Miss Marple (TV series)

This article is about the BBC series starring Joan Hickson. For the ITV series with Geraldine McEwan and Julia McKenzie, see Agatha Christie's Marple.
Miss Marple

Title card
Starring Joan Hickson
David Horovitch
Ian Brimble
John Castle
Gwen Watford
Barbara Hicks
Christopher Good
Various Others
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 3
No. of episodes 12
Production
Running time 120 minutes
Release
Original network BBC One
Picture format 4:3
Audio format Mono (1984–89)
Stereo (1991–92)
Original release 26 December 1984 (1984-12-26) – 27 December 1992 (1992-12-27)
Chronology
Related shows Agatha Christie's Marple

Miss Marple is a British television series based on the Miss Marple murder mystery novels by Agatha Christie. It starred Joan Hickson in the title role, and aired from 26 December 1984 to 27 December 1992. All 12 original Miss Marple Christie novels were dramatised. The adaptations were written by T. R. Bowen, Julia Jones, Alan Plater, Ken Taylor and Jill Hyem, and the series was produced by George Gallaccio. In addition to its availability on VHS and DVD, the series began to be released on Blu-ray Disc in October 2014, marking its 30th anniversary.

Background

Agatha Christie had never been very happy with most filmed adaptations of her works, and according to her grandson Mathew Pritchard, who handled her estate after her death, "did not care much for television" either. Producer Pat Sandys of LWT first approached Pritchard and the Christie estate with a researched, detailed plan to film the novels Why Didn't They Ask Evans? and The Seven Dials Mystery in the early 1980s. Although indifferently treated by critics, the projects were popular with audiences and led to the filming of a number of short stories and the Tommy and Tuppence Beresford stories including The Secret Adversary and in the subsequent series Agatha Christie's Partners in Crime. With the success of that series, the BBC got the approval to produce the stories of one of Christie's most famous detectives.[1]

Joan Hickson as Miss Marple

Joan Hickson, who played Miss Marple, was an octogenarian herself during most of the series' production. Decades before, she had appeared in a minor role in Murder, She Said, in which Margaret Rutherford played Miss Marple. The adaptations are mainly true to the original novels. Hickson had also appeared in a stage adaptation of the novel Appointment with Death in 1946, after which Christie sent Hickson a note "I hope one day you will play my dear Miss Marple."[2]

There were two other semi-regular characters in Miss Marple. The first was Inspector Slack (later Superintendent), played by David Horovitch, the second was Constable (later Sergeant) Lake, played by Ian Brimble. Inspector/Superintendent Slack and Detective Constable/Sergeant Lake appeared in five episodes, Body in the Library, Murder at the Vicarage, 4.50 From Paddington, They Do It with Mirrors and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side. They are the official detectives and both (particularly Slack) originally dislike and are exasperated by Miss Marple, her interference and her methods, but they eventually come to respect (and indeed, in the case of Lake, like) her.

There were also four other recurring characters. John Castle appeared as Inspector Dermot Eric Craddock in A Murder Is Announced and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side. Gwen Watford appeared in Body in the Library and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side as Mrs Dolly Bantry. Barbara Hicks appeared in The Murder at the Vicarage and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side as Miss Amanda Hartnell. Christopher Good appeared as Ronnie Hawes in Murder at the Vicarage and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side.

Characters

Besides Miss Marple, there were several other recurring characters:

