You're Dead to Me - Agatha Christie
Episode Date: May 19, 2023Sue Perkins and Dr Lucy Worsley join Greg Jenner to discuss the life of world-famous novelist, Agatha Christie. Agatha Christie is arguably the greatest ever crime novelist but her work has also perme...ated film, theatre and television over the past century. Christie also lived during an extraordinary period of modern history. Her life encompassed the end of the Victorian era, the two world wars and ended at the age of 85 in 1976. There was also much more to Christie the person: from unexpected sporting hobbies to a romantic life that had its fair share of heartbreak and harmony; her life off the page is as interesting as her novels are on it. Research by Jessica Honey Written by Emma Nagouse, Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow, Jessica Honey and Greg Jenner Produced by Emma Nagouse and Greg Jenner Assistant Producer: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow Project Management: Isla Matthews Audio Producer: Steve Hankey
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Hello and welcome to You're Dead to Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history seriously.
My name is Greg Jenner. I'm a public historian, author and broadcaster. And today we are hopping aboard the Orient Express to investigate the life and works of the queen of crime writing herself, Agatha Christie.
And to help us sift through clues and detect fact from fiction, I'm joined by two very special suspects.
Sorry, guests. Guests.
In History Corner, she's a historian, writer, BBC broadcaster and chief curator at Historic Royal Palaces.
She's the host of the fantastic BBC Sounds historical true crime podcast Lady Killers, a fantastic show that explores women who killed in history. She's also something of
a TV detective herself, solving historical myths on Royal History's biggest fibs. And Lucy Worsley
investigates, that's given away the name, hasn't it? She's the author of A Very British Murder,
and lucky for us, also the author of the recent biography, Agatha Christie, A Very Elusive Woman.
It's Dr Lucy Worsley. Welcome, Lucy. Hello. Thank you for having me.
Absolute pleasure. It's the crossover event of the year. And in Comedy Corner, she's a
renowned broadcaster, writer, actor, comedian. You name it, she can do it. You'll know her
from her iconic hosting skills on Just a Minute, Great British Bake Off, insert name here,
plus various marvellous travel adventures, documentaries and shows. She's even played
a contract killer in the show Hitmen,
which she co-created. So she knows her way around a crime scene. It's the sensational Sue Perkins.
Welcome, Sue. It's lovely to be here. No weapons, I assume? A couple are concealed,
but I don't like to talk about it. Okay, we're all friends. Okay, let's keep them concealed for
now. I've got the officer in my mouth. You're all right. Sue, last time we had you on, we were
gallivanting through unfamiliar territory, 17th century Istanbul.
It was interesting.
It was good fun.
But this one, I think, I reckon we're closer to home here.
I'm willing to bet the series budget, all £8.50, that you know your Agatha Christie's.
Love Agatha Christie.
Yeah?
Agatha Christie.
Christie.
Crispy.
Agatha Christie's another writer.
Agatha Christie kept me company during a pleasant bout of Glangela Fever
when I was sort of 14, 15.
I read all of them. All of them? Because that's the way my brain
works. Why do one when you can do it all?
I haven't read
most of them. I've read
a whole lot and I've still got them.
I've still got the full edition on my shelf.
That's amazing. I've read the 80
books as such but there are short
stories that got away from me. Oh, I've not touched the short stories. I've read the 80 books as such, but there are short stories that got away from me.
Oh, I've not touched the short stories.
Okay.
Or the marginalia, or the juvenalia, or any other alia.
I haven't touched them.
The interalia.
Okay, well, I guess two experts in the room then, and then me in the corner.
Thank you for thinking that 15 was in any way close in memory to me.
So, what do you know?
me. So, what do you know? So, this is the So What Do You Know? This is where I try to guess what you,
our lovely listener, might know about today's subject. And, well, I gather Christy is the best-selling fiction writer of all time. That's two billion books sold, billion with a B. She
wrote such total bangers as Murder on the Orange Express,
Death on the Nile, and then there were none. But with 73 novels to her name, it would be a Herculean task to name them all. That is a pun, sorry. And then, of course, there's the telly and
the movies. Maybe you've watched the dazzling David Suchet play Detective Poirot on TV,
or Kenneth Branagh's enormous moustache play Poirot on film, because let's be honest,
the moustache did most of the acting. Perhaps you've thrilled at the recent savagely dark BBC TV adaptations
written by Sarah Phelps, or maybe you've seen The Mousetrap in London's West End, because it is the
longest running play in theatrical history, 68 consecutive years until Covid ruined everything.
We all know Christie's deliciously dark and deadly stories, but who was the woman behind
the murder she wrote?
Let's find out. Dr Lucy, can we start with the childhood? I'm going to guess fairly cosy,
fairly comfortable. Agatha Christie is not yet Agatha Christie, but she is well to do. Is that
right? She was born into a family called the Millers in the very nice, very genteel seaside resort of Torquay in Devon on the
south coast.
And she had an unusual family because her father was this American.
He had inherited wealth.
So he was living the life of a gentleman of leisure on the English Riviera with Agatha's
English mum.
I say English.
Do you know, there was an awful lot of foreign influence in this family.
She had a German grandfather. So I think this is one of the things that makes Agatha a bit of an
onlooker in British society right from the very start. Anyway, they lived in this big,
lovely house in Torquay and they had lots of money until they lost it all. Frittered away.
The father was very good at shopping and not very good at earning.
Ah, yes, that is a problem, isn't it? You can fritter if you're adding back into the...
If you're replenishing, you can fritter away.
Yeah, you can fritter and then replenish, but you can't just fritter and then...
Fritter and flitter. It's not going to work.
Yeah, it's not... No.
Oh, dear. And siblings? Is Agatha a lonely little child on her own? Or has she got brothers and sisters?
She was an afterthought. So there was a's difference between her older sister and her older brother so she had the kind of vibe of an only
child and she looked up enormously to her sister whose name was madge and madge was a writer and
was really good at amateur dramatics and altogether a very sort of pretty witty, successful, intelligent person. Monty, I'm sorry to say, was a bad lot.
Oh, a cad, a bander.
A wrong-un.
Yes, yes.
Like quite a few characters in Agatha Christie's books.
So why was he a wrong-un?
What did he do?
I think that he bought in too much into the life of leisure
and frittering away.
Ah, the frittering gene.
Another fritterer.
Yes, yes.
He said the one thing that he didn't want to do with his life was work.
And he said that his main goal in life was flirting and locking about.
I'm warming to the guy.
Monty sounds like an absolute A-grade champ as far as I can tell.
Okay, so Agatha has these
two elder siblings who aren't really in the picture because they've
grown up and moved away. So
Sue, how are you imagining the little girl
Agatha Miller? Monty and Madge have gone.
