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Georges Simenon
Simenon in 1963
Simenon in 1963
Born Georges Joseph Christian Simenon
(1903-02-12)12 February 1903
Liège, Wallonia, Belgium
Died 4 September 1989(1989-09-04) (aged 86)
Lausanne, Romandy, Switzerland
Pen name G. Sim, Monsieur Le Coq
Occupation Novelist
Language French
Nationality Belgian
Alma mater Collège Saint-Louis, Liège
Notable awards Académie royale de Belgique (1952)
Years active 1919–1981

Georges Joseph Christian Simenon (French: [ʒɔʁʒ simnɔ̃]; 12/13 February 1903 – 4 September 1989) was a Belgian writer, most famous for his fictional detective Jules Maigret. One of the most popular authors of the 20th century, he published around 400 novels, 21 volumes of memoirs and many short stories, selling over 500 million copies.

Apart from his detective fiction, he achieved critical acclaim for his literary novels which he called romans durs (hard novels). Among his literary admirers were Max Jacob, François Mauriac and André Gide. Gide wrote, “I consider Simenon a great novelist, perhaps the greatest, and the most genuine novelist that we have had in contemporary French literature.”

Born and raised in Liège, Belgium, Simenon lived for extended periods in France (1922–45), the United States (1946–55) and finally Switzerland (1957-1989). Much of his work is semi-autobiographical, inspired by his childhood and youth in Liège, extensive travels in Europe and the world, wartime experiences, troubled marriages, and numerous love affairs.

Critics such as John Banville have praised Simenon's novels for their psychological insights and vivid evocation of time and place. Among his most notable works are The Saint-Fiacre Affair (1932), Monsieur Hire's Engagement (1933), Act of Passion (1947), The Snow was Dirty (1948) and The Cat (1967).

Early life and education

Simenon-rue Leopold
26 rue Léopold, Liège, the house where Simenon was born

Simenon was born at 26 Rue Léopold (Liège) [fr] (now number 24) to Désiré Simenon and his wife Henriette Brüll. Désiré Simenon worked in an accounting office at an insurance company and had married Henriette in April 1902. Simenon was either born at 11.30 pm on Thursday 12 February 1903 (according to the birth certificate), or just after midnight on Friday 13th (the date possibly being falsified on the certificate due to superstition).

The Simenon family was of Walloon and Flemish ancestry, settling in the Belgian Limburg in the seventeenth century. His mother's family was of Flemish, Dutch and German descent. One of his mother's most notorious ancestors was Gabriel Brühl, a criminal who preyed on Limburg from the 1720s until he was executed in 1743. Later, Simenon would use Brühl as one of his many pen names.

In April 1905, two years after Simenon's birth, the family moved to 3 rue Pasteur (now 25 rue Georges Simenon) in Liège's Outremeuse [fr] neighbourhood. Simenon's brother Christian was born in September 1906 and eventually became their mother's favourite child, which Simenon resented. The young Simenon, however, idolised his father and later claimed to have partly modelled Maigret's temperament on him.

At the age of three, Simenon learned to read at the Ecole Guardienne run by the Sisters of Notre Dame. Then, between 1908 and 1914, he attended the Institut Saint-André, run by the Christian Brothers.

In 1911, the Simenons moved to 53 rue de la Loi, where they took in lodgers, many of them students from Eastern Europe, Jews and political refugees. This gave the young Simenon an introduction to the wider world, which was later reflected his novels, notably Pedigree (published 1948) and Le Locataire (The Lodger) (1938).

Following the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914, Liège was occupied by the German army. Henriette took in German officers as lodgers, much to Désiré's disapproval. Simenon later said that the war years provided some of the happiest times of his life. They were also memorable for a child because, "my father cheated, my mother cheated, everyone cheated."

In October 1914, Simenon began his studies at the Collège Saint-Louis, a Jesuit high school. After a year, he switched to Collège St Servais, where he studied for three years. He excelled at French, but his marks in other subjects declined. He read widely in the Russian, French and English classics, frequently played truant, and turned to petty theft in order to buy pastries and other war time luxuries.

In 1917, the Simenon family moved to a former post office building in the rue des Maraîchers. Using his father's heart condition as a pretext, Simenon quit school in June 1918, without taking his end-of-year exams. After brief periods working in a patisserie and a bookshop, Simenon found himself unemployed when the war ended in November 1918. He witnessed scenes of violent retribution against residents of Liège accused of collaboration which stayed with him for the rest of his life. He described these scenes in Pedigree and Les trois crimes de mes amis (My Friends' Three Crimes) (1938).

