MURDER ON THE NILE

 

By Agatha Christie

 

Performed at The Mountbatten Theatre in December , 1985

 

CAST in order of appearance

1st Beadseller

David Bartlett

2nd Beadseller

Adrian Clark

Steward

Alan Watson

Miss Ffoliot-Ffoulkes

Mollie Manns

Christina Grant

Jan Ward

Smith

Malcolm Douglas

Louise

Hazel Burrows

Dr. Bessner

Harry Tuffill

Kay Mostyn

Lynda Edwards

Simon Mostyn

Chris Williams

Canon Pennefather

David Pike

JacqueLine De Severac

Belinda White

McNaught

David Bartlett

 

For the Maskers

Director

Pete White

Designer

Graham Hill

Stage Manager

Joy Wing.Field

Assistant Stage Manager

Keith Hooper

Lighting

Sue Gunningham, Clive Weeks

Sound

Lawrie Gee

Costumes Designed and Created By

Janet Cairney

Properties

Janine Groombridge, Angela Barks

Set Construction

Roger Lockett, John Riggs, Mike Johnson, Dave Allen

Special Effects

Tony Lawther

Hair by

Robbie Manns

 

Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie is known throughout the world as the ‘Queen of Crime’. Her seventy-seven detective novels have been translated into no less than one hundred and three languages and her sales are calculated in hundreds of millions.

 

 She began writing at the end of the First World War when she created, in Hercule Poirot, the most popular sleuth in fiction since Sherlock Holmes.

 

Theatregoers have proved just as eager as the reading public to match wits with Mrs Christie. The first of her many stage whodunnits was Alibi in 1928 and for the next fifty years adaptations, original plays and revivals kept the Christie name in lights. In 1953 she had three productions The Mousetra, Witness for the Prosecution and Spider’s Web all running in London’s West End at the same time. After thirty-three years, The Mousetrap is still playing to packed houses and making theatrical history.

 

Murder on the Nile is one of Mrs Christie’s earlier plays, originally entitled Murder under the Moon. In 1956, in response to public demand for more novels featuring Hercule Poirot, she adapted the stage play into a novel under the title of Death on the Nile, re-working the plot to include the “little Belgian detective”.  It was this version which was later further adapted into the film of the same name. The film was completed after Agatha Christie’s death in 1976.

 

Postscript

Agatha Christie’s own life had one episode which might have been drawn from her own devious imagination when, in December 1926, she mysteriously vanished. Missing for ten days, she turned up at a health resort suffering from ‘amnesia’ and registered under the name of her husband’s mistress. Her disappearance has never been satisfactorily explained.