Monty's gone off frittering, Madge has gone off to
grace a sort of amateur dramatic
stage. So I'm
imagining she, as you say, lived like an
only child in her head. She was a
created characters and was very fanciful
and occupied herself with stories and storytelling,
and that's how I like to think of her.
You're right. She was a great reader.
She taught herself to read against the wishes of her mother, in fact.
One day the nanny said,
I'm awfully sorry, ma'am, but Miss Agatha has taught herself to read.
So, OK, they'll give her a nanny,
but they won't give her the gift of literacy.
That's really odd, isn't it?
That's the Victorians.
Yes, well done.
Keep the girls with you.
Well, the trouble was that the older sister, Madge,
she had been educated.
She was sent to boarding school.
And when she came back from boarding school,
she had all sorts of terrible ideas.
She had thoughts.
Yeah, she had thoughts.
She had thoughts.
And she also came back possessing sexual magnetism.
Oh, wow.
Yes.
It's rare you come back from boarding school with that.
I mean, often it's sort of, you know, a cold sore in some sort of, I don't know, athlete's foot.
But sexual magnetism.
Yeah.
And the very worst thing that could happen to your daughter in the 1890s is that she could go to Cambridge.
Oh, disgusting.
I mean, honestly, the worst people go to Cambridge, right?
Absolutely.
The dregs. So, honestly, the worst people go to Cambridge, right? Absolutely, the dregs.
So, okay, she had ideas, she had thoughts, she had sexual magnetism,
and she was about to get a degree.
Disgusting.
Well, she wasn't allowed to go.
She was put onto the marriage market instead,
where she did very well and snagged a very rich man
with a very extensive country house.
Okay, so little Agatha is at home alone with a very impressive sister to emulate
and a slightly less impressive sister to emulate and a
slightly less impressive brother to emulate. You say the mother's not keen on the reading,
the writing, but a kind mother. Well, kind is perhaps the wrong word. A very intense mother.
Agatha in later life said that she felt that her mother had a sort of melancholy streak. She was
someone who felt things very deeply. And Agatha and her mother, Clara, her name was,
had this really deep, intense, almost spiritual relationship.
Agatha describes having a feeling that they were in touch through ESP kind of thing.
Wow.
Okay, so the mother is not cruel and Victorian schoolmoms, sort of, you know, chastising and...
No, possibly too loving, too clingy, perhaps.
And a woman of great power.
So we've established that Frederick the dad was a bit useless,
wasting the family fortune, etc.
It was definitely this mother, Clara, who was the moral centre of the household
and actually in charge of things.
It's interesting for me, if you look at Agatha's male relatives,
they're all a bit useless, but it's her sister and her mother who are clearly role models to emulate. actually in charge of things. It's interesting for me, if you look at Agatha's male relatives,
they're all a bit useless,
but it's her sister and her mother
who are clearly role models
to emulate.
But is the mum slightly using
the you can't get educated
as a way of keeping
the child in the house?
Like, so she doesn't have
empty nest syndrome,
so she's, you know.
Possibly, possibly that too.
Yes, yes.
Her father did try
to teach Agatha maths
on the dining table
after breakfast.
And I really wish that he had persevered because Agatha described herself as being a natural mathematician.
She said she would have liked to have done that as a job if she'd had a better education.
And we will discover that counting and money will be her Achilles heel as we go on.
But if she'd gone into heavy maths, I'm trying to think of a career, an actuary.
A scientist.
If she'd come and say,
it would have been
crime writings lost.
It would have.
It would have been a crime.
Yes.
Crime writing.
Yeah.
And we have also,
Agatha, as a young person,
her favourite drink,
is it neat cream?
And I say drink,
it's sort of a food,
it's sort of a drink,
it's sort of,
but this is something
that sticks with her
through life.
So I get the idea
of having a little girl
who never really grows up
maybe that's not fair
neat cream
I mean I could do a shot
but I couldn't
probably couldn't do
a whole thing
just one of those
spray cans
just out of the fridge
I've done one of those
well all of her life
she never enjoyed
the taste of alcohol
and if she wanted
to celebrate a success
she had a glass
of neat cream
wow
this was happening
into her 70s
into her 80s.
And she always loved eating and drinking.
It's one of the things I like about her.
She had a great enjoyment of food.
Once in a letter she wrote,
what is life without an orgy now and then?
Wow.
A woman after my own heart.
Bar the cream, bar the heavy cream.
I really don't want that after an orgy.
Let's keep it light, people.
But obviously we get the tragedy of the father dying.
So we have the mother, Clara, who's this very involved person and loving, perhaps a little too constricting, the father dying.
And that's tragic.
And that leaves the family with not much money.
Well, actually, that's not true.
With quite a lot of money, but not enough money for their status.
Is that right?
That's right.
When Agatha is 11, her father dies.
That's right. When Agatha is 11, her father dies.
And this is catastrophic on many levels, emotionally, but also financially, because now they're not able to live in the manner of the gentry, which is what they aspire to.
And from this point on, you begin to see this streak in Agatha that today I feel might get you diagnosed with depression by your doctor.
She talks about from this point having this recurrent nightmare,
which is the nightmare of the gunman.
And in her dream, her mother turns into this stranger,
a man who walks through the house with a gun and doesn't have a proper hand.
His hand has been replaced by a weapon.
And I think this sort of stands for her mother having become a stranger
in her bereavement and her grief.
But it's interesting how it's that she can't see that her mother
is now the authority figure.
She has to make him into a man.
But also it's framed immediately in that kind of violent criminal framework.
And I think it's important for a crime writer because in all of her stories,
somebody in the plot appears to be nice and normal.
Don't point at me.
Yes, somebody like your mother, your friend,
but really that person can sort of transform into a killer, into a gunman.
Oh, my goodness me.
So they're subsisting on £400 per year,
which now, of course, not enough.
Back then, 10 times the annual salary.
It's already a full wage now.
So they're comfortable, but they feel the pressure
because obviously they feel like they should be living higher up.
And that takes us up to an interesting moment
in Agatha's young life,
which is her sort of debutante coming out status,
you know, the fact that they're meant to introduce her
to the marriage market,
and they can't afford the lavish version that Madge has had.
So they're going to go for a budget option.
Sue, what is the budget option for a young Agatha Miller?
Well, it's sausage rolls and a registry office, isn't it?
But in terms of attracting the husband,
is that what you mean?
Well, where do they go?
Do they just go for a promenade?
Do they just go to the beach and just basically just walk her up and down and someone says,
all right, I'll take her off your hands?
What would they do?
So I guess you'd have a society ball if you had a lot of money and you'd have all the
sort of available young men turn up.
I'm saying just some discreet house visits from an arranged marriage.
That is what you would do on a budget.
I feel like their budget's a bit bigger because they go to, Lucy?
Cairo.
They go to Egypt.