Early career, 1919–22

In January 1919, the 15-year-old Simenon took a job as a junior reporter at the Gazette de Liège, a right-wing Catholic newspaper edited by Joseph Demarteau. Within a few months he was promoted to crime reporting, signing his articles "Georges Sim". By April he was given his own opinion and gossip column which he signed "Monsieur Le Coq." He was also assigned interviews with leading international figures such as Hirohito, Crown Prince of Japan, and French war hero Marshal Foch. In 1920-21 he enrolled in a course on forensic science at the University of Liège in order to improve his knowledge of the latest police methods.

In May 1920, Simenon began publishing short fiction in the Gazette. In September he completed his first novel, Au Pont des Arches which he self-published in 1921. He wrote two other novels while working at the Gazette, but these were never published.

In June 1919, Simenon had been introduced into a group of young artists and bohemians which called itself "Le Caque" (herring barrel). The group met at night to discuss art and philosophy. In early 1922 one of the members of the group, Joseph Kleine, died. Simenon was one of the last people to see Kleine alive and was deeply affected by his death.

Through Le Caque, Simenon met a young painter, Régine Renchon, and in early 1921 they began a relationship. They soon became engaged and agreed that Simenon should complete his year of compulsory military service before they married.

Simenon's father died In November 1921, an event which Simenon called, "the most important day in a man's life." Soon after, he began his military service. After a brief posting with the allied occupation forces in Germany, he was transferred to the cavalry barracks in Liège and was soon given permission to resume writing for the Gazette.

When Simenon's military service ended in December 1922, he resigned from the Gazette and moved to Paris to establish a base for himself and his future wife Régine, whom he preferred to call "Tigy".

France, 1922–1945

Literary apprenticeship, 1922–28

Now in Paris, Simenon found a menial job with a far-right political group headed by the writer Binet-Valmer. In March 1923, he returned to Liège to marry Régine. Although neither Simenon or Régine were religious, they were married in a Catholic church to please Simenon's mother, who was devout.

The newly-weds moved to Paris where Régine tried to establish herself as a painter while Simenon resumed work for Binet-Valmer and sent articles to the Revue Sincère of Brussels for which he was the Paris correspondent. He also wrote short stories for popular magazines, but sales were sporadic.

In the summer of 1923, Simenon was engaged by the Marquis de Tracy as his private secretary, which obliged him to spend nine months of the year at the aristocrat's various rural properties. Régine soon moved to a village near the Marquis's principal estate at Paray-le-Frésil, near Moulins.

While working for the Marquis, Simenon began submitting stories to Le Matin whose literary editor was Colette. Colette advised him to make his work "less literary" which Simenon took to mean that he should use simple descriptions and a limited stock of common words. Simenon followed her advice and within a year became one of the paper's regular contributors.

Now with a steady income from his writing, Simenon left the Marquis' employ in 1924 and returned to Paris where he and Régine found an apartment in the fashionable Place des Vosges. Simenon was writing and selling short stories at the rate of 80 typed pages a day, and now turned his hand to pulp novels. His first, Le roman d'une dactylo (The Story of a Typist) was quickly sold and two more appeared in 1924 under the pseudonyms "Jean du Perry" and "Georges Simm". From 1921 to 1934 he used a total of 17 pen names while writing 358 novels and short stories.

In the summer of 1925, the Simenons took a holiday in Normandy where they met Henriette Liberge, the 18-year-old daughter of a fisherman. Régine offered her a job as their housekeeper in Paris and the young woman accepted. Simenon began calling her "Boule", and she was to become his lover and part of the Simenon household under that name for the next 39 years.

Simenon began an affair with Josephine Baker in 1926 or 1927, and became her part-time assistant and editor of Josephine Baker's Magazine. However, the Simenons were tiring of their hectic life in Paris, and in April 1928 they set out with Boule for a six-month tour of the rivers and canals of France in a small boat, the Ginette. Without the distractions provided by Josephine Baker, Simenon's tally of published popular novels increased from 11 in 1927 to 44 in 1928.

Birth and retirement of Maigret, 1929–39

In the spring of 1929, the Simenons and Boule set off for a tour of northern France, Belgium and Holland in a larger, custom-built boat, the Ostrogoth. Simenon had begun contributing detective stories to a new magazine called Détective and continued to publish popular novels, mainly with the publishers Fayard.

