5.2 million people last night watched the last ever episode of
Agatha Christie's Poirot.
The British TV drama series based on Agatha Christie's novels about a Belgian detective has been on our screens since 1989 and has had 13 series, with classically-trained actor David Suchet playing the fictional sleuth.
But last night was when the great detective called it a day and he bowed in front of almost a quarter of last night's total number of TV viewers.
The two-hour episode saw elderly detective Hercule Poirot, who is now wheelchair-bound, call on old friend Captain Hastings for help as they returned to Styles Court, the scene of their first case.
And viewers were treated to an unexpected twist.
A review in The Telegraph said Curtain: Poirot's Final Case proved the show was "one of TV's greatest achievements".
It did not achieve the highest viewing figures of the series however, with two October episodes watched by more than six million people
End of Poirot watched by 5.2 million
BBC News
14th November 2013
In last night's last ever episode, Poirot and Captain Hastings returned to the scene of their first case, Styles Court The final episode of Agatha Christie's Poirot, starring David Suchet as the moustachioed detective, bowed out with an average of 5.2 million viewers.
Watched by 23% of the audience, the ITV crime drama beat competition from a special Children in Need episode of DIY SOS, watched by 4.6 million.
The two-hour Poirot episode peaked at 5.8 million in the first five minutes.
A review in The Telegraph said Curtain: Poirot's Final Case proved the show was "one of TV's greatest achievements".
Giving the episode a five-star review, James Walton saluted its "unshowy brilliance".
"After 24 years, 70 programmes and the triumphant realisation of David Suchet's dream of covering every Poirot novel and short story, the series could certainly have been forgiven for bowing out in a burst of self-congratulatory glory", said Walton.
"That, however, has never been its style - or the secret of its success."
The episode saw elderly detective Hercule Poirot call on old friend Captain Hastings for help as they returned to Styles Court, the scene of their first case.
It did not achieve the highest viewing figures of the series however, with two October episodes watched by more than six million people.
'Beautifully done'
The Guardian's Sam Wollaston said the finale's slightly complicated plot had left him with little idea of what was going on.
After nearly 25 years Suchet has said goodbye to Poirot's famous moustache "It's exactly as Agatha Christie - and Poirot - should be. I'm totally in the dark, in every way, but having fun."
He continued: "It's beautifully done by Suchet. I think we witness the genuine pain of an actor letting go of the body he's occupied for 24 years."
Suchet revealed on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme on Thursday that he had felt "enormous sadness" during the filming of the final scenes.
He told presenter James Naughtie: "I, David, was inevitably saying goodbye to my friend, Hercule Poirot".
The Huffington Post said Suchet was in "subdued but stunning" form as the Belgian detective, who is confined to a wheelchair for the farewell episode.
It earned a modest three-star review in The Independent, which suggested one element of the plot could be interpreted as "laughable, depending on your tolerance for this creaky old-school whodunit fare; it wasn't exactly The Killing or Broadchurch".
However, Gerard Gilbert continued: "Suchet has managed to well and truly eclipse any previous Poirots, including Peter Ustinov, and make the role definitively his own.
"Given the modern actor's reluctance to be typecast, we may probably never see his like again."
Agatha Christie
![... ...](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-fB-eZ6jXkbY/TfJrekl_LAI/AAAAAAAAAIQ/2gGSa_TVrdY/s320/2668654.jpg)
Only Shakespeare and God have had more books published
English crime writer Agatha Christie, who died in 1976, is famous not only for giving us one of the world's greatest fictional detectives - Poirot - but for also writing the world's longest-running play, The Mousetrap.
She is the best-selling novelist of all time. Her novels have sold roughly 4 billion copies, and her estate claims that her works rank third, after those of William Shakespeare and the Bible, as the world's most-widely published books. According to Index Translationum, Christie is the most-translated individual author, and her books have been translated into at least 103 languages.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24940762