Actor is ‘over the moon’ with Poirot role
Henry Goodman takes to the stage in Chichester this summer as celebrated detective Hercule Poirot determined to solve one of the most complex crimes of his career.
Murder On The Orient Express by Agatha Christie, adapted for the stage by Ken Ludwig and directed by Jonathan Church (May 13 to June 4), looks certain to be one of the great highlights of this year’s Chichester Festival Theatre summer season.
Hercule Poirot boards the legendary Orient Express, enjoying the prospect of a luxurious rail journey from Istanbul to Calais in the dead of winter. The train is surprisingly packed for the time of year; only the intervention of the manager secures Poirot a first-class berth, alongside an intriguing and glittering company of international travellers. But just after midnight, the Orient Express screeches to a halt, marooned by a snowdrift. And by morning, one passenger is dead…
Henry makes a return to Chichester to play Poirot, following his appearances in Yes, Prime Minister (2010) and The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (2012 to 13), also directed by Jonathan Church.
In the blank CFT summer of 2020, Henry was due to open the season as Galileo in Brecht’s Life of Galileo – and then the season was cancelled.
Murder On The Orient Express, with Henry as Poirot, was then lined up for the 2021 summer season, but sadly, with more lockdowns looming, it was cancelled before it was even announced. But now at last all is set fair. As CFT artistic director Daniel Evans explains: “It has all been a conversation with Henry. He is loved by our audiences. He was going to play Galileo and then when we started coming back we thought that maybe three hours of Brecht might not be the wisest thing!”
Instead,collectivelytheyhave opted for a Poirot of rare moral complexity: “Obviously I don’t want to give too much away but ofallthePoirotstories,thisisthe onewhereheismakingreallythe mostdifficultdecisionofallatthe end,onethatreallychallengeshis sense of justice and morality.
“I think in our own way with what we have all been living through, we have also had to grapple with our own sense of what is right and what is wrong, and I do think that of all the Agatha Christie stories this is the one that most reflects that, the fact that it really challenges Poirot’s beliefs.
“And Henry being Henry he is going to pour his great intellect into that. He was really over the moon when the idea came up.”