Delfzijl Maigret 01
Maigret statue in Delfzijl, Netherlands

During his northern tour, Simenon wrote three popular novels featuring a police inspector named Maigret, but only one, Train de nuit (Night Train) was accepted by Fayard. Simenon began working on the latter novel (or possibly its successor Pietr-le-Letton (Pietr the Latvian)) in September 1929 when the Ostrogoth was undergoing repairs in the Dutch city of Delfzijl, and the city is now celebrated as the birthplace of Simenon's most famous character.

On his return to Paris in April 1930, Simenon completed Pietr-le-Letton, the first novel in which commissioner Maigret of the Paris mobile crime brigade was a fully developed character. The novel was serialised in Fayard's magazine Ric et Rac later that year, and was the first fictional work to appear under Simenon's real name.

The first Maigret novels were launched in book form by Fayard in February 1931 at the fancy dress bal anthropométrique which had a police and criminals theme. The launching party was widely reported and the novels received positive reviews. Simenon wrote 19 Maigret novels by the end of 1933, and the series eventually sold 500 million copies.

In April 1932, the Simenons and Boule moved to La Rochelle in south-west France. Soon after, they left for Africa where Simenon visited his brother, who was a colonial administrator in the Belgian Congo. Simenon also visited other African colonies and wrote a series of articles highly critical of colonialism. He drew on his African experience in novels such as Le Coup de Lune (Tropic Moon) (1933) and 450 à l'ombre (Aboard the Aquitaine) (1936).

In 1933, the Simenons visited Germany and Eastern Europe, and Simenon secured an interview with Leon Trotsky in exile in Turkey for Paris-Soir. On his return, he announced that he would write no more Maigret novels, and signed a contract with the prestigious publisher Gallimard for his new work.

Maigret, written in June 1933, was intended to be the last of the series and ended with the detective in retirement. Simenon called the Maigret novels "semi-literary" and he wanted to establish himself as a serious writer. He stated his aim was to win the Nobel Prize for Literature by 1947.

Simenon's notable novels of the 1930s, written after the temporary retirement of Maigret, include Le testament Donadieu (The Shadow Falls) (1937), L'homme qui regardait passer les trains (The Man who Watched the Trains Go By) (1938) and Le bourgmestre de Furnes (The Burgomaster of Furnes) (1939). André Gide and François Mauriac were among Simenon's greatest literary admirers at the time.

In 1935, the Simenons undertook a world tour which included the Americas, the Galapagos Islands, Tahiti, Australia and India. They then moved back to Paris, in the fashionable Neuilly district, where they lived a life of luxury which Simenon later described as "too sumptuous".

They moved home to La Rochelle in 1938 because, as Simenon later explained, "I was sickened by the life I was leading." In April the following year, Simenon's first child, Marc, was born.

Second World War, 1939–45

Simenon was in a café in La Rochelle when France declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939. In May 1940, Germany invaded Belgium, and La Rochelle became the reception centre for Belgian refugees. The Belgian government appointed Simenon Commissioner for Refugees, and he organised the reception, accommodation, and food and health needs for some 55,000 war refugees before the armistice of 22 June. By August, all Belgian refugees had been repatriated and Simenon resumed civilian life in his new home at Fontenay-le-Compte in the Vendée.

Later in 1940, a local doctor examined Simenon and diagnosed a serious heart illness, advising him to cut back on his favourite pastimes of pipe smoking and excessive eating. Simenon began working on his memoirs Je me souviens (I remember), intended as a letter to his son from a father who would soon be dead. A second medical opinion was later sought, and Simenon was assured his heart was sound.

Simenon returned to writing Maigret stories and novels, completing two in 1940 and three in 1941. He also wrote longer novels such as Pedigree, a fictionalised reworking of Je me souviens. As a popular, non-Jewish author who avoided war themes and anti-German sentiments, Simenon had few problems in having his works published at a time of censorship and paper restrictions.

Among his major works written during the war years are La veuve Couderc (The Widow Couderc) (1942), Le fuite de M. Monde (Monsieur Monde Vanishes) (published 1945), and Pedigree (published 1948). Simenon also conducted correspondence, most notably with André Gide. Gide considered La veuve Couderc superior to Camus' The Stranger which was published around the same time and has a similar main character and themes.

During the war, Simenon sold the film rights to five of his novels to Continental Films, which was funded by the German government and banned the participation of Jews. The Continental production of Simenon's Les inconnus dans la maison (Strangers in the House) had exaggerated anti-Semitic themes which are not in the novel. Resistance underground newspapers began attacking Continental Films and anyone who took their money.