You made me think it was really low budget.
Is that a thing at the time when you spent most of your money on getting a partner for your eldest?
You just randomly take the second or third to Egypt.
It's not random because in Cairo there are British garrisons
and a lot of British officers.
And while she's there, she spends three months in Cairo.
Agatha has to go to a dance five times a week.
And I love the fact that this is almost like...
That's work.
Yeah, it's like work.
You've got to put the hours in if you want to find a husband.
So this is 1908.
They've gone to Egypt.
I mean, that's a year's salary for Clara.
So they've blown the budget on this.
Yes.
Clara has dipped into savings to fund this trip to find her daughter the right kind of husband,
because that's obviously the goal of their lives.
And I guess the idea is she'll meet and marry somebody so wealthy that it will save Clara at the same time.
And the family's entire fortunes will be restored.
Monty can go back into the fold.
You got it.
Yeah. Speculate to accumulate, that sort of thing.
Yeah. And not only, I mean, the fascinating thing to me
is that there's this sort of joke about her being a very good dancer
if only she could talk.
It's a line that someone says, which seems a little harsh.
Well, Agatha Christie was, I believe if you'd met her,
a shy person.
She was reserved.
And she describes how during the drudgery of the nightly dance in Cairo,
she very slowly and painfully learnt to make small talk.
But she was never good at this.
It's one of the things that draws me to her.
I'm a shy person myself.
I feel the pain.
I feel the pain.
Me too.
So Madge is the sort of chatty, witty, out there vivacious
one and Agatha's more
bookish perhaps. Well, I don't
want to say totally nerdy
because she was tall
and blonde and beautiful and
very athletic.
She was a really good swimmer. She liked
roller skating. A lot of people have.
Yeah. And not only is she out there
trying to meet a fella, she's writing already.
She's 18 years old.
She writes her first novel, which is called what, Lucy?
It's called Snow Upon the Desert.
And it's not a detective story.
It's a kind of a Jane Austen type social satire that's basically laughing at all of these Britishers abroad in Cairo.
Posh people in the sun.
Yeah.
Okay.
But the novel doesn't get picked up.
But she does do quite well on the marriage market.
How many engagement offers do you think young Agatha Miller gets from her Cairo sojourn?
It's hard to know, obviously, without the numbers of people attending the dance.
And it's the same people going every night for five nights a week or a different crowd.
I mean, that could really...
I'd say seven.
I'm going to go for seven.
Yeah, it's not a bad guess.
It's nine.
Point of fact, the nine offers included when going to go for seven. Yeah, it's not a bad guess. It's nine. Point to the fact,
the nine offers included
when she was back in England.
Oh, okay.
They were all in Cairo.
I think she only got one in Cairo.
Oh, is it a disaster then?
Cairo's a failure.
But she comes back with a tan.
Is that what it is?
What do you do in that situation
where you've got nine offers?
Do you sit down in an evening?
Have they got a Victorian...
I'm trying to think what the name of the...
Is it daguerreotype?
Yes, the camera.
A daguerreotype of all the suitors that they've got laid out
and they pick one.
How do they do it?
Well, they come one after another,
so you can't sort of compare them all at the same time,
unless you get two at once, which is something that did.
Oh, hello.
On the same night?
No, she was engaged
to one when another one came along and she kind of had to choose between the two and one of the
engagements goes to clara on behalf of agatha so one of the suitors says to clara i'd like to marry
your daughter but doesn't actually mention this to to agatha and agatha's really cheesed off about
this she wants to receive her own proposals and then she gets rather efficient at getting rid of
them there was one young man who she turned down and she said, look, I'm not going to marry you. And really, it's an awfully silly
thing to go and propose to a girl like that. We've only known each other for 10 days.
That's quite...
She's very grown up, isn't she?
She's very grown up. But I just think of that poor lad, you know.
I know.
Plucking up the courage and then she just bats him off like that. There's a degree of sort of self-possession there.
I mean, as you say, not only from writing the books,
but the way that she's handling herself on this horrific sort of Cairo meat market.
There's this wonderful strong core of self-belief at the heart of her,
which we don't always see.
It gets sort of attacked and trampled down by the world,
but certainly she's a woman who knows what she wants.
She's engaged and then suddenly another one comes along
and she goes, actually, this one's better.
So the first chap is, is it Roger Lacey?
Is that right? Reggie Lucy?
He doesn't really matter
because he just disappears from the story.
He's out.
Yeah, yeah.
Reggie Lucy, he's gone.
She's at another ball back home at Devon this time
when in walks the 10th man and he's incredibly hot and he's an aeroplane pilot.
Yeah, that's hot.
And on top of this, he rides a motorbike as well.
Yeah.
Double hot.
It's Tom Cruise.
It's Maverick.
It's basically Tom Cruise.
Absolutely.
In 1913 as well.
I was going to say, yeah, but it's first gen Maverick.
It's not the second time around Maverick.
They've literally just invented the planes.
Yeah.
Beautiful.
So 1913.
His name is Archie.
Archibald Christie, generally known as Archie.
Christie, good surname.
And so he breaks the first engagement by his hot face and says, hey, come with me.
Get on the motorbike.
And off we go.
And Agatha says, yeah, all right.
Absolutely.
Bit of umming and erring and thinking about it.
But when the war breaks out, he goes off to France.
And when he comes back at Christmas, he's like, right,
we got to do it. I've seen things that make me think that we got to do it. So he insists that
the marriage is done and dusted in his Christmas leave of 1914. So the marriage starts with a war
in the way, which is a bit tricky. The most important thing I think from Agatha as a crime
writer is what she gets up to in World War One. Do you know? I don't, but so Land Girls is World War II, isn't it?
But presumably there's stuff going on for women.
Are they co-opted in any way into the war effort?
I mean, there certainly goes a little bit more freedom, I imagine,
because the lads are away in, well, I was going to say in trenches,
but I don't think Archibald was necessarily trench-based.
She's a VAD, a V-A-D. She's a volunteer nurse.
Ah, yes, yeah, yeah.
She enters four years of this really strange time in her life when she's a bad a vad she's a volunteer nurse yeah yeah she enters four
years of this really strange time in her life when she's married but not living with her husband
because he's advanced so she kind of goes on living a singleton's life and she volunteers to
work in the hospital that's set up in the in the which is perfect because this is where she learns
about strychnine and arsenic all the things that become her stock in trades.
Yeah, absolutely.
And we get her first detective novel written soon after this.
Is that, I mean...
Yes, she's working in this hospital dispensary
and while she's waiting for the prescriptions to come in
for her to mix up the poisons, she writes...
Medicines.
Yeah, very important we say medicines at this point.
And the death rate was very high.
Yeah, medicines.
Well, one of the things about poison that's fascinating,
medicine that's fascinating,
is that you only need a little bit too much
to take it from life-saving to life-ending.
