him on television.
Looking out across the River Dart outside
Dame Agatha’s house now, I am so grateful
for the opportunity, and for the assistance I