In 1942, the French Commissariat-Géneral aux Questions Juives notified Simenon that they suspected him of being Jewish and gave him one month to prove he wasn't. Simenon was able to obtain the necessary certificates of birth and baptism through his mother, and soon after the Simenons moved to a more remote village in the Vendée.

In November 1944, following the German retreat, Simenon, Marc and Boule moved to a hotel in the resort town of Les Sable d'Olonne, while Régine returned to their house near La Rochelle which had now been evacuated by the Germans. In January 1945, Simenon was placed under house arrest by the police and the French Forces of the Interior on suspicion of collaboration. After three months of investigations, he was cleared of all charges.

Simenon went to Paris in May 1945 while Marc and Boule returned to their house near La Rochelle with Régine. Simenon, possibly out of concern that the French Communist Party might take over France, had decided to move to America. The rest of the family soon joined him in Paris and Simenon used his contacts to secure the required travel documents for America. Régine, however, refused to travel to America with Marc unless Boule stayed behind in France. Simenon reluctantly agreed to Régine's demand.

United States and Canada, 1945–1955

The Simenons arrived in New York in October 1945 and soon moved to Canada, where they set up home at Ste-Marguerite du Lac Masson, north of Montreal. In November, Simenon met Denyse Ouimet, a 25-year-old French-Canadian, with whom he started an affair and hired as his secretary. Denyse moved into the Simenon home in January 1946, and several weeks later told Régine that she was his new lover. Simenon fictionalised his affair with Denyse in his novels Trois chambres à Manhattan (Three Bedrooms in Manhattan) (1947) and Lettre à mon juge (Act of Passion) (1947).

The Simenons and Denyse drove to Florida in the summer of 1946, and then visited Cuba in order to arrange for permanent residence visas for the United States. It was in Florida that Simenon wrote Lettre à mon juge, widely considered one of his major works.

In June 1947, the Simenons moved to Arizona. Boule joined them there in 1948, after Régine dropped her objections to Simenon's desire to have a wife and two lovers in his household. Simenon continued to write quickly, working from 6 am to 9 am daily, and averaging 4,500 words a day. While in Arizona, Simenon wrote two Maigret novels and several romans durs (hard novels) including La neige était sale (The Snow Was Dirty) (1948), one of his major works. The 1951 American paperback edition of this novel sold 2 million copies.

Denyse became pregnant in early 1949, and Simenon asked Régine for a divorce. Denyse gave birth to Jean Dennis Chrétien Simenon (known as John) on 29 September. Régine had moved to California with Marc and Boule, and Simenon, Denyse and the baby soon moved to Carmel-by-the-Sea where they would be close to Marc. The divorce was granted in Nevada on 21 June 1950. Simenon married Denyse the following day.

The newly-weds moved to Lakeville, Connecticut and also rented a house in nearby Salmon Creek for Régine, Marc and Boule. In the five years he lived in Connecticut, Simenon wrote 13 Maigret novels and 14 romans durs including the major works La mort de Belle (Belle) (1952) and L'horloger d'Everton (The Watchmaker of Everton) (1954).

While living in Connecticut, Simenon's book sales increased to an estimated 3 million a year, and he was elected president of the Mystery Writers of America. Simenon and Denyse made two trips to Europe, in 1952 and 1954. On the 1952 trip, Simenon was admitted to the Royal Belgian Academy. In February 1953, Denyse gave birth to a daughter, Marie-Georges Simenon (known as Marie-Jo). By this time, Boule had moved in with Denyse and Simenon and had resumed her position as his lover.

By 1955, Simenon had become disillusioned with America and concerned that Denyse, who wanted to live in Europe, was becoming more distant from him. In March, Simenon, Denyse and Boule left for a European holiday and were never to return to live in America.

Return to Europe, 1955–1989

Georges Simenon (1963) by Erling Mandelmann
Simenon, 1963 by Erling Mandelmann.

The Simenons took up residence in France at Mougins, near Cannes, while Régine and Marc lived in a hotel nearby. Simenon wrote two Maigret novels and two romans durs during his first six months on the French Riviera, but was still searching for a permanent home. In July 1957, the Simenons and Boule moved to the Château d'Echandens near Lausanne, Switzerland, and were to remain there for seven years.

In May 1959, Denyse gave birth to a son, Pierre, who soon became seriously ill but survived a difficult first year. In December 1961, Simenon and Denyse employed Teresa Sburelin, a young Italian woman, as a maid. Teresa soon became Simenon's lover and was to remain his companion for the rest of his life.

