The Scotsman

‘Christie is quite warped in her own way, that’s why we love it’

The latest Sarah Phelps adaptation of an Agatha Christie is more than a whodunit, the writer and its star Rufus Sewell tell Gemma Dunn

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When Sarah Phelps landed her first Agatha Christie adaptation in 2015, she had no idea where it would lead.

Five years on and the screenwrit­er’s annual novelto-screen reworkings have become a serial staple in the BBC1 schedule, with her repertoire spanning from And Then There Were None to The Witness For the Prosecutio­n, Ordeal by Innocence, The ABC Murders and now The Pale Horse.

“I didn’t know it was going to grow into a quintet,” she reveals at the premiere of the latter.

“The idea came to me when I was doing And Then There Were None, that maybe there would be a way to tell a story about 50 years of a bloodsoake­d and tumultuous 20th century via the medium of murder mystery – from a writer who maybe didn’t invent it but certainly made the genre her own.

“Christie had such a long writing career, pretty much from the early Twenties until the Sixties – that’s a long time to be writing and observing,” she goes on.

So what else do we need to know about the upcoming drama?

The Pale Horse puts Emmy and Bafta-nominated Rufus Sewell in the lead role of Mark Easterbroo­k, a man who seemingly has it all: he’s rich, successful and popular, with a beautiful new wife (Kaya Scodelario) and perfect home.

But Easterbroo­k – still grief stricken by the loss of his first wife – finds his life turned upside down when his name appears on a mysterious list found inside the shoe of a dead woman.

His search for the truth leads him to the village of Much Deeping; an idyllic English village, but also a place of old tradition, strange beliefs, three suspected witches, curses and spells.

With rumours that the trio of witches (played by Rita Tushingham, Sheila Atim and Kathy Kiera Clarke) played a part in the death, and with the body count continuing to rise, Easterbroo­k becomes hell-bent on finding an explanatio­n, eventually fearing for his own life and sanity.

For Sewell, 52, the two-parter marks his first foray into the twisty world of Christie.

“It was an instant yes,” recalls The Marvelous Mrs Maisel actor, who co-stars alongside Bertie Carvel, Sean Pertwee, and Henry Lloyd-hughes. “I’ve always wanted to do an Agatha Christie because I’ve grown up watching them – but this is so different to that, this is not cosy at all.”

As for Mark: “It’s limited what I can say, but yes, [he’s] quite a complex character,” he adds. “He’s superficia­lly quite fun for me to play because I like the idea of the suits and the cars... But what’s interestin­g for me in a deeper way is psychologi­cally he’s complex and challengin­g.

“There’s something about the exteriors of these people, that in order to support that level of luxury there’s an underbelly of brutality to maintain it, in society,” he follows. “That seemed to be really reflected in this particular character’s story, and I think it runs through Agatha Christie.”

It’s about lies, paranoia and conspiracy, reasons Phelps: “That no matter how rational and tough you think your resilience is to whispers and the little sharp fingernail­s scratching the back of your neck, you fall prey to it.

“We’re all rational when the lights are on; and where we are at the moment, with the amount of disinforma­tion, how do you hang on to what’s true and decent without descending into hell?” she asks.

“I always think with Christie, what she’s interested in is less really about the murder and the solving of the murder, but really about watching people lie. How people lie, the lies they tell themselves and the lies they tell everyone else to keep safe,” she adds. “That’s never going to not be relevant.”

“Christie is quite warped in her own way, that’s why we love it,” Sewell muses.

“It’s like reading something that’s a cross between An Education, The Wicker Man and Jacob’s Ladder,” he compares.

While he’s not ruling out diving into this world once more – I would love to do a cosy one sometime too,” – Sewell’s next release comes in the form of drama film, The Father.

“[I’m starring opposite] Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman,” he notes, the picture having premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this January.

“It’s written by Florian Zeller, the playwright [it’s a play but he’s directed the film co-written by Christophe­r Hampton] and it’s a wonderful script about an old man who is kind of losing it, and who is living with his daughter and his daughter’s husband [who I’m playing].”

And Phelps – is she likely to pursue another Christie novel or is this her lot?

I always thought I’d like to write a quintet and I’ve done it, but I’d never say never,” she confesses. “Maybe there would be something else, another way of framing these stories to give them a reason to be?”

● The Pale Horse is on BBC1 on Sunday at 9pm

 ??  ?? 0 Rufus Sewell in Agatha Christie’s The Pale Horse
0 Rufus Sewell in Agatha Christie’s The Pale Horse

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