Agatha Christie a the Mysterious Affair at Styles

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Agatha Christie a the Mysterious Affair at Styles 5 Culture & CLIL Agatha Christie a The Mysterious Affair at Styles. ? Start thinking b Eleven days. 1 What kind of books do you like reading? c In Torquay. 2 Who is your favourite author? 3 What was the last book you read? d Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. e A Miss Marple story. Comprehension check f He was a pilot. g In September. 1 Watch the video clip and choose the correct h Mary Westmacott. answers. 1 Where was Agatha Christie born? 4 Watch again and correct the mistake in each a in England sentence. b in the USA 1 Torquay is a seaside town in the north of England. c in Canada d in Australia 2 Agatha Christie wrote over 180 books. 2 When did she sell her first book? a in 1890 3 Both her parents were American. b in 1914 c in 1920 4 Agatha had lessons in a school near Torquay. d in 1926 3 Who are her two most famous characters? a Miss Marple and Sherlock Holmes 5 She published a new book every two years. b Miss Marple and Poirot c Inspector Barnaby and Poirot 6 She also wrote twelve romantic novels. d Sherlock Holmes and Inspector Barnaby 7 Miss Westmacott was the name of one of her 2 Watch again and complete the sentences with characters. a number. 1 Agatha Christie wrote over books. 8 She died just after her last book was published. 2 You can read her books in more than languages. th 3 She was born on September, 1890. 5 Complete the summary with the words from the 4 She married Archie Christie in . box. 5 A publisher paid her £ for her first book. autobiography characters detective stories 6 A man found her over miles away mystery novel novelist from her home. publisher romantic novels 7 It took her years to write her The 1 Agatha Christie was born in 1890 autobiography. in Torquay. In 1914 she married Archie Christie. Six 8 She died in . years later a 2 paid her £25 for her first 3 3 Match the questions (1–8) to the answers (a–h). In 1926 she disappeared from her home and was found eleven days later 200 miles 1 Where was Agatha Christie born? away. Her disappearance is still a 4 . As 2 When is the Christie festival? well as 5 , Agatha Christie also wrote 3 What did Agatha’s husband do? 6 under the name of Mary Westmacott. 4 What was the name of her first novel? She also wrote her own 7 , which took 5 How long did she disappear for? her fifteen years. Two of her most famous 6 What name did she use to write her 8 were Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. romantic novels? She died in 1976. 7 Who are the most famous characters in her detective stories? 8 What was the last book she wrote? 10 English plus Pre-Intermediate Culture & CLIL VIDEO • Unit 5 © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS • PHOTOCOPIABLE 4648721 Vid Activity sheets Pre-Int.indb 10 13/04/2011 16:28 5 Language check A I've just finished a fantastic book. I really recommend it. 6 Complete the sentences with the Present perfect form of the verbs in brackets. B What's it called, and who wrote it? 1 People all around the world A It's called The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini. (read) Agatha Christie's books, in many different languages. Extension 2 (you/ever/go) to a Murder 9 In pairs. Look at photos A and B and answer the Mystery dinner party? It's great fun! questions. 3 I (not read) any of Agatha Christie's romantic novels yet. A 4 Would you like to borrow this novel? I (just/finish) it. 5 (you/see) any of Shakespeare's plays at the theatre? 6 Barack Obama (write) a children's book. 7 I can't believe Carol still (not finish) that book. 8 Sorry, I can't lend you that book. I (just/lend) it to someone else. 7 Complete the sentences with the Present perfect or Present perfect continuous form of the verbs B in brackets. 1 Agatha Christie's play, The Mousetrap, opened in London in 1952 – and it (run) every year since that date. 2 I (read) War and Peace for a few months now, and I still (not finish) it! 3 How long (he/write) his autobiography – for more than a year? 4 It was such a sad book. I (cry) ever since I finished it yesterday. 5 You must read this book. It's the funniest book ever! I (never/laugh) so much Photo A in my life! 1 Who can you see in the photo? 6 (you/ever/hear) of Kevin 2 What do you think she’s like? Brooks? He's a very good writer. 3 What qualities make women good detectives? 4 What other jobs do you think women are good at? Talk about it Photo B 8 In pairs. Imagine you are part of a reading group 1 Who can you see in the photo? or book club. Which book would you like to 2 What do you think he’s like? recommend to the group? Why? Ask and answer 3 What qualities make men good detectives? the questions. 4 What other jobs do you think men are good at? What is the name of the book, and who is the author? What is it about? Why do you think people should read it? © OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS • PHOTOCOPIABLE English plus Pre-Intermediate Culture & CLIL VIDEO • Unit 5 11 4648721 Vid Activity sheets Pre-Int.indb 11 13/04/2011 16:28.
