![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgV6SQjCGDGgvyXnXzUg2DG80ILsxmPzcDnAqD-x3FV65SIziem1nPbdcQf_HpBdPxQT9R9hiCqBaQD8gr3CIu_iXq_0vpspE_KcfVOFkjRcxwGZFXvQXsZfsYCzLVbFoyJHDAtwULgODQ/s200/Peter-Elliot-as-DI-Alleyn-in-London_02.png)
Alleyn is teased by 'glimpses' of 'Ngaio' during his investigation as she walks down a London street, sits reflecting in a café or slips into a radio studio for a recording. 'Ngaio' is adept at luring her Detective on, only to evade and escape revelation. This is a cat and mouse game played by two professionals. Who is stalking who and why? Does Ngaio want to be discovered, to finally reveal who she is behind her masks?
Producer/director Aileen O'Sullivan says of making Ngaio marsh - Crime Queen, shot in New Zealand and England, and learning more about Marsh: "It is a documentary I have wanted to make for several years and found the figure we discovered even more complex, more extraordinary and more engaging than I'd originally suspected."
I was speaking to TVNZ this morning about the upcoming screening, and was informed that a decision was made last night to push the screening until later in the year, preferably with a more viewer-friendly time slot (it was scheduled to be shown at midnight on Sunday). So unfortunately we won't be able to what sounds like a fascinating programme this weekend, but the silver lining is that when it is shown, it is likely to be at a much better timeslot.
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