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becke_davis
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Re: Congratulations!


writerfire wrote:

Morning!

Wow Congrats Fricka!

Thanks optic!

I think my aunt is throwing me a party this weekend hee hee hee fun stuff!


Let's have one here, too:

 

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Fricka
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Re: Congratulations!

Yum! Cake! Count me in for the party!!!! Congrats, Holly.

:catvery-happy:

 

Thank you and Optic_I for your congratulations on my great-nephew!

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
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eadieburke
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Re: Congratulations!

Congrats Holly and Fricka! Nice occasions for celebrating!
Eadie - A day out-of-doors, someone I loved to talk with, a good book and some simple food and music -- that would be rest. - Eleanor Roosevelt
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writerfire
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Re: Congratulations!

Whooo Hoo!!! Party!!  Ok I'm in! hahahaha Thanks guys!!

 

The best surprize is one left untold.
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dulcinea3
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Re: Congratulations!

 

Congratulations, Holly!!!

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writerfire
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Re: Congratulations!

Awe thank you dulcinea!!!!!

The best surprize is one left untold.
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Fricka
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Re: Congratulations!

This is a day late, but I thought I'd post it anyway, since it features one of my favorite actresses; I found this on Janet Rudolph's Mystery Fanfare site:

 

Happy Birthday, Margaret Rutherford

 

In honor of Dame Margaret Rutherford's Birthday (May 11), TCM is showing four movies in which she portrays Agatha Christie's Miss Marple. Check your local listing for times.

Murder She Said (1961)
Murder at the Gallop (1963)
Murder Most Foul (1964)
The Alphabet Murder (1965)

Margaret Rutherford Biography from TCM
Gifted, endearing character player, in films since the mid-1930s. A master scene-stealer, Rutherford personified the eccentric English spinster in a number of famous comedies, including David Lean's classic "Blithe Spirit" (1945), as the enthusiastic, bicycle-riding psychic, Madame Arcati. In "The Happiest Days of Your Life" (1950), she teamed beautifully with Alistair Sim for a rollicking secondary school farce. With her plump figure, small and piercing eyes, and bulldog expression, Rutherford could embody a spirit of prim, stiff-upper-lip efficiency or could play a classic, fidgety bungler with equal ease. She made a memorably nervous Miss Prism in a sterling film adaptation of Oscar Wilde's farce, "The Importance of Being Earnest" (1952). Rutherford is perhaps best known as the indomitable title character in four "Miss Marple" mystery films of the 60s. Most of Rutherford's credits are British, but she won an Academy Award for her hilarious rendition of a daffy duchess down on her luck in the old-fashioned, all-star Hollywood anthology drama, "The V.I.P.s" (1963). This much-loved trouper was created a Dame Commander of the British Empire in the late 60s shortly before her death.

 

I know there are some purists who dislike Rutherford's portrayal of Miss Marple, but I have to say that the films in which she starred as MM are a real hoot. Besides that, apparently she and Agatha Christie were friendly with each other, so perhaps Dame Agatha did not object to humor being added to her stories. Besides the films listed above, there's another one, Murder Ahoy, which is a lot of fun, and also features Mr. Stringer, who was the on-screen gentleman friend of Miss Marple.

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
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becke_davis
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Re: Congratulations!


Fricka wrote:

This is a day late, but I thought I'd post it anyway, since it features one of my favorite actresses; I found this on Janet Rudolph's Mystery Fanfare site:

 

Happy Birthday, Margaret Rutherford

 

In honor of Dame Margaret Rutherford's Birthday (May 11), TCM is showing four movies in which she portrays Agatha Christie's Miss Marple. Check your local listing for times.

Murder She Said (1961)
Murder at the Gallop (1963)
Murder Most Foul (1964)
The Alphabet Murder (1965)

Margaret Rutherford Biography from TCM
Gifted, endearing character player, in films since the mid-1930s. A master scene-stealer, Rutherford personified the eccentric English spinster in a number of famous comedies, including David Lean's classic "Blithe Spirit" (1945), as the enthusiastic, bicycle-riding psychic, Madame Arcati. In "The Happiest Days of Your Life" (1950), she teamed beautifully with Alistair Sim for a rollicking secondary school farce. With her plump figure, small and piercing eyes, and bulldog expression, Rutherford could embody a spirit of prim, stiff-upper-lip efficiency or could play a classic, fidgety bungler with equal ease. She made a memorably nervous Miss Prism in a sterling film adaptation of Oscar Wilde's farce, "The Importance of Being Earnest" (1952). Rutherford is perhaps best known as the indomitable title character in four "Miss Marple" mystery films of the 60s. Most of Rutherford's credits are British, but she won an Academy Award for her hilarious rendition of a daffy duchess down on her luck in the old-fashioned, all-star Hollywood anthology drama, "The V.I.P.s" (1963). This much-loved trouper was created a Dame Commander of the British Empire in the late 60s shortly before her death.