So it's kind of on the edge the whole time, isn't it?
And she writes her first book that gets published,
which is called The Mysterious Affair at Stiles.
And it features a death by poisoning
and it also features a young lady who works in a hospital dispensary.
Yes.
And it also features a certain detective, Sue.
Well, this would be Poirot.
Poirot.
Yes, I was thinking it might be Marple, but yes, it's Poirot.
That's right.
And he is, I mean, for listeners who don't know him, he's a Belgian.
But that's, again, from the war.
From the war, yeah.
Sue, do you know this story?
I don't know, but I'm presuming it's from sort of Flanders
or somewhere, you know, sort of around,
I'm hoping that's in Belgium.
I'm not good on geography.
It's not so much to do with the war effort,
it's to do with refugees.
So Hercule Poirot, he's representing,
there's like a quarter of a million Belgian refugees
who flee Belgium in the First World War
and they come to Britain, right?
So this is Agatha again drawing on experiences
and what's happening in society.
But she's also writing against type.
She's a huge fan of Conan Doyle.
She loves Sherlock Holmes.
She doesn't want to write a hero who leaps over things
and is athletic and does karate.
I think this is linked to the fact that she is a woman
now living in a man's world, the world of the hospital,
the world of violence and death and saving life as well.
And she looks unfrettening, right?
And yet she has so much to offer that you don't know at first glance.
And the same is true of Hercule Poirot.
There's even a joke in his name.
You know, Hercules is a big, strong, classical hero.
But Hercule, it's diminutive.
It's camp, if you like.
And everybody underestimates Poirot because he has a foreign accent
and he looks a bit sort of small and ridiculous with his moustache
and he hasn't been to public school.
Yes, he's always dismissed.
There's always at least one character who's belittling him,
who's making some observation about the way he speaks
or the way he looks, little fat man.
And he's not active.
He's very passive, so he just recedes a lot, you know, and he's not active. He's very passive.
So he just recedes a lot, observes and then draws them together at the end, like the master ceremonies.
And I think this is a huge part of his appeal.
I mean, everyone will say they like Poirot.
But if you yourself are a bit of a geek or a nerd or a loner, then I find that people passionately love him for that reason.
I love that you looked at me there because, yes, let's be honest, geek and nerd, sure.
And in terms of professional success, she has a hit.
She has a book that sells well.
People are now aware of her as a writer.
The fascinating thing, actually, is the editor of the book makes one key change to the story.
Yes.
She goes in and she says, look, I think I should call myself by a man's name.
But he, being a commercially savvy guy, thinks
hang on, the war is over,
the world is changing, the world is
now ready for female
writers. So he says, no,
use your own name, call yourself Agatha Christie.
And also, of course, the famous scene at the end where
Poirot is meant to solve the case, he does it in a
courtroom, the editor says, I don't believe it.
Yes, yes, the problem was the
original ending had Pyro telling everybody
what had happened and giving the whole case away from the witness box.
And that's not legally, that wouldn't happen, that wouldn't happen.
So she had to go away and rethink it.
And she came up with this, you know, hallmark of the Christie world,
which is solving the case in a domestic situation.
In the lounge.
In the library. In the library.
Yeah, exactly.
So she's taking the story from the public sphere back into the world of women, the domestic
world.
Yes, because the drawing room is the sort of feminine space.
It's safe.
It's quiet.
It's cosy.
It's not a place where violence happens.
And that action is basically saying, look, women are now in control of this genre.
Get with it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's great.
What I love as well is it's not a procedural in the sense that the police are there,
but they're very much secondary or tertiary characters.
It's more this little domestic scene of a strange man who comes to the house for tea
and then observes everything and then draws them all together at the end for the revelation.
It's really interesting.
It is fascinating.
And it's a hit book, and that's obviously going to get her on the road to being a hugely successful writer.
But in terms of her private life, the marriage with Archie sours quite quickly.
She's trying to be a housewife, but he quickly gets bored. He's off with his mistress.
He's playing golf. He's away at the weekends.
He's gone a bit Monty.
He's gone full Monty. He's gone full Monty.
And so Agatha Christie is now Agatha Christie in terms of her writing.
But she's actually already suffering the slightly lonely life of the housewife who's been neglected.
Yes. One of the things I like about Agatha Christie's life is the way that she seems to stand in for the experience of so many other women in the 20th century.
And Archie, like so many other men, couldn't really settle down after the war, after four years in France.
And he got himself a job in the city. He didn't find it challenging.
He took up golf.
He got bored of his wife.
They had a little girl by this point.
Yes, Rosalind.
Which is a key, key fact.
And it's really hard to track this down through the archives,
but there are hints that he was uncomfortable.
It would have been surprising if he wasn't uncomfortable
with the fact that his wife was being so professionally successful
and earning all of this cash as well. She bought the house that they lived in.
But his job takes him around the world and he takes Agatha with him on this tour because he
works for a sort of British Empire style, hooray for the empire type festival. And off they go on
a huge tour. They go to Madeira, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand. It's nine months. And
while she's on the tour, she goes to Honolulu, where she discovers a new sporting passion. Sue, do you know what it is?
Well, I'd imagine it's Honolulu. I mean, I don't even want to say it because I can't
imagine it, but surfing?
Yes!
It is surfing.
Ridiculous. That's great. I love her even more.
Agatha Christie.
Oh.
Cowabunga, dude.
Yeah, absolutely. Catching some waves. Oh, that's amazing.
Yeah. So she's, as you say, she's sporty. She's athletic. She's modern in a lot of ways.
And yet she is still kind of trapped in the conventional marriage of a husband who plays golf and ignores her.
But we also then get this sort of leap forward in her writing career, which is writing book after book after book after book in the 20s.
And we get 11 books, I think it is, in 10 years, including some classic detective stories, some poetry, a novel, thrillers.
She's bouncing between the genres, Lucy. She's trying to figure out what sells. Is that fair?
In 1926, she publishes her absolute best book yet, The Murder of Roger at Croy. And this just
takes her up a level into the stratosphere. It's often voted as the greatest detective story ever
written. Yeah. Listeners, we're going to give a spoiler now
because we have to take Agatha Christie seriously as a writer.
So we have to talk about her techniques.
Sue, what is it about Roger Ackroyd that is genre defining or genre breaking?
I'm trying to remember which one it is now.
Is it, he's not, no, hang on.
That's, no, there were none.
If I say unreliable narrator to you.
Yes, of course.