Episodes

# Title Airdate Guest cast and synopsis IMDb link
1 The Body in the Library 26, 27, 28 December 1984 Gwen Watford, Moray Watson, Trudie Styler, Jess Conrad, Ciaran Madden, Keith Drinkel, Debbie Arnold, Frederick Jaeger, Valentine Dyall, Raymond Francis, David Horovitch, Ian Brimble, Anthony Smee, Andrew Cruickshank, Hugh Walters, Arthur Bostrom, Martyn Read, Stephen Churchett, Astra Sheridan, John Moffatt [3]
Set some indeterminate time before the events of The Murder at the Vicarage, Miss Marple assists her neighbours the Bantrys when a lovely young girl is found dead in their library. The girl is traced to a seaside resort and the desperate family of a wealthy old man.
2 The Moving Finger 21, 22 February 1985 Michael Culver, Elizabeth Counsell, Richard Pearson, Sabina Franklyn, Andrew Bicknell, Hilary Mason, Dilys Hamlett, Deborah Appleby, John Arnatt, Sandra Payne, Martin Fisk, Imogen Bickford-Smith, Geoffrey Davion, Roger Ostime, Victor Maddern, Gordon Rollings, Patsy Smart, Gerald Sim [4]
Poison pen letters are being sent to everyone in town. It seems like a vulgar joke until a letter is found next to a suicide victim. The village vicar's wife just happens to be a personal friend of Miss Marple and asks her to come and discover the culprit. Then another body is found, this time clearly murder.
3 A Murder Is Announced 28 February, 1, 2 March 1985 Ursula Howells, Renée Asherson, Joan Sims, John Castle, Sylvia Syms, Ralph Michael, Paola Dionisotti, Samantha Bond, Simon Shepherd, Nicola King, Matthew Solon, Mary Kerridge, Vivienne Moore, David Collings, Elaine Ives-Cameron, Joyce Carey, Kevin Whately, Liz Crowther [5]
Set on Friday October 5, 1951 (when rationing was still ongoing in Britain), a party game goes wrong and a young Swiss man is dead. Friends and neighbours start to turn on each other, and Inspector Craddock is stumped. Fortunately, Miss Marple is in town visiting her niece and helps solve the crime.
4 A Pocketful of Rye[6] 7, 8 March 1985 Peter Davison, Timothy West, Stacy Dorning, Annette Badland, Fabia Drake, Clive Merrison, Rachel Bell, Selina Cadell, Tom Wilkinson, Frances Low, Susan Gilmore, Frank Mills, Louis Mahoney, Rhoda Lewis, Charles Pemberton [7]
Set in October,1949, the members of a wealthy banking family start dropping like flies, and Miss Marple is reminded of the old nursery rhyme Sing a Song of Sixpence and vows to find the villainous "blackbird" behind the crimes.
5 The Murder at the Vicarage 25 December 1986 Paul Eddington, Cheryl Campbell, Robert Lang, Polly Adams, Tara MacGowran, James Hazeldine, Jack Galloway, Rosalie Crutchley, Norma West, Christopher Good, Rachel Weaver [8]
Set in spring of 1954 or 1955, Death is only steps from Miss Marple when odious magistrate Colonel Protheroe is murdered in her idyllic village of St. Mary Mead. And in the Vicar's study, no less!
6 Sleeping Murder 11, 18 January 1987 Geraldine Alexander, John Moulder-Brown, Jean Anderson, Terrence Hardiman, Frederick Treves, John Bennett, Geraldine Newman, Jack Watson, Jean Heywood, Amanda Boxer, John Ringham, David McAlister, Kenneth Cope, Gary Watson, Donald Burton, Sheila Raynor, Peter Spraggon [9]
A young wife, Gwenda, believes her house is haunted. With Miss Marple's guidance, she comes to realize she witnessed the murder of her stepmother there 20 years ago as a child. Despite Miss Marple's advice to let sleeping murder lie, the newlyweds decide to investigate the crime, in the process putting Gwenda's own life at risk.
7 At Bertram's Hotel 25 January; 1 February 1987 Caroline Blakiston, Joan Greenwood, George Baker, James Cossins, Helena Michell, Irene Sutcliffe, Preston Lockwood, Edward Burnham, Donald Burton, Peter Baldwin [10]
Set shortly after May 1956 (when Elvis Presley's Heartbreak Hotel was released in Britain), false identities, larceny, and a crime ring are only the tip of the tentacle when Miss Marple stays in a posh London hotel (modeled after Brown's Hotel) where nothing is what it seems. Murder naturally follows, leading to a thrilling chase after the culprit.
8 Nemesis 8, 15 February 1987 Margaret Tyzack, John Horsley, Anna Cropper, Valerie Lush, Helen Cherry, Peter Tilbury, Liz Fraser, Bruce Payne, Joanna Hole, Jane Booker, Alison Skilbeck, Frank Gatliff, Peter Copley, Roger Hammond, David Blake Kelly, Cy Town [11]
Set in August 1955, Miss Marple is sent on a mission from beyond the grave to clear a dead man's son. Vowing to find out the truth, she links him to a dead girl, Verity Hunt, and a family of weird sisters. She discovers love, as well as hate, can be a reason for murder.
9 4.50 from Paddington 25 December 1987 Maurice Denham, Joanna David, Jill Meager, Andrew Burt, Jean Boht, John Hallam, Mona Bruce, Rhoda Lewis, Richard Ashley [12]
Set (beginning) on October 4, 1957 (when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik), Miss Marple's friend witnesses a murder in a railway carriage running parallel to her own, so Miss Marple engages a resourceful young woman to investigate. The search leads to a decrepit estate, where they suspect the body was dumped. But the seemingly innocent family who live there have secrets of their own.
10 A Caribbean Mystery 25 December 1989 Donald Pleasence, Sophie Ward, Adrian Lukis, T. P. McKenna, Frank Middlemass, Sue Lloyd, Robert Swan, Michael Feast, Sheila Ruskin, Joseph Mydell, Barbara Barnes, Valerie Buchanan [13]
Set (beginning) on February 8, 1951, while holidaying in Barbados (the novel set the story in [14] Caribbean island of St. Honoré), Miss Marple hears a lot of stories by a dotty Major who tells tall tales of knowing a murderer. But when the Major turns up dead, the wild beauty of the island can't hide the trail of a manipulative and ruthless killer.
11 They Do It with Mirrors 29 December 1991 Jean Simmons, Joss Ackland, Faith Brook, Holly Aird, Christopher Villiers, Brenda Cowling [15]
At an estate turned reformatory school, Miss Marple visits her old school chum Carrie Louise. When Carrie Louise's dear stepson is killed, the discontent family is only the beginning as there are literally hundreds of suspects!
12 The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side 27 December 1992 Claire Bloom, Barry Newman, Gwen Watford, John Castle, Elizabeth Garvie, Judy Cornwell, Glynis Barber, Christopher Hancock, Rose Keegan, Anna Niland, Ian Brimble, Amanda Elwes, Christopher Good, Rhoda Lewis, Jon Croft, Margaret Courtenay [16]
Set in the summer of 1959, Hollywood comes to St. Mary Mead when faded movie star Marina Gregg takes up residence for a local film shoot. But when she narrowly escapes an attempt on her life and a local woman dies instead, Miss Marple sorts the gossip rag chatter from the facts to uncover a tragedy.

