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Maigret and almost
His wife's given name is Louise, but she is almost exclusively referred to as Madame Maigret in the books.

Maigret and even
Megure / Maigret's wife was played by Tomomi Sato, who earned the praises of Simenon himself: " The best ' Madame Maigret ' in my opinion, even including the French ones, was the ' Madame Maigret ' on Japanese television.

Maigret and when
* Although Richard appeared as Maigret for many decades, Maigret creator Georges Simenon disliked him since he failed to take his hat off when entering a room.
Maigret is genuinely proud and happy when one of his junior officers meets with some professional success.
Jean Richard had an earlier long-running series playing the character on French television however, Simenon himself is said to have disliked Richard's Maigret because he would not take his hat off when entering a room.

Maigret and
Louis Désiré Maigret, SS. CC., ( September 14, 1804 June 11, 1882 ), served as the first vicar apostolic of the Vicariate Apostolic of the Sandwich Islands ; now the Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu.

Maigret and fact
The format of each play would begin with Maigret and Simenon sitting together discussing some fact or event which would then lead into Maigret's recounting a particular case, with Simenon asking questions or commenting from time to time.

Maigret and which
The British television channel ITV produced an adaptation of Maigret in 1992 and 1993, in which Michael Gambon starred as Maigret.
* Rupert Davies, of Maigret fame, played Smiley as a minor although important character in the film version of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, made in 1965, and which starred Richard Burton.
De Maigret also reports that in 1951, three inscriptions were found just north of al-Ukhdud, which refer to a military campaign led by Dhū Nuwas ( where he is called Yūsuf Asar Yathar ), and are dated to the year 633 of the Himyarite era, equivalent to AD 518 or 523.
At the end of his career, he played Commissioner Maigret for six years in the Italian version of those murder stories, which ended with a movie Maigret in Pigalle ( Mario Landi, 1966 ), produced by his son Antonio Cervi.

Maigret and people
Jules Maigret, ( titled Commissaire ) Maigret to most people, including his wife, is a fictional police detective, actually a commissaire or commissioner of the Paris " Brigade Criminelle " ( Direction Régionale de Police Judiciaire de Paris ), created by writer Georges Simenon.

Maigret and with
Seventy-five novels and twenty-eight short stories about Maigret were published between 1931 and 1972, starting with Pietr-le-Leton ( Latvian Pete ) and concluding with Maigret et Monsieur Charles ( Maigret and Monsieur Charles ).
Without any living children of his own, Maigret nevertheless demonstrates fondness for children, treating them with kindness and patience, and often indulging them.
The role of mindless puppet, contrasting with the brilliance of Maigret, is reserved for public prosecutors or more frequently a Juge d ' instruction or Examining Magistrate.
His portrayal won two of the highest accolades: his versions were dubbed into French and played across the Channel ; and Simenon himself presented Davies with a novel inscribed to his " perfect Maigret ".
Maurice Denham played Chief Inspector Maigret in a series of half-hour dramatizations of the novels on BBC Radio 4 from 1992 to 2002, with Michael Gough playing Georges Simenon.
After Denham's death, the series was continued in 2003 with Nicholas Le Prevost playing a gruffer, more earthy Maigret and Julian Barnes playing Simenon.
With RAI, Camilleri worked on several TV productions, such as Inspector Maigret with Gino Cervi.
* Maigret with Michael Gambon: 1992 – 93 ( 6 ), 1994 – 95 ( 6 )
All those who served as Vicar Apostolic of the Hawaiian Islands or Bishop of Honolulu are buried in the Honolulu Catholic Cemetery, with the exception of Bishop Louis Maigret, Bishop James Sweeney, Bishop John Joseph Scanlan and Bishop Joseph Anthony Ferrario.
Some sources state that he was the successor of Rabia ibn Mudhar, a member of the same dynasty ; the archeologist Alessandro de Maigret believes he was a usurper. Nashwad bin Sa ' id al-Himyari stated that he killed his predecessor with a stiletto hidden in his sandal while his predecessor was seducing the handsome Yusuf in his chambers.