So Lucy, we have the narrator of the book
who everyone is trusting as they read yes he's the killer yes it's like dr watson did it it's
it's that level of shock and surprise right yes there's that sort of confessional end didn't
there there's sort of basically sort of slowly changes changes key and and then there's this
yeah i remember now yeah and this is not an original idea
that Agatha has herself
this is an idea
that's been sent in
by two separate people
but she executes it perfectly
that's the thing about her
readers are sending her
in suggestions
this is Lord Louis Mountbatten
who sends her the idea
he says
I think it would be great
if a Dr Watson type character
I'll tell you what though Greg
he claims that he sent in the idea
so does her brother-in-law
yeah
and I think that
Agatha was thinking oh well I'll let them think that.
Do you think she's allowing it to happen?
Yeah.
Do you think it's guys just not allowing her to have her moments?
They mansplained her in work to her.
They retroclaimed it.
Yeah.
Well, maybe that's true because that's a classic Agatha Christie thing, isn't it?
Oh, yeah.
Just keep quiet.
Hide under a bushel.
But what's so important is that she executed the flawless writing.
You have no idea what is happening until you
at the end you go oh my word he did it
and that's the first time that we've had an unreliable narrator
in well it's a very
young genre at this point isn't it
it's a technique that goes back to 18th century novels
but it's the execution of the idea
in this context that's so brilliant
and it's also in the context of
in the 20s writers
are coming up with what they call the rules of detective fiction.
They're even codified in a kind of a jokey way.
And some people get cross because they think this is a breach of the rules.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I've read those rules.
Oh.
I'll tell you why I've read those rules.
When my dad passed away, I wanted to, we were unsure whether his dad was really his dad.
And I wanted to write a detective story
finding out, because weirdly
I looked up the rules of detective fiction
and one of them is
no twins. Yes. Oh.
My dad's an identical twin. Oh. And then
I said to my mum, well I'm going to do this, I'm going to
find out, because you cut a lock of his hair when he passed
away. And she went, no, you did.
And then I went, no unreliable narrators.
It was just really fascinating
then we got around to it in the end because we found out through lots of other means that he was
not illegitimate as he thought but i remember reading those rules and thinking oh the first
thing i want to do is play with those that's fascinating okay so there are hard and fast
rules already and agatha is breaking them well that's arguable you see um some people thought
that she'd broken the rules and that sort of gets her in the public imagination
a kind of a tinge of duplicity, trickiness.
But she said, no, I gave you all the information you needed.
And other writers, like Dorothea says, spoke up for her
and they said, nope, it was all fair.
And the next part of the story really is the most famous thing,
the most scandalous thing in some ways is the vanishing of Agatha. And I think we're going to leave this for now because I think Lucy's going to cover it
in the nuance window. But what we'll say is that there is a huge scandal in this period where
Agatha becomes a celebrity for the wrong reasons because she vanishes. The lady vanishes.
For 11 days.
We get then this successful writer who divorces her husband. She moves on from Archie.
You know, he's been cheating on her.
He's, you know, he's been playing golf, inverted commas, with a young lady.
And so how does Agatha get over Archie?
So this is 1928, by the way.
Well, I know she marries again.
So she could quickly move on as a way of getting her revenge.
Yeah.
Or she could just sell a shed load more books and enjoy her time briefly as a very successful single woman.
But I'm not sure how countless that would be in the late 20s.
I don't know.
Well, it's another adventure.
I mean, so it's not Honolulu surfing, but it is another trip.
Does she go base jumping in New York?
So she goes, does she go on a dig?
Because I know she goes on a, so where was she?
Probably gone back to Egypt or somewhere to go on a...
That's a good guess.
She goes back to Egypt later, doesn't she?
But at this stage, it's Iraq.
At the time, there was this archaeologist called Mr. Woolley
who was excavating the ancient city of Ur.
And it was super famous.
This was the archaeological sensation that everybody
wanted to go to see so she heard good things about it and she decided that she was going to travel
there on the Orient Express and see the thing for herself oh yeah wow and so it's Catherine and
Charles Woolley are the the sort of celebrity archaeology pair and their assistant is called? Max. Max Mallowan, who's just a young man.
He's 14 years younger.
He's dark.
He's quiet.
He's kind of diligent, gets on with stuff.
And the key thing is he's safe.
Never going to play golf.
Yeah.
But hit it off.
Yes.
Of course, since she was divorced, she's rich, she's famous, she's successful.
She's had all of these men hitting on her.
And I think she kind of relaxes into
a friendship with him because he doesn't appear to be at all threatening and he respects her brain
because he also has academic aspirations of his own but he has to convince he has to convince her
yeah and to get to agatha he has to get to the daughter too in terms of like convincing because
rosalind holds some cards here young Rosalind so how does Max
this kindly nice clever man convince a young daughter that he would be a good stepfather
he'd probably take them all on a trip wouldn't he or he'd reassure her in some way by he'd
entertain her in some way or give her gift her something or pay for something close to her heart
very good you're on the money uh Lucy? Well, there's a fabulous letter
which Agatha writes to Max saying, Rosalind, the daughter, has found out about the proposal
and she will give her consent to the marriage if you send her by return two dozen toffee lollipops
from Selfridges. Oh, that's marvellous. Please tell me she was sort of 21 at the time.
She was little, but that's brilliant.
She was 11.
I'm 40.
I can easily be brine with toffee apple.
You bring those in and I am yours.
I will do whatever you want.
You're right, you're right.
Max sent her 26 for luck, which is good.
So he's 26 toffee apples.
And Rosalind says, yep, I'm signing off on this.
That's fine.
You can get married.
All good.
So our newlyweds, they have an age gap.
So Agatha is 39, but she's lying about her age.
Now, this is all very complicated because they put false ages down
because they want to reduce what's this really countercultural age gap between them.
And the reason I have some respect for them as a couple is because it was like
Mrs. Thatcher and Dennis Thatcher.
You know, he had to put up with the fact that she was always the queen of crime
and was younger and had less
money and all of that and she kind of and this makes me a bit sad she kind of got around this by
worshipping him you know holding him up to the world as this fantastic man who was so clever
and she was sensitive to his feelings of you know inadequacy and that she perhaps overcompensated or
they were a couple that worked but they were an odd couple.
And I like that.
Yeah, they're an odd couple, but a warm couple.
And it's going to be a very successful marriage, which is a beautiful thing.
By the 30s, Agatha is a rock star in terms of earnings and stardom and books and output.
And she's rich now, like properly rich.
She's on to a second husband, she's she calls it her plutocratic
period oh that's marvelous yeah wow i'd love one of those yeah do we have any metric it's a modern
metric of how wealthy she was at the time oh this is always murky stuff yeah i do with the buying
power rather than the actual money but enough to own eight houses wow okay yeah yeah the thing was
she was publishing her novels,
and that's what we think of her doing.
But these novels were serialized in the newspapers.
And I think people don't realize what a sort of journalist she was,
in that sense, writing very quickly to order sometimes.
And then the books were published in America,
and they were serialized in the American newspapers too.
So it was going poof.
