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Dame Edith Ngaio Marsh (1895-1982)

 

Of all the "Great Ladies" of the English mystery's golden age, including Margery Allingham, Agatha Christie, and Dorothy L. Sayers, Ngaio Marsh alone survived to publish in the 1980s. Over a fifty-year span, from 1932 to 1982, Marsh wrote thirty-two classic English detective novels, which gained international acclaim. She did not always see herself as a writer, but first planned a career as a painter.

"As is always the case, much of what was unearthed turned out to be of no relevance, much was of doubtful or self-contradictory nature and only a scanty winnowing found to be of real significance. It was as if the components of several jigsaw puzzles had been thrown down on the table and before the one required picture could be assembled the rest would have to be discarded." (from Grave Mistake, 1978)

Ngaio Marsh was born in Christchurch, New Zealand. Her first name is a Maori word, meaning "Reflections on the water", and was chosen by her uncle. Marsh's father was an English banker and clerk; her mother's grandfather was an early colonist in New Zealand. She attended St. Margaret's College (1910-14) and Canterbury University College School of Art (1915-20). Her childhood friend and fiancé died in World War I. She taught speech craft at the school of Drama and Dancing in Christchurch. After painting, acting, and producing in the theater in the 1920s she travelled to England, and opened, in partnership with Mrs. Tahu Rhodes, a succesfull interior decorating business in Knightsbridge. After Marsh's mother became fatally ill, she returned to New Zealand; her mother died in 1932. For the following seventeen years, Marsh took care of her elderly father.

Marsh's first novel, A MAN LAY DEAD (1934), which she wrote in London in 1931-32, introduced the detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn: a combination of Sayers's Lord Peter Wimsey and a realistically depicted police official at work. Throughout the 1930s Marsh painted occasionally, wrote plays for local repertory societies in New Zealand, and published detective novels. In 1937 Marsh went to England for a period. Before going back to her home country, she spent six months travelling about Europe.

The critic and awarded mystery writer H.R.F. Keating included SURFEIT OF LAMPREYS (1940) among the 100 best crime and mystery books ever published. "Her writing is as good as any to be found in crime fiction. Let me end with one sentence from Surfeit of Lampreys that shows it. Roberta is arriving by boat in London. She looks out at the other ships at anchor in the early morning light. 'Stewards,' she says, 'pallid in their undervests, leant out of portholes to stare.' There is an artist in words." (Keating in Crime & Mystery: the 100 Best Books, 1987) In the center of the story is the Lamprey family, English aristocrats, seen through the eyes of a New Zealand girl. Marsh mixed in occultism with Shakespearean details – Lord Wutherwood's eye is put out as in King Lear, where Shakespeare had the Duke of Gloucester tortured and blinded on stage.

During World War II Marsh served in a New Zealand Red Cross Transport Unit, driving repatriated soldiers in a hospital bus. She also worked with the drama department of Canterbury University and settled into a yearly routine that allowed her to spend about nine months writing a book and three months to mount a production of Shakespeare with her students. From 1944 to 1952 she was producer for D.D. O'Connor Theatre Management. In 1949 she returned to England and founded the British Commonwealth Theatre Company. One of her major directorial assignments include Pirandello's play Six Characters in Search of an Author, which she first saw in 1932 at the Westminster Theatre. "If you long above everything to be a director, this is the play that nags and clamours to be done," she later said. Working in two countries she would spend the rest of her time between England and New Zealand, writing mysteries during the sea voyages, and in theatrical activities.

"She thought that the English landscape, more perhaps than any other, is dyed in the heraldic colours of its own history. It is there, she thought, and until it disintegrates, earth, rock, trees, grass, turf by turf, leaf by leaf and blade by blade, it will remain imperturbably itself. To it, she thought, the reed really is as the oak and she found the notion reassuring." (from Grave Mistake)

Marsh was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1949, and in 1966 she was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire. In 1967 she produced Twelfth Night to open the new Ngaio Marsh Theatre in Christchurch. Her last full-scale production, Shakespeare's Henry V, was produced in 1972. Marsh was named in 1978 a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America, along with Dame Daphne du Maurier and Dorothy B. Hughes. Her autobiography, BLACK BEECH AND HONEYDEW, appeared in 1966 (revised in 1981). She died in Christchurch, N.Z., on February 18, 1982. Marsh is buried in the churchyard of Holy Innocents at Mount Peel. Her last novel, LIGHT THICKENS, which blended theatre and crime, was published posthumously in 1982.

Marsh's best-known character is Inspector Roderick Alleyn. The name was created as a compliment to her father who had attended a public school founded by the Elizabethan tragedian Edward Alleyn. Roderick Alleyn is assisted by Inspector Fox who can quote Shakespeare. Later Alleyn marries Agatha Troy, an absent-minded, thin, shy and funny painter, whose character was not far from Marsh's own in the 1930s. Another figure from the first books is the journalist Nigel Bathgate, whom Alleyn could not tolerate. Marsh later dropped him from the stories. Like Sayers's Lord Peter Wimsey, Alleyn has a noble background, but instead of becoming a diplomat he joined the police force after returning from World War I.

