THREE famous faces from stage and screen are set to become Agatha Christie’s latest guests in Leeds.

Gary Mavers, Neil Stacy and Deborah Grant have joined the UK tour of Christie thriller And Then There Were None.

The play, which is at the Grand Theatre from August 17 to 22, marks the 10th anniversary of the Agatha Christie Theatre Company and the 125th anniversary of the author’s birth.

And Then There Were None is regarded as Queen of Crime’s most popular and best-selling thriller, with the novel having sold 100 million copies.

Widely considered to be Christie’s masterpiece, her own stage adaptation of this dark and captivating tale promises to thrill and enthral.

The play is set on a remote island off the coast of Devon, where 10 strangers have been lured. Upon arrival, they discover that their host, an eccentric millionaire, is missing.

At dinner a recorded message is played accusing each of them in turn of having a guilty secret and by the end of the evening the 10 guests become nine.

Stranded on the island by a torrential storm and haunted by an ancient nursery rhyme, one by one the guests begin to die.

Gary Mavers, best known as Peak Practice heartthrob Dr Andrew Attwood, will play retired police inspector William Henry Blore.

Neil Stacy, who is best known for his role as Robert Cochran in the 1980s ITV sitcom Duty Free, will play judge Sir Lawrence Wargrave.

Bergerac and Peak Practice’s Deborah Grant will star as eccentric spinster Emily Brent, while Keiza Burrows, who played junior doctor Cath Llewellyn in the 2009 BBC drama series Crash, plays secretary Vera Claythorne.

The quartet have joined a cast that already included Emmerdale’s Frazer Hines, former Blue Peter presenter and actor Mark Curry, Soldier Soldier’s Ben Nealon and Bouquet Of Barbed Wire’s Eric Carte.

The summer season continues with The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time (August 25-29) and The Shawshank Redemption (August 31 to September 5).

Visit leedsgrandtheatre.com or call 0844 8482700.