What she was perhaps not doing as she should have done
is keeping the records and paying the tax.
Yes.
And the 1930s not only is it a time of great lavishness for her,
she's buying these gorgeous houses and she loves doing them up.
She loves interior design and all that.
But creatively she's so fertile in the 30s in terms of the book.
I mean, the ABC murders, Murder on the Orient Express,
Murder in the Vicarage, the first Marple.
We get Murder in Mesopotamia, which I guess is...
Set in Iraq.
Yeah, set in Iraq.
You know, really we're now into the kind of golden age
of Agatha Christie as the crime writer.
Golden age for Agatha Christie.
And it's also generally known as the golden age of crime fiction.
Although today you always put a footnote and say,
apart from the racism, the sexism, the classism,
all the rest of it.
Yes.
And Rosalind, therefore, is slightly packed off to boarding school.
Is that fair?
Yes, Agatha Christie was a single working mum, basically, for her daughter's childhood.
And one of the things that, you know, you'll often hear it said Agatha Christie was a bad mother, sent the kid off to boarding school.
But the kid will learn sexual magnetism.
That's very true.
She's older, so that's good.
Yes, because she wasn't present in the way that her own mother had been.
Except, except, except, I don't personally think there's such a thing as a bad mum.
There are mums who have good days and mums who have bad days.
And what Agatha did was admit that the bad stuff happened and she wrote about it so people
you know they remember that they remember the negative stuff so rosalind's off to boarding
school and then to paris a sort of finishing school in paris and then you know classic obviously we've
got a an archaeologist here so i'll make the analogy but as with indiana jones the nazis
ruined everything world war ii has begun and world war ii is an incredibly interesting time for max
and agatha in terms of relationship because the blitz is happening and she has the lovely eight everything. World War II has begun. And World War II is an incredibly interesting time for Max and
Agatha in terms of relationship, because the Blitz is happening. And she has the lovely eight houses.
And suddenly, the houses go to... They all get bombed.
They get bombed, or they get given to sort of various Coast Guard and military units and school
boy evacuees to sort of live in. And she's going to go and live in the Blitz. She moves into the
Blitz. She does because she takes a job. She always had this great sense of public service
and she took a job at the London University College Hospital
and she went back to the dispensary.
Back to the poisons.
Yes.
Straight back to strychnine.
And Max, meanwhile, is in Cairo.
So he's in a war zone
because Cairo is going to be under attack from Rommel.
And she's in the Blitz.
I mean, she's literally being bombed.
Tail end of the Blitz, capture site, yeah.
But she moves into a very famous building
called the Isocon Building.
Oh, which I...
On Lawn Road.
Yeah, the Lawn Road.
I'm obsessed with it.
I love the design that came out of that.
Yeah, it's an incredible building.
Architecturally, it's modernism.
It's got a sort of central cafeteria.
I love it because it's full of Russian spies.
The KGB and various departments send spies in there
to the point that the Russians are spying on themselves because they don't realise
there are so many spies in there from different departments.
So it's MacArthur Christie, various artists
and loads of Russians.
She's writing through the war
and she's writing like an absolute
100 miles an hour writing, isn't she?
She's not getting on well without Max.
He was an essential support and he's off serving
in North Africa. So one of the ways
in which she keeps herself on something like like an even keel although it's very rocky is producing a huge number of
books so I mean you're a writer I don't know what a good day would be in terms of word count oh I
mean a good good day is actually doing some writing I mean I have terrible intention issues
and and uh yeah but um I can't sort of imagine how she must be churning out two a year at this
stage okay plus stuff yeah poems and essays and, as you say, stuff to order.
So for me, a good day of writing 3,000 words.
That's an amazing day.
Agatha Christie, 17,000 words a day for three days straight.
She writes a book in three days.
It's 54,000 words long.
So she's in almost like a fugue state when she's doing it.
Yeah.
Do we know if she'd plotted before?
Do we know the style of writing?
She's got it all in the memory bank and then she just runs it out.
This particular book, she says it was the book that she'd wanted to write all of her life.
She'd been planning it.
She'd been building up to it.
And this little glimpse of her at work like a demon for the three days,
I think is really important because we'll learn that when she's had her confidence
knocked by the mystery that we're going to come back to,
after that point, she never liked to talk about her technique.
She liked to downplay the fact that she was a professional writer.
But in this moment, when she produces a book in three days,
we catch her taking herself seriously.
And she did describe writing as a time when she felt close to God.
There was something really sort of spiritual about it for her.
So she's in flow, properly in flow in that time.
And what's interesting is this book is called Absent in the Spring
and it's not an Agatha Christie.
She writes under a pseudonym.
Do you want to guess the pseudonym?
What would your pseudonym be?
It depends how good the book is.
I mean, if it was good, I'd have something fancy,
if it was bad, Mel Gedroich, probably.
It's really annoying.
Is it...
Presumably she's still...
She doesn't use a masculine nom de plume.
She's...
No.
It's still a lady author.
A lady author.
Okay.
And it's...
Can I ask what the genre of the book is?
It's not a crime.
Is it romance?
It's an interesting question because conventionally these are said to be romances.
But I don't like that name for them.
I think if they were published today, you might well call them literary fiction.
Yeah.
They get put into a kind of woman's box.
Does she use her mother's maiden name?
Oh, close, yes.
Claire?
Not quite.
Lucy?
It's Mary Westmacott, which is her own...
I've heard of that.
Oh, OK.
I've heard of it. Now you've said that's wrong about Mary Westmacott. It's a own... I've heard of that. Oh, OK. I've heard of it.
Now you've said that's wrong about Mary Westmacott.
It's a mash-up of family names, basically.
Yeah, and that's classic Agatha Christie drawing from her own life,
slightly twisting it so you don't realise it's her.
She's writing this feverish book.
She's nearly bombed out.
I mean, her street is bombed, isn't it?
The Isocon building is nearly bombed.
Then the war ends and Max returns home safely,
and hooray, good for that. And Rosalind
has also had a real tragedy. Her husband has died, hasn't she?
Super sad, yes. Her husband had died after 18 months, I think, of marriage.
It's after D-Day, isn't it?
He'd gone into Northern France and left Rosalind with a little baby boy.
Matthew.
Matthew, that's correct. That's correct. So Agatha, his grandma, kind of rolls
up her sleeves and gets to work and helps out to bring up the baby. She even cooks the dinner.
And slightly later on, baby Matthew acquires a nanny. And the nanny's relatives say one day,
oh, yes, they'd like a writer called Agatha Christie. And the nanny says, oh, I know Agatha Christie. She's our cook.
Really?
Amazing, isn't it?
Oh, good for Agatha Christie, though, mucking in.
So Rosalind's new husband's called Anthony Hicks,
and he sort of becomes head gardener at Agatha's favourite home,
which is called Greenway, which you've been to, Sue.