Four of Marsh's Alleyn stories were set in the theatre, ENTER A MURDERER (1935), OPENING NIGHT (1951), VINTAGE MURDER (1937), and KILLER DOLPHIN (1966). OVERTURE TO DEATH (1939) was set in a small village, Winston St. Giles, where Alleyn returned occasionally in later books. In some stories Alleyn solves murders outside England - in Australia and New Zealand (Vintage Murder, COLOUR SCHEME, DIED IN THE WOOL), France (SPINSTERS IN JEOPARDY), or in Italy (WHEN IN ROME) - Alleyn spoke French and Italian. During World War II Alleyn chased spies, but after the war he continued in the same style as in the 1930s. A modern psychopath appeared in SINGING IN THE SHROUDS (1959). Typical of Marsh's mysteries is vivid characterization and dialogue. Julian Symons has praised in his book Bloody Murder (1985) Marsh's capacity for amused observation of the undercurrents beneath ordinary social intercourse, as in the novel Opening Night. Marsh also wrote plays, a television play EVIL LIVER (Crown Court series, 1975), and a book about New Zealand. In 1978 a New Zealand television company released adaptations of four of her novels as the "Ngaio Marsh Theatre."

Although her novels had English protagonists, relied on British class structure and social environment, she thought of herself as a New Zealander. Marsh's long association with the aristocratic Rhodes family colored her reticent personality, which is portrayed in the novel Blue Blood by Stevan Eldred-Grigg. "The more deeply and honestly," Marsh wrote in her autobiography BLACK BEECH AND HONEYDEW (1965, rev.1981), "one examines one's characters the more disquieting becomes the skulduggery that one is obliged to practise." The novels Marsh set in her home country, Colour Scheme (1943), Vintage Murder, and Died in the Wool (1944), show a sympathy for the Maoris, and a love of the landscape. Her Mount Peel homestead was memorialized as "Deepacres" in the prologue to DEATH OF A PEER (1940).

For further reading: Bloody Murder by Julian Symons (1972); Ngaio Marsh: A Life by Margaret Lewis (1998); Blue Blood by Stevan Eldred-Grigg (1997); World Authors 1900-1950 ed. by Martin Seymour-Smith and Andrew C. Kimmens (1996); Return to Black Beech, ed. by Carolyn Lidgard and Carole Acheson (1996); Ngaio Marsh; The Woman and Her Work, ed. by B.J. Rahn (1995); Ngaio Marsh: A Life by M. Lewis (1991); Ngaio Marsh by K.S. McDorman (1991)

Selected writings:

  • A MAN LAY DEAD, 1934
  • ENTER A MURDERER, 1935
  • THE NURSING-HOME MURDER, 1935 (play, with H. Jellet)
  • DEATH IN ECSTASY, 1936
  • VINTAGE MURDER, 1937
  • ARTISTS IN CRIME, 1938
  • DEATH IN A WHITE TIE, 1938
  • OVERTURE TO DEATH, 1939
  • DEATH AT THE BAR, 1940
  • DEATH OF A PEER / A SURFEIT OF LAMPREYS, 1940
  • DEATH AND THE DANCING FOOTMAN, 1941
  • NEW ZEALAND, 1942 (with R.M. Burdon)
  • COLOUR SCHEME, 1943
  • DIED IN THE WOOL, 1945
  • A PLAY TOWARD, 1946
  • HAND IN GLOVE, 1947 - Hansikoitu käsi (suom. Eija Palsbo)
  • FINAL CURTAIN, 1947
  • SWING, BROTHER, SWING, 1949 - U.S. title: A WREATH FOR RIVIERA
  • OPENING NIGHT, 1951 - U.S. title: NIGHT AT THE VULCAN
  • SPINSTERS IN JEOPARDY, 1953
  • SCALES OF JUSTICE, 1955 - Odottamaton onkimies (suom. Inkeri Hämäläinen)
  • DEATH OF A FOOL OFF WITH HIS HEAD, 1956
  • SINGING IN THE SHROUDS, 1958 - Serenadi ruumille (suom. Pentti Kankaala)
  • FALSE SCENT, 1959 - Pettävä tuoksu (suom. Pauli A. Kopperi)
  • PERSPECTIVES, 1960
  • PLAY PRODUCTION, 1960
  • FALSE SCENT, 1961 (play, with Eileen Mackay)
  • HAND IN GLOVE, 1962
  • THE CHRISTMAS TREE, 1962 (play)
  • A UNICORN FOR CHRISTMAS, 1962 (play, music by David Farquhar)
  • DEAD WATER, 1963
  • MURDER SAILS AT MIDNIGHT, 1963 (play)
  • NEW ZEALAND, 1964
  • BLACK BEECH AND HONEYDEW, 1965 - revised 1981
  • KILLER DOLPHIN, 1966
  • television script: SLIPKNOT, 1967
  • CLUTCH OF THE CONSTABLES, 1968 - Murharisteily (suom. Risto Säämänen)
  • WHEN IN ROME, 1970
  • TIED UP IN TINSEL, 1972
  • BLACK AS HE'S PAINTED, 1973 - Mustaa miestä ken pelkäisi
  • LAST DITCH, 1977 - Viimeinen este (suom. Virpi Luukkonen, Teija Rinne)
  • GRAVE MISTAKE, 1978
  • PHOTO-FINISH, 1980
  • LIGHT THICKENS, 1982 - Esirippu nousee (suom. Paula Herranen)
  • THE COLLECTED SHORT FICTION OF NGAIO MARSH, 1989


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