Production

BBC producer Guy Slater cast Joan Hickson as Miss Marple. The series was filmed beginning in 1983 in areas including Norfolk, Devon, Oxfordshire and Barbados. The town of Nether Wallop, Hampshire doubled as Miss Marple's home village of St. Mary Mead. Slater was replaced by producer George Gallaccio starting with the fourth film. The Murder at the Vicarage was set in 1954, Nemesis was set in 1955 or 1956, At Bertram's Hotel in 1956, and 4.50 from Paddington was set in 1957.

Hickson vowed not to do another film after 1989's A Caribbean Mystery, but was persuaded to return for the final two films in 1991 and 1992. A Caribbean Mystery was shot on location at the Coral Reef Hotel in Barbados, where Christie had stayed in her visit to the country, and which had been the inspiration for the setting of the novel. Owners Budge and Cynthia O'Hara, who still owned the hotel 30 years later, were the inspirations for the characters in the novel and were able to share a treasure trove of Christie memorabilia with the cast.[2]

The evocative theme tune for the TV series was composed by Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley. The series opening titles featured paintings of seemingly pleasant village life, darkened by suspicious looking characters and the shot of a murder victim behind a cricket score board. Gossipy women were made to look like they were hiding secrets, whilst the vicar appeared to be hiding in the shadows. Initially, these paintings were black and white. In later episodes, new, colour drawings replaced these, though they still depicted suspicious looking villagers in the surroundings.

Although the books A Caribbean Mystery was written in 1964 and Nemesis in 1971, they were filmed out of order. Nemesis was produced in February 1987 and A Caribbean Mystery in December 1989. The significance of this is the character Jason Rafiel. He is introduced in A Caribbean Mystery and in Nemesis he has died and made a request of Miss Marple to solve a years old mystery. Filmed out of order, viewers are clueless as to what part Jason Rafiel played in Miss Marple's life until they watch A Caribbean Mystery. Rafiel was portrayed by Frank Gatliff in Nemesis, but by Donald Pleasence in A Caribbean Mystery.

The character of Inspector Craddock presents another inconsistency in the series. The character is clearly unknown to Miss Marple in "A Murder is Announced" but in his second and final appearance in "The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side", Craddock is Miss Marple's nephew.