I have.
I was doing a documentary, and we went there,
and the National Trust was in the process of removing
all of her furniture on that day in order to stop it falling down refurbish it yeah yeah and i had
this like sainted day this glorious sunshine looking at the river it's unbelievable and these
amazing plants because the victorian plantsmen had gone off and sort of gone to unan where they'd gone
and brought back all these amazing things. And they were in full tilt.
And it was just, it's an amazing house.
She had taste, that woman.
As a realtor, she was...
Well, we have these lovely letters of her being so excited
to buy sort of chests of drawers and wardrobes.
She really loves going shopping for things she doesn't need.
She does.
And the way this fits into the 20th century more broadly
is that this is the 1950s,
which people think of as the age of the happy homemaker.
And this is the one time in her life when Agatha Christie lets up a bit on the work
in order to have the pleasure of decorating and going shopping mad
and refurbishing Greenway.
And I think, I mean, Greenway is her favourite home probably.
It's also probably today where the fans might go as a bit of a pilgrimage.
But also this decade, the late 50s into the 60s,
is when the movies and TV shows start to happen.
The Agatha Christie sort of transfer to the screen.
Well, there's two things that happen really,
and it's interesting that you didn't even say.
There's the age of her as a playwright.
She was the Queen of the West End,
and people have really forgotten that today.
They think of her as a novelist.
But before the films come, The Mousetrap and Witness for the Prosecution,
which are both going to be performed in London tonight.
Yeah.
And I think it's fair to say that she's history's most performed female playwright.
But The Mousetrap is 1958 and until Covid came along,
was the longest running play in the history of the world.
And I think it was racking up nearly 30,000 performances before COVID broke it.
And still nobody knows how it ends.
Everyone's kept the secret.
Well, you might.
I've not seen that one.
But we get 1961, the first MGM movie.
And then they start to sort of churn them out.
And we end up with a murder on the Orient Express, which I think is like the biggest ever smash in 1974 in the British box office.
But we also get the tax crisis because in the 70s and 60s, like because the tax rate is 83 percent, the top rate.
And so Agatha gets some.
She gets some tax issues, Lucy.
Yes. The reason that she sells the rights to make films of her books to MGM Studios.
She doesn't want to do this because she won't be in control, right?
And we've established that she's a control freak.
The reason she does this is partly because she's run up
these massive, massive back tax bills going right back to the 1930s.
And members of her family say, look, become a tax exile.
But she doesn't want to do that.
She sort of feels like she has to keep on working.
But she's got such an ambivalent mixed up attitude,
because as we know, also her work is really important to her for her mental health.
Okay, so 51% of her rights are sold, that clears the tax bill. And also, I suppose there's an
element there that she's got all these people around her who orbit her. I mean, she's a
superstar. So she must have agents and managers and editors and people who need her to keep writing
books so they can have
their nice homes. It's true. It's true. And one thing that's quite cool is that she gets the
company to buy her a Rolls voice. Oh, okay. That's nice. Agatha Christie just showing up in the Rolls.
That's sweet. She deserves that. She can write a book in three days. She can have anything she
wants. Yeah. I mean, that's absolutely astonishing work rate. And as you say, you know, theatre, radio plays, novels, the Mary Westmacott books, this is a prodigious output of quality
work. And I think some would say her work slightly reduces in quality towards the end of her life,
some would say, which is a little bit harsh. But I think the thing is that she's just incredibly
rich and fertile in her ability to just tell stories. But she does,
sadly, of course, die in the end in 1976. She's 85. It's been a long and happy life.
Does Max survive her? He does. He's with her when she dies. He was pushing her in her wheelchair
into the drawing room just after lunch. And he was by her side where he'd been since 1930. And he couldn't live alone.
He did quite quickly get married to a family friend. He was one of those people who couldn't
survive being not part of a couple. That's okay. You know, 46 years of marriage.
There's no judgment there. No, absolutely not. And so in total, I think we've got, I mean,
73 novels, 30 plays for stage TV, radio, 26 collections, three books of poetry, an autobiography in two volumes, which was published after her death, which is interesting.
She had also put a couple of her, I think she put a couple of novels in a safe during the war in case she was killed as a future pension plan for the family.
So at the end of her life, there is this sort of commemoration in the West End.
They dim the lights in the West End
on the night that she dies.
Yes, for the mousetrap
and also the other play that was running then,
which was The Murder of the Vicarage.
Yeah.
So she became a bit of an institution.
She is an institution.
I feel like she's part of the wallpaper
in the back of a lot of British people's minds.
They don't realise quite what an interesting, slightly mixed
Quite counter-cultural.
Yeah. Counter-cultural figure that she was. Yeah.
And she'd also given a farewell for her famous character Poirot. So she had these two great
detectives, Marple and Poirot.
The Curtain, is it?
Curtain. That's it. His final novel where he dies and in acknowledgement of the incredible
stature of the character, the New York Times gave him an obituary.
On the front page.
Front page obituary for a fictional character.
It never happened before.
It's a very sad and poignant farewell, isn't it?
But, you know, this is...
So long.
But she'd created these two brilliant characters,
both of whom are detectives who are always underappreciated.
You know, Marple is a little old lady who everyone ignores.
Hercule Poirot, the Belgian foreigner who everyone ignores. There's a sense there that she liked to write
quite subversively. But also, I think, ending him, in a way, kind of still gives her control
so that he's not sort of boundless in the public's imagination. There's a sort of finite
point which he reaches so that she gets to sort of, yeah, author that and curtail any sort of
possible sequels without her consent. That's interesting. You're so right. And the reason
that her autobiography was only published after her death is that she didn't really want to
publish it. The reason she was working on it was so that her agent could say when people said,
can I write Mrs. Chrissie's biography? He could say, no, she's writing her own.
I mean, Sue, obviously you read all those novels
when you were 14-15. Yes which was a long time ago. A long time ago but I wanted to ask you why
do we love Agatha Christie novels so much because when you're on the face of them they are full of
cruelty and violence and deceit and they are subversive and they are threatening. Yes and
equally they're also as you I mean I imagine if I read them now, they would
also be challenging in the sense that they represent very old fashioned and sometimes
unpalatable kind of tropes. But for me, the reason they endure is they ask something of the reader.
You know, you're very much brought in as, can you do this? Can you work this out? She's always
very clear that it's been laid out that everything is there to find however
sometimes it's very very hidden but also she she earns i think the right for you to sort of
schlep through some perhaps not so good ones because she has genuinely written three or four
books which have plots so masterful and game-changing that that people endlessly want
to recreate them in film and television you know know, Orient Express, and then there were none.
As you were saying, the murder of Roger Ackroyd.
They're all game-changing sort of Rubik's Cube twists
in the way that people view the crime novel, I think.