 

I know there are some purists who dislike Rutherford's portrayal of Miss Marple, but I have to say that the films in which she starred as MM are a real hoot. Besides that, apparently she and Agatha Christie were friendly with each other, so perhaps Dame Agatha did not object to humor being added to her stories. Besides the films listed above, there's another one, Murder Ahoy, which is a lot of fun, and also features Mr. Stringer, who was the on-screen gentleman friend of Miss Marple.


Thank you so much for posting this!!

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dulcinea3
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Re: Congratulations!

"Mr. Stringer", a character invented for the Margaret Rutherford Marple movies, was played by Margaret Rutherford's husband.  I think his real name was Stringer Davis.

 

I have always found it interesting that Christie and Rutherford were friendly, because I believe I have also always read that Christie was appalled at those movies.  Some of the movies were really Poirot stories, I believe, and at least one had no relation to any Christie novel at all.  These movies are the kind that you have to pretend that they are not really Christie movies in order to enjoy, because, as you say, they are a lot of fun.  But they bear very little resemblance to Christie's novels, and I know that many of us here tend to complain a lot when the PBS adaptations stray too far.

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becke_davis
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Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis


dulcinea3 wrote:

"Mr. Stringer", a character invented for the Margaret Rutherford Marple movies, was played by Margaret Rutherford's husband.  I think his real name was Stringer Davis.

 

I have always found it interesting that Christie and Rutherford were friendly, because I believe I have also always read that Christie was appalled at those movies.  Some of the movies were really Poirot stories, I believe, and at least one had no relation to any Christie novel at all.  These movies are the kind that you have to pretend that they are not really Christie movies in order to enjoy, because, as you say, they are a lot of fun.  But they bear very little resemblance to Christie's novels, and I know that many of us here tend to complain a lot when the PBS adaptations stray too far.


I love Margaret Rutherford but I can't watch these movies a second time. If they weren't called Agatha Christie movies I'd probably like them. I try to relate them to her books, though, so that takes away all the enjoyment for me.

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Fricka
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Re: Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis

I agree, becke and dulcinea3. I tend to not think of these movies as really adaptations of Christie novels, but more loosely based on them in order to provide Margaret Rutherford an acting vehicle. I know that the Alphabet Murders was  a Poirot story, and I'm pretty sure that neither Murder at the Gallop or Murder Ahoy were based on any Miss Marple stories(if on any Christie stories at all!) They still are a lot of fun to watch, I think, mostly because MR chewed up her scenes as MM with more than a  touch of Ham, if you get my drift. In addition, the music that was chosen to accompany these productions was a light and cheerful tune most of the time, so it again gave the idea that we're being taken for a good natured romp. I like Murder at the Gallop because it features Robert Morley, another hammy actor. Between his bulging eyes, and Margaret's facial contortions, I almost laugh myself silly.Incidentally, Joan Hickson, who later on went to play Miss Marple herself, is featured(albeit briefly) in one of these Rutherford films. Joan played the cook in, I think it was, Murder Most Foul( Verrrry loosely based on What Mrs. McGillicudy Saw!)

 

Anyway, changing the subject a bit, I'd like to wish a Happy Mother's Day to all our mothers and grandmothers who are members of our forum! Hope you've had a great day!

My dad got my mom a gift card from Olive Garden, so after we got back from early church service this morning, we went to an early lunch there. We also had left-overs which we brought home in to-go boxes,which gets me off the hook for supper as well as lunch prep today! Hooooray!

 

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
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Fricka
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Re: Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis

Also, Janet Rudolph had posted a list of mystery novels that have a Mother's Day theme, on  her Mystery Fanfare site:     Mother's Day Crime Fiction

 
 
 

Mother's Day: So many infamous Mothers in Mysteries, but this is just a sampling with emphasis on the Mother's Day Holiday. If I listed all the mysteries and crime fiction with famous and infamous mothers, the list would be way too long. Be sure and scroll down to the Psycho Trailer!

