Agatha Christie Wiki
No edit summary
Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
No edit summary
Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 2: Line 2:
   
 
Lucky has golden blonde hair, which is almost the same colour as [[Molly Kendal|Molly Kendal's]] hair. However, according to [[Joan Prescott|Miss Prescott]], Molly's hair colour is natural, but Lucky dyes her hair.
 
Lucky has golden blonde hair, which is almost the same colour as [[Molly Kendal|Molly Kendal's]] hair. However, according to [[Joan Prescott|Miss Prescott]], Molly's hair colour is natural, but Lucky dyes her hair.
  +
  +
Lucky is not her real name, but Greg gave her that nicknam because he said that she was his "good-luck piece", and that if he lost her, he would lose his luck.
   
 
She had plotted to kill his first [[Gail Dyson|wife]], along with [[Edward Hillingdon]], whom she tricked into guilt for his actions, and then seduced. She is the third murder victim.
 
She had plotted to kill his first [[Gail Dyson|wife]], along with [[Edward Hillingdon]], whom she tricked into guilt for his actions, and then seduced. She is the third murder victim.

Revision as of 03:40, 24 May 2022

In the novel A Caribbean Mystery, “Lucky” Dyson is an attractive American woman who is married to Greg.

Lucky has golden blonde hair, which is almost the same colour as Molly Kendal's hair. However, according to Miss Prescott, Molly's hair colour is natural, but Lucky dyes her hair.

Lucky is not her real name, but Greg gave her that nicknam because he said that she was his "good-luck piece", and that if he lost her, he would lose his luck.

She had plotted to kill his first wife, along with Edward Hillingdon, whom she tricked into guilt for his actions, and then seduced. She is the third murder victim.

Portrayals

In the 1983 Warner Bros adaptation of A Caribbean Mystery, Lucky is portrayed by Cassie Yates.

In the BBC 1989 adaptation of A Caribbean Mystery, Lucky is portrayed by Sue Lloyd.

In the 2013 ITV adaptation of A Caribbean Mystery, Lucky is portrayed by MyAnna Buring. In this adaptation, she had a first husband, one Parker De Witt III. Evelyn Hillingdon accused her of killing Parker by persuading Edward Hillingdon to get the poison for her. She claims Parker was already dying and sick and a few months didn't make any difference. Lucky subsequently married Greg Dyson. By the time of the events in the show, they no longer loved each other but could not divorce because they shared the secret of Parker's death. Although Greg insisted he had nothing to do with it, Lucky reminded him that since he married her, he would always be a natural suspect. In this adaptation, also, Lucky was a cocaine addict, and obtained some of it from Victoria Johnson. Miss Marple surmised that what she had done to Parker had driven her to depression. Lucky died by being pushed off a cliff. Tim Kendal had mistaken her for Molly as she was standing at Molly's favourite spot and wearing a shawl like Molly's which she had admired earlier.

In Albert Major parlait trop, the Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie adaptation of the novel, the parallel character is Lucette Vidal, the wife of Grégoire Vidal, the head of the Hôpital Saint Paul where the events are set.