Author:Agatha Christie,June Whitfield,Joan Sims,Ian Lavender,Full Cast
Elspeth McGillicuddy is down from Scotland for a holiday and boards the 4:50 train from Paddington station to visit her friend, Miss Marple. During the journey, another train pulls alongside, and through the window Mrs McGillicuddy witnesses a tall, dark man strangling a blonde woman. She reports what she has seen, yet no one takes any notice. There is no report of any murder, no dead woman found on any train, and the police have no record of any persons reported missing that match the description. Only Miss Marple believes her account, and realising that the body must have been thrown off the train, with the help of maps and train timetables she pinpoints the exact spot where the body must be. With the help of her young friend Lucy Eyelesbarrow, she goes about the tricky task of uncovering a murder - and a cunning murderer... Agatha Christie's intricate mystery is dramatised with a full cast including Ian Lavender as Inspector Craddock, Joan Sims as Mrs McGillicuddy and Susannah Harker as Lucy Eyelesbarrow.
...an intimate portrait of one of the world's most famous women. A fine tribute to a true star
—— Waterstone's Books QuarterlySpoto tells her story movingly and well
—— Sunday ExpressSpoto was a close friend of Kelly's, so this is as definitive a biography as we will ever get
—— S, Sunday Express magazineDrawing on previously unpublished conversations, Spoto explores how Kelly changed Hollywood
—— Harpers BazaarKelly's life as told here reveals a gentler Donald Spoto than we're used to: his friendship with the star has ensured a generosity of judgement throughout...Some may yearn for a less sympathetic portrait, but it's hard to imagine that any subsequent biography could do such consummate justice to her life and career
—— The TimesSpoto turns a fresh eye on the well-known story bringing it alive for a new generation of readers
—— Wales on SundayMeyers is very good
—— Catholic HeraldOne of the least likely liaisons in showbiz, the marriage between Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller followed a predictable trajectory which Jeffrey Meyers illuminates with fascinating filigree.
—— Independent