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Arthur Hastings

Captain Arthur J. M. Hastings, OBE, is a fictional character created by Agatha Christie as the companion-chronicler and best friend of the Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot. He is first introduced in Christie's 1920 novel The Mysterious Affair at Styles (originally written in 1916) and appears as a character in seven other Poirot novels, including the final one Curtain: Poirot's Last Case (1975), along with a play and many short stories. He is also the narrator of several of them.

Arthur Hastings
Hugh Fraser as Hastings
First appearanceThe Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920)
Last appearanceCurtain (1975)
Created byAgatha Christie
Portrayed byRichard Cooper
Robert Morley
Jonathan Cecil
Dmitry Krylov
Hugh Fraser
In-universe information
OccupationArmy Captain (ex), secretary, rancher
SpouseDulcie Duveen (1923-unknown; her death)
ChildrenTwo unnamed sons[1]
Grace[1]
Judith
RelativesA sister
Two grandsons
ReligionAnglicanism
Nationality British
Birth date and placeabt. 1886[2] (30 in 1916)
United Kingdom

Literary function edit

Hastings is today strongly associated with Poirot, due more to the television adaptations than to the novels. Many of the early TV episodes of Agatha Christie's Poirot were adaptations of short stories, in most of which he appeared in print. A few were stories into which he had been adapted (for example, Murder in the Mews). In Christie's original writings, however, Hastings is not in every short story or novel. He is not a character in either Death on the Nile or Murder on the Orient Express, the two best-known Poirot novels. Of the twenty-two Poirot novels published between 1920 and 1937, he appears in seven. Moreover, when Christie expanded The Submarine Plans (1923) as The Incredible Theft (1937), she removed Hastings.

Hastings appears to have been introduced by Christie in accordance with the model of Sherlock Holmes's associate, Doctor Watson, to whom he bears a marked resemblance. Both narrate in the first person, both are slow to see the significance of clues, and both stand as a form of surrogate for the reader. There are even similarities of role: Hastings is Poirot's only close friend and the two share a flat briefly when Poirot sets up his detective agency. Similarly to Watson, Hastings also has a penchant for speculation and gambling, as well as a military background in the colonial Middle East. The presence of Chief Inspector Japp, a close "literary descendant" of Holmes's Inspector Lestrade, fleshed out Christie's adoption of the Holmes paradigm.

In the novels, Hastings's literary function changes with Poirot's method. In the earlier phase of his career, Hastings is valued for his imaginative approach to cases, inevitably giving rise to fanciful hypotheses that Poirot gently mocks. Poirot himself characterised Hastings thus in "The Mystery of the Spanish Chest" (1932): "How my dear friend, Hastings, would have enjoyed this! What romantic flights of imagination he would have had. What ineptitudes he would have uttered! Ah ce cher Hastings, at this moment, today, I miss him..." Later in her career, Christie's apparatus is less fanciful and the opportunity for wild speculation much diminished. When the need for a sidekick arises in the later novels and stories it is either as:

  • a suspect;
  • Miss Lemon, who, in direct contrast with Hastings, is completely unimaginative;
  • Mr Satterthwaite: a great observer of human nature who avoids passing judgments;
  • Ariadne Oliver: a crime novelist who opened to Christie the opportunity for self-satire.

Although Hastings remains the most popular of Poirot's sidekicks, his appearance in only eight of the thirty-three Poirot novels indicates that the character's service to Christie's literary purpose was somewhat limited.

Career edit

Similarly to his friend Poirot, details of Hastings's life before 1916 are not revealed, though the reader is able to pinpoint Hastings's approximate birth year as 1886 from the first chapter of The Mysterious Affair at Styles, as he mentions that John Cavendish was 'a good fifteen years [his] senior' though hardly looking 'his forty-five years'. This makes Hastings thirty years old at the start of the novel. It is also mentioned later on that he was employed at Lloyd's prior to the war. Neither his first name nor his rank is mentioned in this novel. Elsewhere he states that he attended Eton College.[3]

Hastings meets Poirot in Belgium several years before their meeting on 16 July 1916,[4] at Styles Court, Essex, which is their first encounter in literature.[5] The two remain friends right up to Poirot's death. Although there is little evidence regarding their possible subsequent meetings, Hastings saw Poirot a year before the latter's death.