MOTHER'S DAY MYSTERIES

Angel at Troublesome Creek by Mignon F. Ballard
How to Murder Your Mother-in-Law by Dorothy Cannell
Mother's Day Murder by Wensley Clarkson
A Darkly Hidden Truth by Donna Fletcher Crow
Motherhood is Murder (Shorts) by Mary Daheim, Carolyn Hart, Shirley Rousseau Murphy and Jane Isenberg
Murder Can Upset Your Mother by Selma Eichler
Bon Bon Voyage by Nancy Fairbanks
Murder for Mother: Short Story collection, edited by Martin S. Greenberg
Murder Superior by Jane Haddam
The Mother’s Day Murder by Lee Harris
Mother’s Day by Patricia MacDonald
Mother's Day by Dennis McDougal
Mother’s Day Murder by Leslie Meier
Mom, Apple Pie & Murder: A collection of New Mysteries for Mother’s Day, edited by Nancy Pickard
Mother’s Day by Joshua Quittner and Michelle Slatalla
A Mother's Day Murder by Genevieve Scholl

Happy Mother's Day!

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
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becke_davis
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Re: Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis


Fricka wrote:

I agree, becke and dulcinea3. I tend to not think of these movies as really adaptations of Christie novels, but more loosely based on them in order to provide Margaret Rutherford an acting vehicle. I know that the Alphabet Murders was  a Poirot story, and I'm pretty sure that neither Murder at the Gallop or Murder Ahoy were based on any Miss Marple stories(if on any Christie stories at all!) They still are a lot of fun to watch, I think, mostly because MR chewed up her scenes as MM with more than a  touch of Ham, if you get my drift. In addition, the music that was chosen to accompany these productions was a light and cheerful tune most of the time, so it again gave the idea that we're being taken for a good natured romp. I like Murder at the Gallop because it features Robert Morley, another hammy actor. Between his bulging eyes, and Margaret's facial contortions, I almost laugh myself silly.Incidentally, Joan Hickson, who later on went to play Miss Marple herself, is featured(albeit briefly) in one of these Rutherford films. Joan played the cook in, I think it was, Murder Most Foul( Verrrry loosely based on What Mrs. McGillicudy Saw!)

 

Anyway, changing the subject a bit, I'd like to wish a Happy Mother's Day to all our mothers and grandmothers who are members of our forum! Hope you've had a great day!

My dad got my mom a gift card from Olive Garden, so after we got back from early church service this morning, we went to an early lunch there. We also had left-overs which we brought home in to-go boxes,which gets me off the hook for supper as well as lunch prep today! Hooooray!

 


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snowloverVD
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Re: Welcome to the B&N Mystery Forum - Introduce Yourself!

Canadian Mystery Convention, Bloody Words. Toronto June 1 - 3, 2012.  I've left this way too late, but anyway, if any of you like to travel to exotic locales to talk mysteries, the Bloody Words conference is being held in Toronto (how's that for exotic) on June 1st - 3rd. www.bloodywords2012.com.

 

If I've posted this in the wrong place, please forgive me.  I'm a newbie.

 

Vicki Delany

www.vickidelany.com 

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becke_davis
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Re: Welcome to the B&N Mystery Forum - Introduce Yourself!


snowloverVD wrote:

Canadian Mystery Convention, Bloody Words. Toronto June 1 - 3, 2012.  I've left this way too late, but anyway, if any of you like to travel to exotic locales to talk mysteries, the Bloody Words conference is being held in Toronto (how's that for exotic) on June 1st - 3rd. www.bloodywords2012.com.

 

If I've posted this in the wrong place, please forgive me.  I'm a newbie.

 

Vicki Delany

www.vickidelany.com 


I'm already scheduled for Lori Foster's Reader Author Get Together that weekend, but I hope I can make it to this conference some other time!

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Fricka
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Re: Welcome to the B&N Mystery Forum - Introduce Yourself!

No, you haven't posted in the wrong place, Vicky. And, welcome to our forum, by the way. In case you didn't know, though, our fearless leader, becke, now has a thread exclusively earmarked for Canadian authors/books. I did check out the link you had on your post, as I was curious about the Bloody Words Conference. Here's the short list for the Bony Blithe award:

The short list:

Janet Bolin, Dire Threads   (Berkley Prime Crime)
Alan Bradley, A Red Herring without Mustard  (Doubleday Canada)
Gloria Ferris, Cheat the Hangman   (Imajin Books)
Mary Jane Maffini, The Busy Woman’s Guide to Murder   (Berkley Prime Crime)
Phyllis Smallman, Champagne for Buzzards   (McArthur & Company

 

I'm surprised to find out how many of the books I've read have been written by Canadian authors. I knew Louise Penny was, of course, but I didn't know that Alan Bradley, Janet Bolin, and Mary Jane Maffini were.

