Author:Agatha Christie,John Moffatt,Full Cast
The gruesome death of Mrs McGinty provokes Superintendent Spence to seek the help of his old ally Hercule Poirot. The victim's young lodger has been found guilty and is due to hang. But Spence is not convinced by the circumstantial evidence which influenced the verdict. So, at considerable personal discomfort, Poirot goes down to the sleepy village where the old lady lived and where, by chance, his good friend Ariadne Oliver is also staying. There he alights upon his first and most crucial clue - a newspaper article on the present whereabouts of women implicated in notorious murder cases. Did Mrs McGinty have to die because she had identified one of her neighbours as a brutal killer? Is that killer still at large, and can Poirot and Ariadne act swiftly enough to save an innocent man from the gallows? Agatha Christie's intriguing mystery is dramatised with a full cast including Julia McKenzie and George Baker. John Moffatt stars as Hercule Poirot.
Funny, poignant, interesting and charming. This is how life should be lived, (apart from where he nearly dies)
—— John O'FarrellAll the qualities which make Arthur Smith such a success on the stage are here... by drawing out the comedy in humdrum reality he keeps one constantly smiling
—— The ScotsmanThe loveable old codger rolls out his memoirs, full of so-barking-they-must-be-true stories of his youth and stand-up career
—— Metro...witty, self-aware and poignant
—— The Observer...it radiates a glow of whimsy and invention
—— Independent on SundayMy Name is Daphne Fairfax is a witty inside track on life's bigger themes: the mirage of fame, boredome, depression and death
—— The TimesSmith stands out among his generation for a willingness to keep pushing himself and experimenting with new forms of comedic expression ... Today's hottest young comics still see him as an inspiration
—— The GuardianWitty, engaging and unconventional . . . As funny and emotionally satisfying as a great stand-up performance.
—— Independent on Sunday