Hastings, while being no great detective himself, serves Poirot in many ways. A former British Army officer in World War I, he is brave. He has courage and is often used by Poirot for physical duties such as catching and subduing a criminal. Poirot likes to tease Hastings about being dim-witted at times, but he clearly enjoys the Captain's company. In The Mysterious Affair at Styles and The A.B.C. Murders, Hastings plays a prominent role in the resolution of the mystery, with a casual observation that leads Poirot to the guilty party: In the case of the former, by mentioning that Poirot had to straighten some spill holders and ornaments in Styles, he prompts Poirot to realise that someone had moved them, causing Poirot to discover a crucial piece of evidence. In the case of the latter, he suggests that the error in recipient address of a letter by the murderer was deliberate, thus causing Poirot to realise the murderer had attached greater importance to that particular murder.

Hastings represents the traditional English gentleman—not too bright but absolutely scrupulous, a throwback to the Victorian-era gentleman who is always concerned about "fair play". Hastings himself notes that he is somewhat old-fashioned. While Poirot, who is not above lying, surreptitiously reads other people's letters or eavesdrops, Hastings is horrified of such acts and usually refuses to perform them to help Poirot in one of his cases. Although he lacks Poirot's intellect, Poirot often compliments Hastings' ability to remember facts and details about their cases even if he deplores the manner in which Hastings tells the story at times. Hastings' physical appearance is rarely described in the novels because he is often the narrator. However, it is mentioned that he, like Poirot, has a moustache which becomes a target of the detective's criticism in Peril at End House: 'And your moustache. If you must have a moustache, let it be a real moustache, a thing of beauty such as mine.'[6] Although he has served in the army, Hastings is not a violent man by nature, with Poirot noting during his final letter to Hastings in Curtain that he knows that Hastings is not a murderer.

Relationship with women edit

Hastings has a soft spot for auburn-haired women. Back in The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Hastings was charmed with auburn-haired Cynthia Murdoch and proposed to her. This would become a running gag in the series, with Poirot often teasing Hastings. Whenever Hastings suggests the innocence of a young, beautiful, female murder suspect, Poirot slyly asks "Does she have auburn hair?" [7] This pronounced weakness for pretty women with auburn hair gets Hastings and Poirot into trouble more than once: in The Big Four, while posing as secretary for millionaire Abe Ryland, Hastings trusts false information from a woman with auburn hair, while in the short story Double Sin, Hastings believes auburn-haired Mary Durant.

Despite his preference for auburn hair and his Victorian ideas about not marrying outside one's class, he eventually falls in love with a dark-haired music-hall actress, singer and acrobat Dulcie Duveen, the self-styled 'Cinderella'. They meet in the story The Murder on the Links, the second full-length Poirot novel. Poirot plays a rather significant part in uniting the couple. Hastings then acquires a ranch in Argentina and settles down to a life as a ranchholder.

Later appearances edit

Hastings's appearances in Poirot's later novels are restricted to a few cases in which he participates on his periodic returns to England from Argentina. Poirot comments in The ABC Murders that he enjoys Hastings's visits because he always has his most interesting cases when Hastings is with him. In the course of The Big Four, Dulcie's life is threatened by members of an international conspiracy. Hastings is forced to risk Poirot's life in return for her promised safety. In other respects there is very little personal detail regarding Hastings in these novels, until Curtain: Poirot's Last Case, which takes place after World War II: with his wife now dead, Hastings rejoins Poirot at Styles to help tackle one last case. The novel culminates with Poirot dying of a heart attack, leaving Hastings a confession explaining his role in events as he tracked a criminal who manipulated others to commit murder for him. Poirot's friendship with Hastings is further referenced when the murderer's attempt to manipulate Hastings in such a manner leaves Poirot resolved to kill his adversary, despite his disapproval of murder, as he knew that his friend would normally never do such a thing.