Recommended publications
  • SOMETHING's AFOOT TIG2.Pdf
    GOODSPEED MUSICALS TEACHER’S INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE Goodspeed’s Teacher’s Instructional Guide Instructional Teacher’s Goodspeed’s is madepossiblethroughthegenerosity of The Max Showalter Centerfor Education inMusical Theatre SOMETHING’S AFOOT Goodspeed Opera House Oct 5 -Dec 9, 2012 _________ BOOK, MUSIC, AND LYRICS BY JAMES MCDONALD, DAVID VOS & ROBERT GERLACH ADDITIONAL MUSIC BY ED LINDERMAN Teacher’s Instructional Guide LIGHTING DESIGN BY JASON LYONS TABLE OF CONTENTS How To Use The Guides.......................................................................................3 COSTUME DESIGN BY TRACY CHRISTENSEN ABOUT THE SHOW: Show Synopsis........................………………………………………………...4 SCENIC DESIGN BY ADRIEN W. JONES Character Summary.........................………………………………………..6 Meet the Writers.........................................................................................7 CHOREOGRAPHED & DIRECTED BY VINCE PESCE “Parody of Sleuth Fiction at Goodspeed is Praised”..............................8 PRODUCTION CONCEPTION BY Behind the Scenes: Set Design..............................................................9 CASEY HUSHION BACKGROUND AND THEMATIC MATERIAL: PRODUCED FOR GOODSPEED The Language of Something’s Afoot......……….……………………….10 MUSICALS BY MICHAEL P. PRICE Archetypes........................…………....…………………………………11 The Comic Style of Something’s Afoot…..……………………….……..12 Murder Mystery Novels.…………………………………………….………14 LESSONS: Middle School Language Arts.....….………………………………..........16 Middle School Social Studies............….………….……………………....19
    [Show full text]
  • The Unexpected Guest
    Reno Little Theater in partnership with Hug High School presents The Unexpected Guest by Agatha Christie directed by Kathy Easly March 5, 6, 12, 13, 19, and 20 at 8:00 pm March 7, 14, and 21 at 2:00 pm 2004 Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc. The Unexpected Guest The action takes place in Richard Warwick’s study in South Wales near the Bristol Channel. The will be one fifteen-minute intermission. Agatha Christie Taught at home, as a child, by tutors and a governess, Agatha Christie never attended school. At a very young age, she became adept at creating games to keep herself occupied. A shy child, unable to adequately express her feelings, she first turned to music as a means of expression and, later in life, to writing. In 1914, at the age of 24, she married Archie Christie, a World War I fighter pilot. While he was off at war, she worked as a nurse. It was while working in a hospital during the war that Christie first came up with the idea of writing a detective novel. Although it was completed in a year, it wasn't published until 1920, five years later. The Mysterious Affair at Styles gave the world the inimitable Hercule Poirot, a retired Belgian police officer who was to become one of the most enduring characters in all of fiction. With his waxed moustache and his “little grey cells,” he was a “meticulous, a tidy little man, always neat and orderly, with a slight flavour of absurdity about him.” Christie wrote more than thirty novels featuring Poirot.
    [Show full text]
  • Agatha Christie
    Agatha Christie Investigating Femininity Merja Makinen Crime Files Series General Editor: Clive Bloom Since its invention in the nineteenth century, detective fiction has never been more popular. In novels, short stories, films, radio, television and now in computer games, private detectives and psychopaths, prim poisoners and over- worked cops, tommy gun gangsters and cocaine criminals are the very stuff of modern imagination, and their creators one mainstay of popular consciousness. Crime Files is a ground-breaking series offering scholars, students and discerning readers a comprehensive set of guides to the world of crime and detective fiction. Every aspect of crime writing, detective fiction, gangster movie, true-crime exposé, police procedural and post-colonial investigation is explored through clear and informative texts offering comprehensive coverage and theoretical sophistication. Published titles include: Hans Bertens and Theo D’haen CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN CRIME FICTION Anita Biressi CRIME, FEAR AND THE LAW IN TRUE CRIME STORIES Ed Christian (editor) THE POST-COLONIAL DETECTIVE Paul Cobley THE AMERICAN THRILLER Generic Innovation and Social Change in the 1970s Lee Horsley THE NOIR THRILLER Merja Makinen AGATHA CHRISTIE Investigating Femininity Fran Mason AMERICAN GANGSTER CINEMA From Little Caesar to Pulp Fiction Linden Peach MASQUERADE, CRIME AND FICTION Susan Rowland FROM AGATHA CHRISTIE TO RUTH RENDELL British Women Writers in Detective and Crime Fiction Adrian Schober POSSESSED CHILD NARRATIVES IN LITERATURE AND FILM Contrary States Heather Worthington THE RISE OF THE DETECTIVE IN EARLY NINETEENTH-CENTURY POPULAR FICTION Crime Files Series Standing Order ISBN 978-0-333-71471-3 (Hardback) ISBN 978-0-333-93064-9 (Paperback) (outside North America only) You can receive future titles in this series as they are published by placing a standing order.
