It's 1936, and we are transported to Gull’s Point, a coastal estate where British tennis star Nevile Strange (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) decides it’s just another day at the beach to go on holiday with his ...
BBC viewers were left in shock by the racy scenes on display in the second episode of the three-part 'slow burner' adaptation ...
Fans of Agatha Christie's iconic murder mysteries should seek out a long-running cozy crime drama that blends character ...
Set in 1936, this has tennis champ Nevile Strange (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) in the middle of a messy divorce that is playing out ...
Introduced as a radio play called “Three Blind Mice,” “The Mousetrap” opened in 1952 at the Ambassador Theatre in London, ...
Agatha Christie's BLACK COFFEE will be presented on the Main Stage at the Pieter Toerien Theatre at Montecasino in May. Learn ...
Leave any expectations of subtlety or restraint at the door, says Phil Harrison, and there’s plenty to enjoy in the BBC’s new ...
(Eight episodes) As Clarke Peters' lawyer Mr Treves explains at the beginning of this three-part Agatha Christie adaptation, a murder does not begin with the body, there is a moment of origin ...
"Mac has a bit of a troubled past and as with all Agatha Christie characters he’s has a secret which unravels slowly during the story. He’s quite a stoic, quiet, man of few words, but ...
Lovely to have a proper old school period Agatha Christie mystery back on Sunday nights on BBC1. This is what being English is all about. And what a fine adaptation of Christie’s classic tale ...
It is a whodunnit that is even more cryptic than usual - as the opening TV episode does not begin with a murder.