Final appearance edit

Curtain provides additional details on Hastings's family: He and Dulcie have two sons and two daughters. One son joins the Royal Navy, while the other and his wife manage the ranch after Dulcie's death. Hastings's daughter Grace is married to a British officer stationed in India. His other daughter, Judith, appears as a character in Curtain. Judith is Hastings's youngest child and his favourite, albeit the child whom he understands the least. She marries Dr John Franklin, a medical researcher, and moves to Africa with him. In the postscript of Curtain, Poirot suggests that Hastings should consider a second marriage with Elizabeth Litchfield, the younger sister of a woman who was manipulated into killing her abusive father by the novel's antagonist. Poirot notes that Elizabeth must be reassured that she is not tainted by her sister's actions and that Hastings is still not unattractive to women. Age is not specifically discussed for Hastings after the first book; he is said to be 30 in The Mysterious Affair at Styles, which would leave him at least 60 years old in the earliest setting for Curtain. That novel was published in 1975, though written during the Second World War. No specific time is made clear in Curtain, unlike most of the Poirot stories, however when Poirot says “the food, it is disgusting”, Hastings says “rationing, I suppose”. Food rationing was in place in Britain until midnight on 4 July 1954, nine years after the end of the Second World War. In addition, it is clear that the story is set when capital punishment by hanging was still occurring in the UK; the last woman hanged in the UK was in 1955. These two facts place the events of Curtain in time no later than 1954, and Hastings is therefore, as he says himself, “I’m pushing it a bit”; with four adult children and having done service in the First World War, he must be in his 60s.

Portrayals edit

Hastings has been portrayed on film and television by several actors, Richard Cooper in Black Coffee (1931) and Lord Edgware Dies (1934); Robert Morley in The Alphabet Murders (1965); Jonathan Cecil in three TV films – Thirteen at Dinner (1985), Dead Man's Folly (1986) and Murder in Three Acts (1986); Dmitry Krylov in the Soviet film Mystery Endhauz (1989, directed by Vadim Derbenyov); and Hugh Fraser, who portrayed Hastings alongside David Suchet's Poirot in 43 of the 70 episodes of Agatha Christie's Poirot. He is also a main character in the anime Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple.

In the BBC Radio 4 dramatisations starring John Moffatt as Hercule Poirot, Captain Hastings was played by Jeremy Clyde in Murder on the Links (1990),[8] and by Simon Williams in Lord Edgware Dies (1992), The ABC Murders (2000), Peril at End House (2000), The Mysterious Affair at Styles (2005), and Dumb Witness (2006).[9]

The Hastings novels edit

Hastings narrates the majority of the short stories featuring Poirot, but appears in only eight of the novels, seven of which were written before 1940:

Hastings is the narrator of all stories in Poirot Investigates (1924), a collection of short stories. Hastings is also present in Christie's play Black Coffee (1930) and its novelisation alongside Poirot.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Curtain: Poirot's Last Case
  2. ^ Based on The Mysterious Affair at Styles
  3. ^ Christie, Agatha (1992) [1937]. "Bezoek aan juffrouw Peabody". Brief van een Dode [Dumb Witness] (paperback) (in Dutch). A.W. Sijthoff's Uitgeversmaatschappij bv. p. 81. ISBN 9024511828.
  4. ^ Curtain: Poirot's Last Case, Chapter 1.
  5. ^ The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Chapter 2.
  6. ^ Peril at End House, Chapter 6.
  7. ^ Zemboy, James (2008). "The Big Four (1927)". The Detective Novels of Agatha Christie: A Reader's Guide. McFarland & Company. pp. 43–47. ISBN 978-0786451685.
  8. ^ "Saturday-Night Theatre: Agatha Christie's Murder on the Links". BBC Genome: Radio Times. BBC. 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  9. ^ "Afternoon Play: Agatha Christie's Dumb Witness". BBC Genome: Radio Times. BBC. 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2020. See also Lord Edgware Dies, The ABC Murders, Peril at End House, and The Mysterious Affair at Styles.

