Vicars, tennis and a black sleuth… it would be a mystery if the BBC hadn’t updated Agatha Christie | Martha Gill

Murder is Easy provoked outrage but the Queen of Crime was in safe hands in a fresh adaptation for a modern audience

Has there ever been so much fuss about an Agatha Christie adaptation? This year’s dose of Christmas homicide, Murder is Easy, has now received a pasting in the Mail, the Telegraph and the Spectator.

The problem? A black actor, David Jonsson, has been cast in the lead role. But it’s not the casting so much as the context that has offended commentators – he has been reimagined as a Nigerian immigrant, on his way from a position in the Colonial Office to a job in Whitehall. This version is set in the 1950s (the book was published in the 30s) and there are touches of contemporary racism – when the hero enters a pub, it falls dead silent. The local doctor is the proud owner of a tract entitled Race Hygiene: A Campaign to Create a Master Race. There is a scene where Jonsson’s character is told by a friend that he is “collaborating with his oppressors”. Continue reading...


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