
Dame Agatha Mary Clarissa Mallowan, Lady Mallowan, usually known by her first married name, Agatha Christie, was an English author known for her 66 detective novels and 14 short-story collections, particularly those revolving around fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. She is widely regarded as one of the greatest writers, particularly in the mystery genre.
Agatha Christie was an English author who wrote 66 detective novels and 14 short-story collections, many featuring her famous fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. She is widely regarded as one of the greatest writers in the mystery genre.
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Investigating Agatha Christie - POINTE-À-CALLIÈRE
Visit the Musem and discover the birthplace of Montréal!
pacmusee.qc.ca →This original exhibition is focusing on an exceptional woman whose unusual life and compelling novels left their mark on international literature. The exhibition looks at Christie through her work, her imagination and her world, including archaeology. It is one of the major international events being held to mark the 125th anniversary of the famous novelist’s birth on September 15, 1890. A world exclusive produced by Pointe-à-Callière, the Montréal exhibition features a total of some 320 items from such world-renowned institutions as the British Museum, in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York, and the Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto. It also includes a number of Christie’s own belongings, still in her family’s possession, thanks to the close collaboration of Mathew Prichard, her grandson and trustee of the Christie Archive Trust, and John Mallowan, the nephew of her husband Max. The National Trust, which manages Greenway House, one of Agatha’s houses that today is a historic site, also co-operated with Pointe-à-Callière. Agatha Christie penned 66 mysteries, 6 novels under the name Mary Westmacott, 150 short stories, 18 plays and 2 memoirs. She is the world’s most-translated author, far surpassing Jules Verne: her writing has been translated into over 100 languages and 2 billion copies have been sold – exceeded only by the Bible and the works of Shakespeare. Dubbed the Queen of Crime , she created such unforgettable characters as detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple, and her colossal body of work has inspired numerous films and television series. The Museum’s goal with this exhibition is to introduce visitors to a new side of Agatha Christie: an imaginative woman with many interests, an avid traveller and explorer, very open to other cultures. The exhibition is chronological, from Agatha Mary Clarissa Miller’s birth in Torquay, Devon, on September 15, 1890, to her death at her home in Wallingford, near Oxford, in January 1976. Christie herself accompanies visitors along the tour route, illustrated by some of her personal effects and memories recounted in her own voice, thanks to archival recordings made available to Pointe-à-Callière. They are also invited inside her different homes, including Ashfield, Winterbrook and Greenway House, her vacation villa, and on board the Orient Express, the famous train that she herself rode and used as the setting for one of her most memorable mysteries, Murder on the Orient Express . Few people are aware that the life and work of this imaginative and adventurous woman were intimately bound up with archaeology. It played an important part in her personal and professional life, since she was married to Sir Max Edgar Lucien Mallowan, a famous archaeologist. Between 1930 and 1960, she witnessed some major finds at ancient Mesopotamian sites in what is now Syria and Iraq, the birthplace of writing, agriculture and other innovations. And she was no passive spectator: in addition to underwriting some of her husband’s digs, she cleaned, classified and documented the work in the photos and films visitors can see in the exhibition. Some of the artifacts handled by Agatha, from dig sites managed by Max Mallowan or archaeological sites she herself visited in Egypt and the Middle East, are on display. The exhibition presents a number of the author’s personal effects, along with artifacts from Mesopotamia and Egypt. Some of them, like the notebooks revealed in 2010 and analyzed by world-renowned expert John Curran, have never been exhibited before. The exhibition also showcases many first editions, books dedicated by her to friends and relatives, some of her dresses, a coat and her tea service. Her grandson, Mathew Prichard, gave the Museum access to his private collection, allowing us to display her famous 1937 Remington typewriter, her Dictaphone, and evocative items like the chair in which she sat to have her portrait painted, letters, manuscripts, first editions of her boo
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