    [Show full text]
  • G O O D Speed M U Sic a Ls G U Id E to Th E Th Eatr E
    Goodspeed’s Student Guide is made possible through the generosity of GOODSPEED MUSICALS GOODSPEED GUIDE TO THE THEATRE The Max Showalter Center for Education in Musical Theatre SOMETHING’S AFOOT Goodspeed Opera House Oct 5 -Dec 9, 2012 _________ BOOK, MUSIC, AND LYRICS BY JAMES MCDONALD, DAVID VOS & ROBERT GERLACH ADDITIONAL MUSIC BY ED LINDERMAN Student Guide to the Theatre LIGHTING DESIGN BY JASON LYONS TABLE OF CONTENTS COSTUME DESIGN BY TRACY CHRISTENSEN ABOUT THE SHOW: The Story...............................................................................3 ABOUT THE SHOW: The Characters .....………………………………….………...5 SCENIC DESIGN BY ADRIEN W. JONES ABOUT THE SHOW: The Writers.......................………...………………………..…..6 BEHIND THE SCENES: Set Design..........................................................................7 CHOREOGRAPHED & DIRECTED BY VINCE PESCE The Language of Something’s Afoot........................…………………………….8 Archetypes ..........................................................................................................10 PRODUCTION CONCEPTION BY CASEY HUSHION The Comic Style of Something’s Afoot..............................................................11 Murder Mystery Novels........................................................................................12 PRODUCED FOR GOODSPEED MUSICALS BY FUN AND GAMES: Word Search........................................................................15 MICHAEL P. PRICE FUN AND GAMES: Crossword Puzzle.................................................................16
    [Show full text]
  • Autobiography She Wrote: Agatha Christie and the Problem of Female Authorship
    University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM Graduate College Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 2020 Autobiography She Wrote: Agatha Christie and the Problem of Female Authorship Jesse Marie Keel University of Vermont Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons Recommended Citation Keel, Jesse Marie, "Autobiography She Wrote: Agatha Christie and the Problem of Female Authorship" (2020). Graduate College Dissertations and Theses. 1205. https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1205 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks @ UVM. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate College Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UVM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AUTOBIOGRAPHY SHE WROTE: AGATHA CHRISTIE AND THE PROBLEM OF FEMALE AUTHORSHIP A Thesis Presented by Jesse Marie Keel to The Faculty of the Graduate College of The University of Vermont In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Specializing in English May, 2020 Defense Date: March 18, 2020 Thesis Examination Committee: Jinny Huh, Ph.D., Advisor Paul Deslandes, Ph.D., Chairperson Sarah Turner, Ph.D. Cynthia J. Forehand, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate College ABSTRACT Best known for being a best-selling author of mystery and detective fiction, little attention has been paid to the six non-mystery novels Agatha Christie wrote under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. Moreover, other than in biographical studies, scant critical attention exists surrounding her autobiography. Taking these seven overlooked texts into consideration, this thesis seeks to build on current Christie scholarship by looking at Christie’s commercially constructed authorial persona and looking at the ways in which the Mary Westmacott novels can be read as a form of alternative biography.
    [Show full text]
  • Agatha Christie, Woman of Mystery Tells the True Story of the Life of Agatha Christie
    STAGE Agatha Christie, 2 Woman of Mystery John Escott Introduction This ungraded summary is for the teacher’s use only and should not be given to students. The story Agatha Christie, Woman of Mystery tells the true story of the life of Agatha Christie. In 1908, at the age of eighteen, Agatha Miller is ill in bed and bored. As Agatha’s elder sister has written a few short stories for magazines, her mother suggests that Agatha try the same thing – but neither her stories Background to the story nor the novel she writes are published. There is always a fascination in detective stories, and In 1911, Agatha visits Cairo with her mother, and Agatha Christie built on the tradition which is probably meets Reggie Lucy. The couple fall in love, but Reggie best shown in Conan Doyle’s stories about Sherlock has to go to Hong Kong for two years. They agree to Holmes. She created two great (and eccentric) marry in two years’ time, when he returns. detectives. The fi rst, Hercule Poirot, appeared in the But in 1912, Agatha meets Archie Christie. She fi rst of her published novels, and in many later books. writes to Reggie to tell him that she is going to marry He is a small, rather pompous man, interested in his another man. War breaks out, and Archie, who is in own appearance (especially his elegant moustache) the Royal Flying Corps, wants to get married quickly. and rather too proud of his own successes. Miss They marry on December 24th 1914. During the war, Marple, on the other hand, is the portrait of a rather Agatha works in a hospital dispensary, where she typical English lady, living in a pretty English village, learns all about poisons.
