THE CHARACTERS: Murder in Make-Up (1934) is the first detective novel by former silent film actor Charles Ashton. The novel introduces his series characters Jack Atherley and Inspector Saunders. Atherley is the true sleuth in Ashton's series of detective novels and he's a breath of fresh air. Saunders is a by-the-book copper while Atherley is his witty, carefree aide with a talent for seeing things "out of the box". He reminds me of Philip "Spike" Tracy, the playboy amateur detective created by Harriette Ashbrook. Saunders and Atherley are perfect foils for one another and I enjoyed how Atherley routinely exasperated Saunders, often for the sheer joy of annoying his policeman colleague.
The rest of the cast is made up of Saunders' homicide squad headed by Sgt. Davis, another serious policeman who is more tolerant of Atherley's lightheartedness and often anticipates when the Major is about to pull one over on Saunders. And of course because the murder takes place in the world of cinema we have a supporting cast of suspects in the movie biz. They are:
William Harvey - the character actor who plays the gentleman thief and was supposed to be in the scene being filmed when Weston was killed. As the story progresses several more attempts are made on Harvey's life. The police do their best to protect him, but the killer always manages to penetrate the police protecting Harvey
Lettise Moore- the ingenue lead in Tempest. She has a secret related to Harvey that the police soon uncover. This makes her a prime suspect but she is protected by...Mrs. Moxon -- a dresser on the set for Miss Moore, and a servant/confidante in Moore's private life. Maternal, overprotective and somewhat of a termagant. Moxon is a thorn in Saunders' side. Atherley is the only who can tame this shrew. She is actually on his list of suspects because after stabbing Weston the killer needed to be able to silently lower his athletic body behind the flats while the scene was being filmed. Atherley is certain the killer is one of a similar build and with enough upper body strength to carry out the silent disposal of the corpse. Besides three of the male suspects, Mrs. Moxon is the only woman who could also to do everything as he thought it out.
Ralph Lastor - the producer (in the US we'd call him the director) of the movie. His mind is only on the movie, its delays and the possible scrapping of the production due to the criminal investigation and the loss of his leading man. Why would he kill one of his actors and sabotage his own production? Does he have a secret too?Dick Howard - assistant director, man of all work. Suspicious, shifty, mistrustful. He draws the attention of Saunders when his police team while following Howard as directed see him sneaking around off the set making visits to Miss Moore's home and conversing confidentially with...
Miss Laurie - the script girl (continuity in modern movie talk) who is always on set. We learn fairly quickly that she talks in a fake American accent, flirts with nearly all the men, and had the hots for handsome Weston. But she was rejected by him. If Weston was the true intended target then Miss Laurie is definitely suspect #1 thinks Atherley. But was she strong enough to commit the murder as he envisioned it. Or was Weston somehow stabbed in some other manner?
INNOVATIONS: For a novice effort at detective novel Ashton does some admirable work here. It is almost a purely fair play novel. Unfortunately, he does hold back a bit and does more suggesting what happened which forces the reader to fill in some unexplained events. For instance, late in the book Atherley finds some supplies left behind by workmen who were doing plumbing repairs in his flat. Atherley is described as picking up a bucket of paint and stepping onto the fire escape. He then exclaims with a smile, "What a fine night!" and the chapter ends. But why was he out there with a bucket of paint? It's all explained in the final chapter. The reader has to figure it out on his own prior to being told what Atherley did. This kind of "sneaky" clueing is perhaps forgivable in a novice mystery writer. But! I know that Ashton continued to do this sort of thing in his later books. Here Comes Murder was written nearly ten years later and includes similar scenes only partially explained when first presented to the reader.
Really the best part of the book is the insider information on how an early talkie movie is produced. Ashton, a former silent film actor, offers up not only the glamorous part of movie making but the complicated work of the non-actors made up of the lighting crew, cameramen, make-up and wardrobe staff, as well as the hassles of keeping track of all the changes from shot to shot carried out by the continuity person -- in the early days of moviemaking usually called "the script girl" and almost always (as in the novel) a woman. The script girl is really nothing more than a secretary who spends all day taking copious notes, later typing them up in a daily report, on what everyone is wearing, which props are held in which hand, and all the rest of the minutiae of a movie scene.
Charles Ashton as Dick Alward in Pillars of Society (1920) |
Atherley uses an odd abbreviation in a single line of dialogue: "And it's got the archives of the famous Yard l.b.w." He says this after looking up one of the suspects in Who's Who on the Screen. I spent nearly an hour using various search terms in trying to find what those three letters meant. Turns out it's the cricket term "Leg Before Wicket" which I think means a foul that can get a batter dismissed. If it had been made clear early in the novel that Atherley was also a cricket player and often uses cricket terms I'd been able to figure this out faster. By the midpoint long after the use of that abbreviation we learn that Atherley is an avid cricket player and has played in tournaments. Apparently on a professional team because a taxi driver recognizes him from a past game. Why he uses "l.b.w." in refernce to the Who's Who listing still eleudes me.
EASY TO FIND? You can have my copy (it's the "Cherry Tree Book" copy pictured at the top) if you're lucky enough to place the highest bid. It's up for auction on my eBay listings here. Good luck finding a copy anywhere else. Like all of Ashton's detective novels it's as rare as finding a silver nitrate copy of one of Charles Ashton's movies from the silent era.
The dust jacket of this book is being sold for $25, ha!ha!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.dustjackets.com/pages/books/5873/charles-ashton/murder-in-make-up
Why do you find that so funny? Mark Terry had been selling those facsimile dust jackets for over 25 years now. They are basically very fancy photocopies. He has thousands of them. Did you just discover them? The mystery bloggers use those photos of his facsimile DJs all the time. Me included.
DeleteAmateur players played alongside professional players in cricket matches, though there were all sorts of shiboleths: they used separate entrances to the pavilion and amateurs were refered to as "Mr. X. Y. Whosit" while professionals were "Whosit, X. Y." and many amateurs were shamateurs who could claim more in expenses than professionals received in pay.
DeleteThe obvious meaning of "And it's got the archives of the famous Yard l.b.w." is that the Yard's archives are demonstrated to be wrong. The problem is that the l.b.w. law is one of the most complicated and variable in cricket. There's endless debate about how to change and apply it, and it depends entirely on the observation and interpretation of the umpire - a guarantee of debate and argument. Perhaps Ashton meant to write "And it's got the archives of the famous Yard clean bowled." "Clean bowled" means the ball hit the wicket without the bat touching it and there can be no argument about irrefutable proof.
Thanks so much for that detailed background. Cricket is as alien to me as Sanskrit poetry.
Delete