External links edit

  • at the official Agatha Christie website
  • Hastings and Poirot at the new home of Agatha Christie website
  • Biography of Captain Hastings

Poirot page on Wikipedia.

arthur, hastings, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Arthur Hastings news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message Captain Arthur J M Hastings OBE is a fictional character created by Agatha Christie as the companion chronicler and best friend of the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot He is first introduced in Christie s 1920 novel The Mysterious Affair at Styles originally written in 1916 and appears as a character in seven other Poirot novels including the final one Curtain Poirot s Last Case 1975 along with a play and many short stories He is also the narrator of several of them Arthur HastingsHugh Fraser as HastingsFirst appearanceThe Mysterious Affair at Styles 1920 Last appearanceCurtain 1975 Created byAgatha ChristiePortrayed byRichard CooperRobert MorleyJonathan CecilDmitry KrylovHugh FraserIn universe informationOccupationArmy Captain ex secretary rancherSpouseDulcie Duveen 1923 unknown her death ChildrenTwo unnamed sons 1 Grace 1 JudithRelativesA sisterTwo grandsonsReligionAnglicanismNationalityBritishBirth date and placeabt 1886 2 30 in 1916 United Kingdom Contents 1 Literary function 2 Career 3 Relationship with women 4 Later appearances 5 Final appearance 6 Portrayals 7 The Hastings novels 8 References 9 External linksLiterary function editHastings is today strongly associated with Poirot due more to the television adaptations than to the novels Many of the early TV episodes of Agatha Christie s Poirot were adaptations of short stories in most of which he appeared in print A few were stories into which he had been adapted for example Murder in the Mews In Christie s original writings however Hastings is not in every short story or novel He is not a character in either Death on the Nile or Murder on the Orient Express the two best known Poirot novels Of the twenty two Poirot novels published between 1920 and 1937 he appears in seven Moreover when Christie expanded The Submarine Plans 1923 as The Incredible Theft 1937 she removed Hastings Hastings appears to have been introduced by Christie in accordance with the model of Sherlock Holmes s associate Doctor Watson to whom he bears a marked resemblance Both narrate in the first person both are slow to see the significance of clues and both stand as a form of surrogate for the reader There are even similarities of role Hastings is Poirot s only close friend and the two share a flat briefly when Poirot sets up his detective agency Similarly to Watson Hastings also has a penchant for speculation and gambling as well as a military background in the colonial Middle East The presence of Chief Inspector Japp a close literary descendant of Holmes s Inspector Lestrade fleshed out Christie s adoption of the Holmes paradigm In the novels Hastings s literary function changes with Poirot s method In the earlier phase of his career Hastings is valued for his imaginative approach to cases inevitably giving rise to fanciful hypotheses that Poirot gently mocks Poirot himself characterised Hastings thus in The Mystery of the Spanish Chest 1932 How my dear friend Hastings would have enjoyed this What romantic flights of imagination he would have had What ineptitudes he would have uttered Ah ce cher Hastings at this moment today I miss him Later in her career Christie s apparatus is less fanciful and the opportunity for wild speculation much diminished When the need for a sidekick arises in the later novels and stories it is either as a suspect Miss Lemon who in direct contrast with Hastings is completely unimaginative Mr Satterthwaite a great observer of human nature who avoids passing judgments Ariadne Oliver a crime novelist who opened to Christie the opportunity for self satire Although Hastings remains the most popular of Poirot s sidekicks his appearance in only eight of the thirty three Poirot novels indicates that the character s service to Christie s literary purpose was somewhat limited Career editSimilarly to his friend Poirot details of Hastings s life before 1916 are not revealed though the reader is able to pinpoint Hastings s approximate birth year as 1886 from the first chapter of The Mysterious Affair at Styles as he mentions that John Cavendish was a good fifteen years his senior though hardly looking his forty five years This makes Hastings thirty years old at the start of the novel It is also mentioned later on that he was employed at Lloyd s prior to the war Neither his first name nor his rank is mentioned in this novel Elsewhere he states that he attended Eton College 3 Hastings