BTW, I just read that Alan's Flavia de Luce series has been optioned for television production by Sam Mendes, and that there are a planned 10 books total in the series.

" A murder mystery is the normal recreation of the noble mind."--Sister Carol Anne O' Marie
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becke_davis
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Re: Welcome to the B&N Mystery Forum - Introduce Yourself!


Fricka wrote:

No, you haven't posted in the wrong place, Vicky. And, welcome to our forum, by the way. In case you didn't know, though, our fearless leader, becke, now has a thread exclusively earmarked for Canadian authors/books. I did check out the link you had on your post, as I was curious about the Bloody Words Conference. Here's the short list for the Bony Blithe award:

The short list:

Janet Bolin, Dire Threads   (Berkley Prime Crime)
Alan Bradley, A Red Herring without Mustard  (Doubleday Canada)
Gloria Ferris, Cheat the Hangman   (Imajin Books)
Mary Jane Maffini, The Busy Woman’s Guide to Murder   (Berkley Prime Crime)
Phyllis Smallman, Champagne for Buzzards   (McArthur & Company

 

I'm surprised to find out how many of the books I've read have been written by Canadian authors. I knew Louise Penny was, of course, but I didn't know that Alan Bradley, Janet Bolin, and Mary Jane Maffini were.

BTW, I just read that Alan's Flavia de Luce series has been optioned for television production by Sam Mendes, and that there are a planned 10 books total in the series.


Vicky is the main reason I started the Canadian authors thread - well, Vicky and several other Canadian authors I met at Malice Domestic. I've known Janet Bolin online for quite awhile, also Wendy Roberts, and I'm a serious fan of Alan Bradley and Louise Penny. But I keep finding more and more Canadian authors! Lots of talent up to the north of us...

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dulcinea3
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Re: Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis

[ Edited ]

Fricka wrote:

I agree, becke and dulcinea3. I tend to not think of these movies as really adaptations of Christie novels, but more loosely based on them in order to provide Margaret Rutherford an acting vehicle. I know that the Alphabet Murders was  a Poirot story, and I'm pretty sure that neither Murder at the Gallop or Murder Ahoy were based on any Miss Marple stories(if on any Christie stories at all!) They still are a lot of fun to watch, I think, mostly because MR chewed up her scenes as MM with more than a  touch of Ham, if you get my drift. In addition, the music that was chosen to accompany these productions was a light and cheerful tune most of the time, so it again gave the idea that we're being taken for a good natured romp. I like Murder at the Gallop because it features Robert Morley, another hammy actor. Between his bulging eyes, and Margaret's facial contortions, I almost laugh myself silly.Incidentally, Joan Hickson, who later on went to play Miss Marple herself, is featured(albeit briefly) in one of these Rutherford films. Joan played the cook in, I think it was, Murder Most Foul( Verrrry loosely based on What Mrs. McGillicudy Saw!) 


It's Murder Ahoy! that is not based on a Christie.  Murder at the Gallop was based on a Poirot novel called After the Funeral (aka Funerals Are Fatal).

 

BTW, I also love Margaret Rutherford as Miss Prism in the old movie The Importance of Being Earnest!

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becke_davis
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Re: Margaret Rutherford and Stringer Davis

I found quite a few listings on Margaret Rutherford's IMDb page:

 

The Alphabet Murders 
Miss Jane Marple (uncredited) - 1965

 

Murder Ahoy 
Miss Marple - 1964

 

Murder at the Gallop 
Miss Marple - 1963

 

Murder She Said 
Miss Marple - 1961 (Based on The 4:50 from Paddington, it sounds like)

 

 

She's absolutely wonderful in:

 

The V.I.P.s 
The Duchess of Brighton - 1963

 

and

 

The Mouse on the Moon 
Grand Duchess Gloriana XIII - 1963

 

I love this one:

 

Passport to Pimlico 
Professor Hatton-Jones - 1949

 


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becke_davis
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American Mystery Classics question

Check out the American Mystery Classics thread. Originally I was planning to feature Ellery Queen at the end of this month, but there are a gazillion Ellery Queen books and we've had a request to postpone that feature to give people more time to read them.

 

We've got several other ideas for this month's American Mystery Classics feature. Take a look at some of the author's that have been suggested and give me some input. Otherwise I'll just randomly pick a feature for this month. Thanks!