When you think of David Suchet’s Poirot the first thing that probably springs to mind is his iconic moustache.

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But for Suchet, getting the walk right was pivotal for the role.

“When I did a film test – before I even started the programme – the producer and I agreed I walked too much like David Suchet and I said to him, ‘I remember that somewhere Agatha Christie describes his walk,” Suchet tells Radio Times magazine.

Suchet adds, “I went home that night and I searched and I searched… How I came across it I will never know but I wrote it down and I have memorised it virtually word for word.”

He leans forward and enunciates with theatrical deliberation: “’Poirot crossed the lawn in his usual, rapid, mincing gait, with his feet tightly and painfully enclosed within his patent leather boots’ And that’s it!”

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Not that this is Suchet’s only inspiration – Laurence Olivier had a rather interesting approach to a similar task. Suchet explains, “When he was playing a fop in a Restoration play he put a penny in the crack of his bottom and walked and wouldn’t let it drop. If you do that, you can’t walk fast, so I did the same thing.”

Does this mean Suchet walked around with a penny in his bottom for the entire run of Poirot? “No, but what I made myself do when I wanted to walk like Poirot was to squeeze my bottom. That makes you walk with short strides and that’s all I do. If you think of Poirot and how he walks – that precise little thing is very much who he is. He is not a man of broad, relaxed gestures.”

Mystery solved, eh?

Poirot continues Wednesday 8:00pm, ITV

Read the full interview in the Radio Times magazine, on sale today

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