    [Show full text]
  • Hebert Thesis Draft.Docx
    Reading beyond the blood. Item Type Thesis Authors Hebert, Jacqueline Download date 24/09/2021 20:38:32 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/126 Hebert 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS: ● Acknowledgments............................................................................................................ 3 ● Introduction...................................................................................................................... 4 ● Chapter One: Christie in Context................................................................................. 16 ○ Christie’s Life in Wartime Britain.................................................................... 16 ○ From Context to Theory..................................................................................... 25 ○ From Theory to Application.............................................................................. 29 ● Chapter Two: Christie’s Works Through a New Lens............................................... 33 ● Chapter Three: A New Perspective.............................................................................. 61 ● Works Cited..................................................................................................................... 68 Hebert 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Since my early childhood, I have been compelled by mysteries. The allure of the mystery-to-be-solved was irresistible to me; it determined my favorite films and T.V. episodes to watch, my favorite books to read, and my favorite games to play with my friends. I even planned my own birthday
    [Show full text]
  • The Mystery of Mrs. Christie Book Club Guide
    THE MYSTERY OF MRS. CHRISTIE BOOK CLUB GUIDE 1 THE MYSTERY OF MRS. CHRISTIE Contents PERSONAL NOTE FROM MARIE BENEDICT 3 EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT 4 FOR YOUR BOOK CLUBS 8 • Agatha Christie-Inspired Cocktail Recipe • A Conversation with the Author • Reading Group Guide FURTHER READING 12 • An Agatha Christie Reading List • More by Marie Benedict AGATHA CHRISTIE PHOTOS 16 2 THE MYSTERY OF MRS. CHRISTIE A NOTE FROM MARIE BENEDICT As you may know, I am a writer on a mission to excavate the most important, complex women from history and bring them into the light of the present day, where we can finally perceive the breadth of their contributions as well as the insights they bring to modern-day issues. I’ve long been a fan of Agatha Christie’s mysteries—since my middle-school years, in fact—and I became curious about the background of the woman who became the most successful novelist of all time and the creator of the modern mystery novel. When I learned that she disappeared for eleven days in 1926 in circumstances seemingly torn from the pages of one of her own novels, I knew I had to turn to her story next. I couldn’t help but wonder what happened to her during the eleven days she went missing, a disappearance that led to the largest manhunt in England’s history. How could a writer that talented in the art of plotting have been a victim in her own vanishing? Could she have been that rare example of a historical woman who used her talents and courage to escape from the limitations her era placed on women to write herself back into the narrative? I hope you join me in unraveling The Mystery of Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • Agatha Christie, Woman of Mystery
    CHAPTER ONE 'Why don't you write a story?' Agatha Mary Clarissa Miller was bored. It was a winter morning in 1908, and she was in bed because she was ill. 'I'm feeling much better today,' she said to her mother, Clara. 'I think I'll get up.' 'You're still ill,' said Clara. 'The doctor told you to stay in bed and keep warm. And that's what you're going to do!' Agatha was eighteen years old at this time, but in those days daughters had to do what their mothers told them. 'But I'm bored!' 'Well, do something, then,' said her mother. 'Read a book. Or write a story. Yes, why don't you write a story?' 'Write a story?' said Agatha, surprised. 'Yes,' her mother said. 'Like Madge.' Madge was Agatha's sister. She was eleven years older than Agatha, and sometimes wrote short stories for magazines like Vanity Fair. 'I don't think that I can write stories,' said Agatha. 'How do you know?' said her mother. 'You've never tried.' And she went to find a pencil and paper. Soon after, Agatha sat up in bed and began to write a story. It was called House of Beauty, a strange story about dreams. It wasn't a very good story. She typed it on Madge's old typewriter, and sent it off to a magazine. But they sent it back with a letter: Thank you for sending us your story. We are afraid we cannot publish it... 'You must try again,' said her mother.
