Claud Eustace Teal
Fictional character
title: "Claud Eustace Teal" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["characters-of-the-golden-age-of-detective-fiction", "fictional-british-police-detectives", "literary-characters-introduced-in-1929", "the-saint-(simon-templar)", "spy-film-characters"] description: "Fictional character" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claud_Eustace_Teal" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Fictional character ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox character"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Claud Eustace Teal |
| series | The Saint |
| image | InspectorTeal.jpg |
| image_size | 200px |
| caption | Ivor Dean as Teal. |
| first | Daredevil (1929) |
| creator | Leslie Charteris |
| portrayer | Ivor Dean |
| Campbell Singer | |
| Gordon McLeod | |
| Charles Victor | |
| David Ryall | |
| Alun Armstrong | |
| occupation | Chief inspector |
| Scotland Yard | |
| gender | Male |
| nationality | British |
| :: |
| name = Claud Eustace Teal | series = The Saint | image = InspectorTeal.jpg | image_size = 200px | caption = Ivor Dean as Teal. | first = Daredevil (1929) | creator = Leslie Charteris | portrayer = Ivor Dean Campbell Singer Gordon McLeod Charles Victor David Ryall Alun Armstrong | occupation = Chief inspector Scotland Yard | gender = Male | nationality = British
Claud Eustace Teal is a fictional character who made many appearances in a series of novels, novellas and short stories by Leslie Charteris featuring The Saint, starting in 1929. A common spelling variation of his first name in reference works and websites is Claude, however in his works Charteris uses the spelling without the 'e'.
History
Teal was a London-based police detective for Scotland Yard, with which he initially held the rank of Inspector. He first appeared not in a Saint story, but in a 1929 novel entitled Daredevil as a friend of that book's hero, "Storm" Arden.{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Daredevil! | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | year = 1929 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Meet - The Tiger! | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1928
Backstory
Teal first appeared opposite Simon Templar in several novella-length stories that appeared in the UK magazine Thriller in the spring and summer of 1929; several were published in 1930 as the collection Enter the Saint (which is where most readers were first exposed to Teal),{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Enter the Saint | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1930 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Featuring the Saint | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1931 | last = Barer | first = Burl | author-link = Burl Barer | title = The Saint: A Complete History in Print, Radio, Film and Television 1928–1992 | publisher = MacFarland | year = 2003
At some point, Teal received a promotion to Chief Inspector and he is identified with this rank for the first time in the short story collection The Brighter Buccaneer.{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = The Brighter Buccaneer | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1933
Teal is described as a heavy set, blue-eyed, perpetually weary policeman who, instead of smoking (a common behaviour during the era), had mints regularly. Little if any family life is indicated for the character. According to Daredevil, however, he had married at the age of 22. It isn't known whether Teal had mints in an attempt to quit smoking; the Wrigley's Spearmint brand is frequently mentioned by name (and even illustrated on the cover of some editions of Saint books that involve Teal).
