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  1. Crime Drama Mystery. A superstitious woman dies of apparent fright after her fate is foretold by a medium, but Miss Marple is convinced of foul play. Director. David Moore. Writers. Stewart Harcourt. Agatha Christie. Stars. Julia McKenzie. Sharon Small. Toby Stephens. See production info at IMDbPro. STREAMING. RENT/BUY. search Amazon.

    • (1.2K)
    • Crime, Drama, Mystery
    • David Moore
    • 2010-06-27
    • Synopsis
    • Cast
    • Filming Locations

    While visiting her friend Dermot Milewate in Little Ambrose, Miss Marple meets a young man named Eddie Seward on the bus. A few days later he is dead, having apparently been drowned. Within a few days, there is a second suspicious death, that of Mary Pritchard who seems to have died from fright. Inspector Somerset is convinced that the two deaths a...

    Julia McKenzie as Miss Marple
    Sharon Small as Mary Pritchard
    Toby Stephens as George Pritchard
    Claudie Blakley as Philippa Pritchard
  2. The Blue Geranium. Miss Marple. ⍔ Short Story. 1929. Mrs Pritchard lives in fear of a psychic's message: blue primrose is a warning, blue hollyhock is danger, and the blue geranium is death. From The Thirteen Problems . More about this story.

  3. "Marple" The Blue Geranium (TV Episode 2010) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. Miss Marple is visiting a friend in the village of Little Ambrose. On the bus there she meets a young man, Eddie Seward, and finds him intelligent and sensitive company. However, a few days later, Eddie Seward is found dead on the banks of the river near the golf club, and it looks like murder.

  5. NHK produced an anime adaptation of the story as episode 15 of their Japanese anime series Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple with the same title: The Blue Geranium. The episode was broadcast in 2004 and features Miss Marple and her great niece Mabel West .

  6. Nov 25, 2020 · The Blue Geranium is one of Agatha’s earliest short stories involving Jane Marple. Jane is still evolving as a character. Agatha also used the hackneyed and awkward trope of a group of people sitting around a dinner table telling true crime stories to see if the other dinner guests can figure out whodunit.