meets Poirot in Belgium several years before their meeting on 16 July 1916 4 at Styles Court Essex which is their first encounter in literature 5 The two remain friends right up to Poirot s death Although there is little evidence regarding their possible subsequent meetings Hastings saw Poirot a year before the latter s death Hastings while being no great detective himself serves Poirot in many ways A former British Army officer in World War I he is brave He has courage and is often used by Poirot for physical duties such as catching and subduing a criminal Poirot likes to tease Hastings about being dim witted at times but he clearly enjoys the Captain s company In The Mysterious Affair at Styles and The A B C Murders Hastings plays a prominent role in the resolution of the mystery with a casual observation that leads Poirot to the guilty party In the case of the former by mentioning that Poirot had to straighten some spill holders and ornaments in Styles he prompts Poirot to realise that someone had moved them causing Poirot to discover a crucial piece of evidence In the case of the latter he suggests that the error in recipient address of a letter by the murderer was deliberate thus causing Poirot to realise the murderer had attached greater importance to that particular murder Hastings represents the traditional English gentleman not too bright but absolutely scrupulous a throwback to the Victorian era gentleman who is always concerned about fair play Hastings himself notes that he is somewhat old fashioned While Poirot who is not above lying surreptitiously reads other people s letters or eavesdrops Hastings is horrified of such acts and usually refuses to perform them to help Poirot in one of his cases Although he lacks Poirot s intellect Poirot often compliments Hastings ability to remember facts and details about their cases even if he deplores the manner in which Hastings tells the story at times Hastings physical appearance is rarely described in the novels because he is often the narrator However it is mentioned that he like Poirot has a moustache which becomes a target of the detective s criticism in Peril at End House And your moustache If you must have a moustache let it be a real moustache a thing of beauty such as mine 6 Although he has served in the army Hastings is not a violent man by nature with Poirot noting during his final letter to Hastings in Curtain that he knows that Hastings is not a murderer Relationship with women editHastings has a soft spot for auburn haired women Back in The Mysterious Affair at Styles Hastings was charmed with auburn haired Cynthia Murdoch and proposed to her This would become a running gag in the series with Poirot often teasing Hastings Whenever Hastings suggests the innocence of a young beautiful female murder suspect Poirot slyly asks Does she have auburn hair 7 This pronounced weakness for pretty women with auburn hair gets Hastings and Poirot into trouble more than once in The Big Four while posing as secretary for millionaire Abe Ryland Hastings trusts false information from a woman with auburn hair while in the short story Double Sin Hastings believes auburn haired Mary Durant Despite his preference for auburn hair and his Victorian ideas about not marrying outside one s class he eventually falls in love with a dark haired music hall actress singer and acrobat Dulcie Duveen the self styled Cinderella They meet in the story The Murder on the Links the second full length Poirot novel Poirot plays a rather significant part in uniting the couple Hastings then acquires a ranch in Argentina and settles down to a life as a ranchholder Later appearances editHastings s appearances in Poirot s later novels are restricted to a few cases in which he participates on his periodic returns to England from Argentina Poirot comments in The ABC Murders that he enjoys Hastings s visits because he always has his most interesting cases when Hastings is with him In the course of The Big Four Dulcie s life is threatened by members of an international conspiracy Hastings is forced to risk Poirot s life in return for her promised safety In other respects there is very little personal detail regarding Hastings in these novels until Curtain Poirot s Last Case which takes place after World War II with his wife now dead Hastings rejoins Poirot at Styles to help tackle one last case The novel culminates with Poirot dying of a heart attack leaving Hastings a confession explaining his role in events as he tracked a criminal who manipulated others to commit murder for him Poirot s friendship with Hastings is further referenced when the murderer s attempt to manipulate Hastings in such a manner leaves Poirot resolved to kill his adversary despite his