Maigret and .
* 1804 – Louis Désiré Maigret, French bishop ( d. 1882 )
* Alessandro de Maigret.
** Louis Désiré Maigret, Roman Catholic bishop of Honolulu ( d. 1882 )
* The first grammatical description of the French language is published by Louis Maigret.
He has been married since 1951 to Connie ( Constance M. Wake ), an actress who appeared in early 1960s television dramas such as Maigret.
Inspector Maigret, the creation of Georges Simenon ( 1903 – 89 ), won a wide following in translation.
The first missionary to arrive was Father Louis Desiré Maigret, a Roman Catholic priest.
Ten years later Maigret returned to the Hawaiian kingdom as Bishop of Honolulu.
Among his designs those for Simenon's Maigret are quite famous.
Jules Maigret sculpture offered to Delfzijl, Netherlands by A. W.
Laughton made his first color film in Paris as Inspector Maigret in The Man on the Eiffel Tower ( 1949 ) and, wrote the Monthly Film Bulletin, " appeared to overact " alongside Boris Karloff as a mad French nobleman in a version of Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Door in 1951.
* Alessandro de Maigret.
Maigret statue by Pieter d ' Hont in Delfzijl.
The unveiling was made by Simenon himself on September 3, 1966, at the place where he had written the first Maigret novel, and was attended by Maigret actors from various countries.
The Maigret stories were also adapted for television and radio.
Maigret was born at Saint-Fiacre in the Allier department ( where there is no such village ), supposedly in 1884, although different birth years may be inferred from different books.

almost and invariably
Their conversations were, almost invariably, accompanied by the same gestures -- arms and pointed forefingers darting toward each other in arclike semicircular motions.
Again, the sufferings and disasters produced by any transgression against the commandment not to love are almost invariably associated in one way or another with childhood, with the figure of a child.
Then he would get to his feet, as though rising in honor of his own remarkable powers, and say almost invariably, `` Gentlemen, this is an amazing story!!
And this means, I suppose, that almost invariably age reveals itself by easily recognizable signs engraved on both the body and the mind.
For some compulsive reason which would have fascinated Dr. Freud, Communists of all shapes and sizes almost invariably impute to others the very motives which they harbor themselves.
It began invariably in low tones, almost conversational, and then gradually worked up to high, shrill appeals to God and man.
The charged particles then repel each other and are also repelled from the charged surface, which almost invariably bears a negative charge under washing conditions.
The Jewish working girl almost invariably works in an office -- in contradistinction to gentile factory workers -- and, buttressed by a respectable income, she is likely to dress better and live more expansively than the college student.
The cat-like sinuousness and agility of both dancers were exploited in leaps, lifts, crawls and slides that were almost invariably compelling in a work of strong, sometimes almost frightening, tensions.
Knight also expressed misgivings about van Vogt's politics, noting that his stories almost invariably present absolute monarchy in a favorable light.
Ancient authors were almost invariably from an elite background for whom giving poor and uneducated people power over their betters seemed a reversal of the proper, rational order of society.
Originally exercised by a single person, the office of Lord High Admiral was from the 18th century onward almost invariably put " in commission " and exercised by the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, who sat on the Board of Admiralty.
Baptism ( from the Greek noun Βάπτισμα baptisma ; itself derived from baptismos, washing ) is a Christian rite of admission ( or adoption ), almost invariably with the use of water, into the Christian Church generally and also a particular church tradition.
Most boomerangs seen today, are of the tourist or competition sort, and are almost invariably of the returning type.
Energy and entropy considerations are invariably important in almost all chemical studies.
After the Second World War, surviving European monarchies almost invariably adopted some variant of the constitutional monarchy model originally developed in Britain.
* Prominent socialites, elite aristocrats and royal families, top level professional athletes, chart-topping musicians and pop singers, television and film actors with lead roles on prominently scheduled television shows and hit box office movies, internationally recognized supermodels and models are almost invariably celebrities.
Returning to more normal compounds, salts of Cs < sup >+</ sup > are almost invariably colorless unless the anion itself is colored.
Multiple units are almost invariably equipped with control cabs at both ends, which is why such units are so frequently used to provide commuter services, due to the associated short turn-around time.
Implementations almost invariably fall short when one or more facets of this prescription are ignored:
In American English, collective nouns almost invariably take singular verb forms ( formal agreement ).
The shell almost invariably has a circular opening over which the drumhead is stretched, but the shape of the remainder of the shell varies widely.
The DNS resolver will almost invariably have a cache ( see above ) containing recent lookups.
They are also characterised by a laxer following of verse principles that the authors of later epics almost invariably adhered to.

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