Yeah, and there are elements of her writing which we now find very shocking.
You know, racism, anti-Semitism, the use of the N-word.
But there are also a lesbian couple at the heart of the book.
Yes.
Just after the war and a murder is announced,
there is a same-sex couple living happily in the village.
Nobody bats an eyelid.
And you can see as she gets older,
you can see her own attitude slowly changing.
She gradually liberalizes her views on, say, people from
Iraq who develop into characters
more in some of the later books.
And if you read them purely
as entertainment, then yes, they come with a health
warning. But if you're reading them as a historical
source or as a great work
of literature, like Dickens or
Shakespeare, then you're going to be prepared for the fact
that these are views of the world in the
past. The Nuance Window!
Well, it's time now for The Nuance Window.
This is where Sue and I drink gallons of neat cream and we allow Dr Lucy to talk for two
uninterrupted minutes to tell us something that we need to know about Agatha Christie
and the famous vanishing, which is a very famous story.
But I think, Lucy, you'd like to recontextualize it and look again.
And a quick content warning, listener, this will mention self-harm.
So if that's not something you want to hear, then skip ahead to the quiz.
Okay, Lucy, my stopwatch is ready.
Take it away.
In 1926, Agatha Christie disappeared for 11 days,
and she was discovered living under a false name in a hotel in Harrogate.
And at the time, and since the time, a lot of people will tell you that she did this either to get publicity for her books or to frame her cheating husband with having murdered her.
And this is often still spoken of as a mystery because people got caught up in this event at the time
that was in all the newspapers.
The sad truth is that she explained exactly what had happened
in an interview to the Daily Mail.
So it's not a mystery at all.
The thing is people didn't want to hear what she had to say
because it was distressing, it was difficult to hear.
She said that after her husband's betrayal, she began to experience suicidal thoughts.
And she made an attempt on her life.
She tried to crash her car that night in December 1926.
And after that, she went into what's called a fugue state, which is where you set aside your normal self and your trouble and your trauma.
And you adopt a kind of
different imaginary persona so when she was in harrogate this at the time was a place of health
and medical treatment and an obvious place for her to go she was living under a false name to
protect herself from the reality of her situation so the mystery of what happened in the 11 days
isn't a mystery at all agatha was really ill and she was doing what she could to make herself better.
I just find that really awful that a woman of that time and perhaps still of this time,
society around her finds it more palatable to create this sort of dangerous dark mythology
around her than accept that women are very, very damaged as are men in unfaithful, unhappy,
difficult and traumatic relationships.
Because as you say, it was published and no one wanted to see it
because it had to come with this sort of corona of sort of mystery and intrigue.
No, it's just basic human emotions.
And she was just sad and tired and messed up.
And it makes me very, very sad for her because that sort of disassociation
of personality must have been caused by years of trauma and grief and pain.
Yeah.
And part of the historical context was that we're just after World War I.
If people had heard of fugue state, it was because they'd heard about soldiers going into this state.
Shell shock, it was called.
But that was associated with shirking, right?
So when she did come out and say, I was in a fugue state, I lost my memory.
People thought, oh, yes, we know all about that then.
Yeah, cowardice.
It's the idea of, yeah, you're not stepping up.
Yeah, it's very sad, isn't it?
And it's really fascinating.
And your book goes into much more so richly.
If people want to read it, they should.
So what do you know now?
which if people want to read it, they should.
So what do you know now?
It's time now for our quiz.
This is a So What Do You Know Now?
We have our quickfire quiz.
Ten questions for Sue.
Sue, are you feeling the pressure?
I am now, actually, yes.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Yeah, that's okay.
We've had a lovely chat.
We have.
Let's spoil it now with a quickfire quiz.
Sorry. The format demands it. Listen, I it now with a quickfire quiz. Sorry.
The format demands it.
Listen, I understand.
The procedure is as it must be.
Okay, so we have ten questions.
Here we go.
Question one.
What was Agatha Christie's mother called?
Clara.
What's Clara?
Question two.
What was Agatha's favourite drink through childhood and adulthood?
Neat cream.
Oh, yeah.
Question three.
Who was Agatha's daughter with her first husband, Archie? That was...
I know her name.
I know her name.
Rosalind.
Yes, very good.
Question four.
Where did Agatha volunteer during the First World War?
She volunteered at the University College Hospital
where she worked in the dispensary.
That's the Second World War.
First World War.
She was at the dispensary again.
Yes, in Torquay.
In Torquay, yeah.
I'll let you have that.
Question five. Which Poirot mystery released in 1926 First World War. She was at the dispensary again. Yes, in Torquay. In Torquay, yeah. I'll let you have that.
Question five.
Which Poirot mystery released in 1926 caused controversy with its unreliable narrator?
The murder of Roderick Royd.
Yes.
Question six.
Where was Agatha Christie eventually found after her disappearance in 1926?
In Harrogate.
Question seven.
What pseudonym did Agatha Christie use to write a series of novels during the 1930s and 40s?
Mary Westmacott.
Yep.
Question eight.
While Agatha and her first husband, Archie, were travelling in Honolulu, what sport did she discover?
Surfing, dude.
Oh, yeah.
Question nine.
Why did Agatha sell 51% of her Agatha Christie Limited company to Booker Books?
Because she had a massive tax bill.
Massive tax bill.
And this for a perfect ten.
Agatha Christie died in 1976.
How was she commemorated in the West End that night?
They dimmed the light.
They did.
10 out of 10.
Never in doubt, Sue Perkins.
Honestly, extraordinary stuff.
Thank you so much, Sue.
I'd like to say a huge thank you to our guests in History Corner.
We have the murderously magnificent Dr. Lucy Worsley.
Thank you, Lucy.
You charmer.
And in Comedy Corner, we have the fatally funny Sue Perkins.
Thank you, Sue.
Pleasure.
Loved it.
And to you, lovely listener, join me next time as we apply our little grey cells to another historical mystery.
But for now, I'm off to go and order a giant crate of toffee lollipops.
Bye.
You're Dead to Me was a production by The Athletic for BBC Radio 4. The research was by Jessica Honey.
This episode was written by Jessica Honey,
Emmy Rose Price-Goodfellow,
Emma Neguse and me,
and was produced by Emma Neguse and me.
The assistant producer was Emmy Rose Price-Goodfellow,
the project manager was Isla Matthews,
and the audio producer was Steve Hankey.
Hello, I'm Lucy Worsley, and I want to tell you about Lady Killers from BBC Radio 4.
It's a programme that mixes true crime with history, but with a twist.
With our all-female team of experts, I am re-examining the crimes committed by murderesses in the past through the eyes of 21st century feminists.
What can we learn from these women and would it be any different today?
Lady Killers. Listen first on BBC Sounds.
on BBC Sounds.