disapproval of murder as he knew that his friend would normally never do such a thing Final appearance editCurtain provides additional details on Hastings s family He and Dulcie have two sons and two daughters One son joins the Royal Navy while the other and his wife manage the ranch after Dulcie s death Hastings s daughter Grace is married to a British officer stationed in India His other daughter Judith appears as a character in Curtain Judith is Hastings s youngest child and his favourite albeit the child whom he understands the least She marries Dr John Franklin a medical researcher and moves to Africa with him In the postscript of Curtain Poirot suggests that Hastings should consider a second marriage with Elizabeth Litchfield the younger sister of a woman who was manipulated into killing her abusive father by the novel s antagonist Poirot notes that Elizabeth must be reassured that she is not tainted by her sister s actions and that Hastings is still not unattractive to women Age is not specifically discussed for Hastings after the first book he is said to be 30 in The Mysterious Affair at Styles which would leave him at least 60 years old in the earliest setting for Curtain That novel was published in 1975 though written during the Second World War No specific time is made clear in Curtain unlike most of the Poirot stories however when Poirot says the food it is disgusting Hastings says rationing I suppose Food rationing was in place in Britain until midnight on 4 July 1954 nine years after the end of the Second World War In addition it is clear that the story is set when capital punishment by hanging was still occurring in the UK the last woman hanged in the UK was in 1955 These two facts place the events of Curtain in time no later than 1954 and Hastings is therefore as he says himself I m pushing it a bit with four adult children and having done service in the First World War he must be in his 60s Portrayals editHastings has been portrayed on film and television by several actors Richard Cooper in Black Coffee 1931 and Lord Edgware Dies 1934 Robert Morley in The Alphabet Murders 1965 Jonathan Cecil in three TV films Thirteen at Dinner 1985 Dead Man s Folly 1986 and Murder in Three Acts 1986 Dmitry Krylov in the Soviet film Mystery Endhauz 1989 directed by Vadim Derbenyov and Hugh Fraser who portrayed Hastings alongside David Suchet s Poirot in 43 of the 70 episodes of Agatha Christie s Poirot He is also a main character in the anime Agatha Christie s Great Detectives Poirot and Marple In the BBC Radio 4 dramatisations starring John Moffatt as Hercule Poirot Captain Hastings was played by Jeremy Clyde in Murder on the Links 1990 8 and by Simon Williams in Lord Edgware Dies 1992 The ABC Murders 2000 Peril at End House 2000 The Mysterious Affair at Styles 2005 and Dumb Witness 2006 9 The Hastings novels editHastings narrates the majority of the short stories featuring Poirot but appears in only eight of the novels seven of which were written before 1940 The Mysterious Affair at Styles 1916 but published in 1920 The Murder on the Links 1923 The Big Four 1927 Peril at End House 1932 Lord Edgware Dies 1933 published in the U S as Thirteen at Dinner The A B C Murders 1936 Dumb Witness 1937 published in the U S as Poirot Loses a Client Curtain Poirot s Last Case 1975 Hastings is the narrator of all stories in Poirot Investigates 1924 a collection of short stories Hastings is also present in Christie s play Black Coffee 1930 and its novelisation alongside Poirot References edit a b Curtain Poirot s Last Case Based on The Mysterious Affair at Styles Christie Agatha 1992 1937 Bezoek aan juffrouw Peabody Brief van een Dode Dumb Witness paperback in Dutch A W Sijthoff s Uitgeversmaatschappij bv p 81 ISBN 9024511828 Curtain Poirot s Last Case Chapter 1 The Mysterious Affair at Styles Chapter 2 Peril at End House Chapter 6 Zemboy James 2008 The Big Four 1927 The Detective Novels of Agatha Christie A Reader s Guide McFarland amp Company pp 43 47 ISBN 978 0786451685 Saturday Night Theatre Agatha Christie s Murder on the Links BBC Genome Radio Times BBC 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Afternoon Play Agatha Christie s Dumb Witness BBC Genome Radio Times BBC 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2020 See also Lord Edgware Dies The ABC Murders Peril at End House and The Mysterious Affair at Styles External links editHastings at the official Agatha Christie website Hastings and Poirot at the new home of Agatha Christie website Biography of Captain Hastings Poirot page on Wikipedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Hastings amp oldid 1221382754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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