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Opening Night (novel)

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1951

Originally published
  
1951

Preceded by
  
Swing Brother Swing

Genre
  
Detective fiction


Series
  
Roderick Alleyn

Media type
  
Print ()

Author
  
Ngaio Marsh

Followed by
  
Spinsters in Jeopardy

Publisher
  
Collins Crime Club

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Similar
  
Ngaio Marsh books, Inspector Alleyn mystery books, Other books

Opening Night is a detective novel by Ngaio Marsh; it is the sixteenth novel to feature Roderick Alleyn, and was first published in 1951. It was published in the United States as Night at the Vulcan.

The novel is one of the theatrical ones for which Marsh was best known, and concerns the murder of an actor backstage on opening night of a new play in London. The play is being performed at the Vulcan Theatre; it was formerly known as the Jupiter Theatre, renamed after an infamous murder recounted in the Alleyn short story "I Can Find My Way Out". The old crime is referenced in the text.

Martyn Tarne, a young and inexperienced actress from New Zealand, finds herself involved in a play where her own heredity plays a significant role in a minor part. As the understudy for a minor role, Martyn is caught up when Inspector Roderick Alleyn begins investigating a murder made to appear a suicide.

The book also sees the return of Lord Michael Lamprey. A child witness in A Surfeit of Lampreys (American title Death of a Peer), he was a civilian eager to join the police force in "I Can Find My Way Out", and he appears in Opening Night as a police constable attached to the CID.

Opening Night was one of four Alleyn novels adapted for New Zealand television in 1977; Alleyn was played by George Baker.

References

Opening Night (novel) Wikipedia