Reception

The first episode was enthusiastically received by critics. The Times said "once hooked, you won't be able to turn off", and The Sun said it was a series "with pulling power and real class". For episode two, "The Moving Finger", The Daily Telegraph stated "Once again Guy Slater's production is built around the brilliant performance of Joan Hickson, behind whose faded blue eyes and spinsterish sibilants, the wheels of detective intelligence can be seen positively whirring around. The enterprise is impeccably cast, beautifully ordered, lovingly photographed." Reviews for subsequent films were equally positive.[2]

Alan McKee, of the Museum of Broadcast Communications, reviews the series as "a good example of a 'heritage' production", popular in the 1980s. It combines new Victorianism in moral standards and a sanitised version of England's past. Mostly set in a rural past, English architecture and country mansion houses are featured. Like many BBC programmes, production values are impeccable and costumes, houses and decor, cars, hairstyles and make-up could all be described as "sumptuous".[17]

McKee also praises the series for "being as faithful as possible to the source material. Miss Marple does not chase the villains herself as Margaret Rutherford does in her film series, nor are the titles of the books altered to make them more sensational."[17]

As for Hickson personally, she is frequently described as the "definitive" Miss Marple as Christie would have pictured her, and Hickson personally credited in large part the bestowal of an OBE award to the role, as Queen Elizabeth II was a fan of the series and Hickson's performance.[2]

Other countries

All twelve episodes were shown in the United States on the PBS Mystery! series. Miss Marple was also seen in over 30 countries, including Spain, the former Soviet Union and China.

Home media

Miss Marple was first released in DVD in the UK (Region 2) in 2000. A complete box set of all 12 stories was released in 2005 by 2 Entertain Video. In North America (Region 1), episodes were first released in 2001.

In summer 2009 the Sunday edition of the Greek newspaper Kathimerini was offering to its readers DVDs (one per week) of the series.

In January 2010, the Daily Mail offered six DVDs (from 2 Entertain Video) each with a complete episode from series. The episodes in the DVD giveaway offer were "The Murder at the Vicarage", "Sleeping Murder", "At Bertram's Hotel", "Nemesis", "A Caribbean Mystery", and "They Do It with Mirrors".

To mark the 30th anniversary of the series, BBC Home Entertainment fully remastered the series for release on DVD and, for the first time, on Blu-ray Disc.[18] The series was released in three volumes. Miss Marple: Volume One, released October 28, 2014, included the episodes "The Body in the Library", "A Murder Is Announced", "The Moving Finger," and "Murder at the Vicarage" and the first part of the three-part documentary special, "A Very British Murder, Part 1: A New Taste for Blood".[19] Miss Marple: Volume Two, released March 31, 2015, included the episodes "They Do It with Mirrors", "The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side", "4.50 from Paddington", and "A Pocketful of Rye" along with the bonus material "A Very British Murder, Part 2: Detection Most Ingenious".[20] Miss Marple: Volume Three, released June 9, 2015, included the episodes "A Caribbean Mystery", "At Bertram’s Hotel", " Sleeping Murder", and "Nemesis" along with the bonus material "A Very British Murder, Part 3: The Golden Age".[21]

References

  1. The New Bedside, Bathtub & Armchair Companion to Agatha Christie, Edited by Dick Riley and Pam McAllister. Ungar Publishing, New York 1979, rev 1986. "Christie on the BBC" Tennenbaum, Michael, p 339 ISBN 0-8044-5803-0
  2. 1 2 3 4 Agatha Christie: Murder in Four Acts, Haining, Peter, Virgin Books, London, 1990. ISBN 1-85227-273-2
  3. The Body in the Library (TV 1984) – IMDb
  4. IMDb – The Moving Finger (TV 1985)
  5. Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: A Murder Is Announced (TV 1985) – IMDb
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=r9Xa-cEZias#t=27
  7. Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: A Pocket Full of Rye (TV 1985) – IMDb
  8. The Murder at the Vicarage (TV 1986) – IMDb
  9. Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: Sleeping Murder (TV 1987) – IMDb
  10. IMDb – Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: At Bertram's Hotel (TV 1987)
  11. Miss Marple: Nemesis (TV 1987) – IMDb
  12. 4.50 from Paddington (TV 1987) – IMDb
  13. Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: A Caribbean Mystery (TV 1989) – IMDb
  14. A Caribbean Mystery is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie,
  15. They Do It with Mirrors (TV 1991) – IMDb
  16. The Mirror Crack'd (TV 1992) – IMDb
  17. 1 2 "Museum of Broadcast Communications". Museum.tv. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
  18. "Restoring classic BBC murder mystery Agatha Christie's Miss Marple". BBC Studios and Post Production, October 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  19. "Miss Marple: Volume One". BBC Home Entertainment. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  20. "Miss Marple: Volume Two". BBC Home Entertainment. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  21. "Miss Marple: Volume Three". BBC Home Entertainment. Retrieved 15 August 2015.

External links

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