Teal's relationship with Templar varies throughout the long-running Saint series. In the earliest parts, "The Saint" was a mysterious criminal that Teal was hunting. In the later part, Teal already knows The Saint is Simon Templar—gets to know him very well—but finds it difficult to obtain proof of his law-breaking that would stand in court. Sometimes they are adversaries, with Teal striving to put Templar behind bars and stop his "law-bending" crimefighting ways. Templar, in return, baits Teal frequently and in The Holy Terror goes so far as to blackmail Teal (an action that earns Templar a rare rebuke from his girlfriend and partner, Patricia Holm, in the later book, Once More the Saint).{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = The Holy Terror | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1932 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Once More the Saint | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1933
At other times, Teal and Templar maintain a cordial relationship bordering on friendship. Indeed, in several of the early Saint books (including The Holy Terror), Teal states outright that he would consider Templar a friend if they weren't on the opposite sides of the law.{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = The Holy Terror | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1932 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = The Misfortunes of Mr. Teal | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1934
Despite giving an air of being weary and slow-moving, Teal is a brilliant detective, and one whom Templar occasionally underestimates. He also has demonstrated the ability to exhibit surprising dexterity and speed when the need arises. (In one early story, he braves entering a gas-filled cellar – at grave risk of being gassed to death himself – in order to carry an unconscious Templar to safety, an action he later half-jokingly regrets.{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = "The Story of a Dead Man" in Alias the Saint | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1931 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = The Misfortunes of Mr. Teal | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1934 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = "The Unusual Ending" in The Brighter Buccaneer | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1933
Teal, however, is also shown acknowledging Templar's crimefighting and deduction abilities on numerous occasions. Although an attempt to make Templar an agent of Scotland Yard meets with failure (as seen in the novel She Was a Lady),{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = She Was a Lady | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1931
Teal disappears from the book series for a time after the 1939 short story collection The Happy Highwayman, as the Saint entered into a series of books set in America during World War II, reappearing after the war.
In "The Talented Husband" (a short story in the 1956 collection The Saint Around the World) the Saint returns to the UK and indulges in one final round of 'Teal-baiting' before the Chief Inspector retires.{{cite book | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = "The Talented Husband" in The Saint Around the World | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1956 | last = Charteris | first = Leslie | author-link = Leslie Charteris | title = Catch the Saint | publisher = Hodder and Stoughton | series = The Saint | year = 1975
Teal was considered a major character by Charteris, so much so that he named a 1934 volume The Misfortunes of Mr. Teal. (Later editions of 1933's Once More the Saint were also retitled The Saint and Mr. Teal.)
Portrayals
Teal has appeared in numerous film and TV adaptations of The Saint. Generally (though not always) dramatic depictions of Teal have presented him as a rather less competent policeman than in the novels, with his ponderous approach exaggerated at the expense of his detection abilities. In his most significant adaptation (the 1960s British television series) he is presented as almost incompetent, with his success in solving cases always down to the efforts of Simon Templar.
Film
When The Saint was first adapted for cinema by RKO Radio Pictures, five of the eight films in the RKO series were set in the United States. As a result, the character of Teal was usually replaced by Inspector Fernack, a New York detective of similar disposition who had been introduced in the novel The Saint in New York. Teal made his first RKO appearance in 1939's The Saint in London played by Gordon McLeod, and McLeod reprised the role in The Saint's Vacation (1941) and The Saint Meets the Tiger (1943). The Saint Meets the Tiger was based upon the aforementioned Meet – The Tiger!, only this time Teal replaces the character of Detective Carn.
In 1953 British Hammer Film Productions made The Saint's Return, which wasn't based on any of Charteris' stories. This film featured Charles Victor as Teal.
The most recent appearance of the character has been in the 1997 film version of The Saint, played by Alun Armstrong. Besides Templar, Teal is the only character from the original canon to appear in this loosely based film.
TV
On television, Ivor Dean played Teal as a recurring character in the 1962–69 British series, The Saint. Teal appeared in several early episodes played by other actors (Campbell Singer, Norman Pitt and Wensley Pithey respectively). Dean appeared in another role in Teal's second appearance (an episode entitled Starring the Saint) before being cast on a permanent basis. In the TV series Templar always greets Teal with mock respect: "Claud Eustace Teal, pride of Scotland Yard". Whilst Teal always gruffly refers to Templar by his surname only, Templar addresses Teal with the much more chummy "my dear Claud".
The character did not appear in the spin-off, 1978's Return of the Saint, but did make a reappearance in the first episode of the 1989 series of TV movies starring Simon Dutton. On this occasion, he was played by David Ryall.
Radio
John Baddeley voiced Teal in the 1995 BBC Radio adaptations of The Saint Closes the Case, and The Saint Plays With Fire. 2. The Saint Closes the Case3. The Saint Plays With Fire
References
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