    [Show full text]
  • Landscapes of Murder: Exploring Geographies of Crime in the Novels of Agatha Christie
    Dottorato di ricerca in Studi Letterari, Linguistici e Storici XXXI ciclo Tesi di Dottorato in Letteratura Inglese Landscapes of Murder: Exploring Geographies of Crime in the Novels of Agatha Christie Coordinatore del Dottorato: Candidata Prof. Carmine Pinto Debora A. Sarnelli Matricola: 8801300008 Tutor: Prof.ssa Eleonora Rao Anno Accademico 2017/2018 Abstract Mystery novels and literary geography have not often intersected. Crime fiction, for instance, has frequently been examined in terms of temporality, rather than in terms of spatiality. Todorov, in this respect, argues that crime narratives, in particular the clue-puzzle forms, are constructed on a temporal duality: the story of the crime – tells what really happened, and the story of the detective’s investigation – the way the detective/narrator presents it to the reader. The two stories eventually converge when the sleuth unmasks the murderer (Todorov 1977). The aim of this research is to read Agatha Christie’s whodunit mysteries as centrally concerned with space, considering that, to quote Geoffrey Hartman, “to solve a crime in detective stories means to give it an exact location” (Hartman 2004). The study focuses on the spatial dimension of Agatha Christie’s detective fiction, shedding a light on her domesticated milieus, both real and fictive. The first to be analysed is rural England, presenting both the narrations where the English country house – a Victorian or a Georgian mansion – functions as the only setting prevailing over the local geography, and her fictional villages, apparent idyllic paradises which in actual fact offer no refuge from the cruelties of the world. Similarly, the study takes into consideration the urban settings with a special attention devoted to the city of London which becomes the epitome of a privileged lifestyle.
    [Show full text]
  • Close View 5 Programnr: 01062Ra 5
    Over to You 2001/2002 Close View 5 Programnr: 01062ra 5 CLOSE VIEW – SPECIAL REPORT Agatha Christie– In a League of her Own Manus: Trese McPhie Producent: Claes Nordenskiöld Sändningsdatum: 6/3, 2002 Längd: 14'38 Excerpt from "The Murder at the Vicarage" Music: The Smiths "Girl Afraid" Presenter: Close View – Special Report presents an excerpt from Agatha Christie's "The Murder at the Vicarage" starring the one and only Miss Marple: When the hated Colonel Protheroe is murdered, everyone in St. Mary Mead is a suspect. Excerpt from "The Murder at the Vicarage" Music: The Smiths "Girl Afraid" Narrator: Welcome to "Agatha Christie – In a League of Her Own". What you heard was a short excerpt from "The Murder at the Vicarage" – one of Christie's many best-selling books. Agatha Christie has sold more than two billion books in forty-five languages, making her the most popular novelist in history, with titles such as "Death on the Nile", "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" and "The Murder on the Orient Express". We sent Becky Dickinson to the British Museum to take a look at their retrospective exhibition on Agatha Christie, but first Becky sat down to chat with the author's grandson Matthew Prichard, for a firsthand account of the famous writer. Matthew Prichard: I was actually very fond of her, as an ordinary grandmother. Leave aside all the books that she wrote and the plays that she wrote, et cetera, who played quite a part in my upbringing, as I didn't have a father, who was killed in the war.
    [Show full text]
  • Mousetrap………………………………….…...32
    The Jefferson Performing Arts Society Presents 1118 Clearview Parkway Metairie, LA 70001 504-885-2000 www.jpas.org 1 | P a g e Table of Contents Teacher’s Notes………………………..……………….………..……..3 Standards and Benchmarks…………………………....……….…..6 Background: Agatha Christie ……………………………………….7 Background: The Mousetrap………………………………….…...32 Up Whodunnit …..…………….………....................................72 The Mousetrap Vocabulary Time Period and Phrases………76 The Mousetrap: Differences in English and American Culture …….…....95 The Mousetrap: Who Do You Think is the Suspect?……………………………...108 The Mousetrap: Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast ……………………...120 Additional Resources ……………………………….…...…..….....144 2 | P a g e Teacher’s Notes • Directed by Keith Thomas In Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap a group of strangers is stranded in a boarding house during a snow storm. The Mousetrap is a murder mystery. The suspects include the newly married couple who run the house, and the suspicions in their minds nearly wreck their perfect marriage. Other potential suspects or victims are a spinster with a curious background, an architect who seems better equipped to be a chef, a retired Army major, a strange little man who claims his car has overturned in a drift, a jurist who makes life miserable for everyone and a policeman. Who will be the suspect(s)? Who will be the victim(s)? The Background portion of this Companion is divided into two sections, background on author and playwright Agatha Christie and background on her play The Mousetrap, the longest running play in the world! Author and playwright Agatha Christie was a phenomenal woman. Intelligent and determined, she showed perseverance and a commitment to being her own person from the time she was a child.
    [Show full text]