Simenon continued to produce novels at a rate of three to five a year at Enchandens, including two of his most notable, Le président (The Premier) (1958) and Les anneaux de Bicêtre (The Patient) (1963).

However, the relationship between Denyse and Simenon was deteriorating. In June 1962, Denyse was persuaded to admit herself to a mental health clinic for several months. In 1961 the Simenons had decided to build a new house at Epalinges in the heights above Lausanne. The house was completed in December 1963, but Denyse lived there for only a few months before returning to the clinic.

Denyse left Epalinges for the last time in April 1964. In November, Simenon dismissed Boule who went to live with Marc who was now married with children.

Although Simenon never divorced Denyse, he was now living with his companion Teresa and three of his children: John, Marie-Jo, and Pierre. He continued to work steadily, completing three to four books a year from 1965 to 1971, including the important works Le petit saint (The Little Saint) (1965) and Le chat (The Cat) (1967).

In February 1973, Simenon announced that he was retiring from writing. A few months later, he and Teresa moved into a small house in Lausanne. He produced no new fiction from that date, but he dictated 21 volumes of memoirs.

In May 1978, Simenon's daughter, Marie-Jo, died in Paris at the age of 25. In his final volume of memoirs, Mémoires intimes (Intimate memoirs) (1981), he wrote, "One never recovers from the loss of a daughter one has cherished. It leaves a void that nothing can fill."

Simenon underwent a brain operation in 1984, but made a full recovery. From late 1988 he was confined to a wheelchair. He died on 4 September 1989, following a fall.

Honours and legacy

  • President of the Mystery Writers of America (1952)
  • Member of Royal Academy of French Language and Literature of Belgium (1952)
  • Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur (1955)
  • Honorary Member of American Academy of Arts and Letters (1971)

In 2003, the collection La Pléiade published 21 of Simenon's novels in two volumes. The novels were selected by Professor Jacques Dubois, President of the Centre for Georges Simenon Studies at the Université de Liège, and his assistant Benoît Denis, both experts on Simenon. A third volume of 8 novels and two autobiographical works was published in 2009.

Film adaptations

Simenon's work has been widely adapted to cinema and television. He is credited on at least 171 productions. Notable films include:

  • Night at the Crossroads (La nuit du carrefour, France, 1932), written and directed by Jean Renoir, starring Pierre Renoir as Maigret
  • The Yellow Dog (Le chien jaune, France, 1932), directed by Jean Tarride, starring Abel Tarride as Maigret
  • A Man's Neck (France, 1933), directed by Julien Duvivier, starring Harry Baur as Maigret
  • La Maison des sept jeunes filles (France, 1942), directed by Albert Valentin
  • Annette and the Blonde Woman (Annette et la dame blonde, France, 1942), adapted by Henri Decoin, directed by Jean Dréville
  • The Strangers in the House (Les inconnus dans la maison, France, 1942), adapted by Henri-Georges Clouzot & Henri Decoin, directed by Henri Decoin
  • Monsieur La Souris (France, 1942), directed by Georges Lacombe
  • Picpus (France, 1943), directed by Richard Pottier, starring Albert Préjean as Maigret
  • Strange Inheritance (Le voyageur de la Toussaint, France, 1943), adapted from Strange Inheritance, directed by Louis Daquin
  • The Man from London (L'Homme de Londres, France, 1943), directed by Henri Decoin
  • Cecile Is Dead (Cécile est morte, France 1944), adapted by Jean-Paul Le Chanois & Michel Duran, directed by Maurice Tourneur, starring Albert Préjean as Maigret
  • Majestic Hotel Cellars (Les caves du Majestic, France, 1945), directed by Richard Pottier, starring Albert Préjean as Maigret
  • Panic (Panique, France, 1946), adapted from Les fiançailles de M. Hire, directed by Julien Duvivier
  • Temptation Harbour (UK, 1947), adapted from L'homme de Londres (Newhaven-Dieppe), directed by Lance Comfort
  • Last Refuge (Dernier Refuge, France, 1947), adapted from Le locataire, directed by Marc Maurette
  • The Man on the Eiffel Tower (1949), adapted from La tête d'un homme, directed by Burgess Meredith, starring Charles Laughton as Maigret
  • La Marie du port (France, 1950), directed by Marcel Carné
  • Midnight Episode (UK, 1950), adapted from Monsieur La Souris, directed by Gordon Parry
  • La Vérité sur Bébé Donge (France, 1952), directed by Henri Decoin
  • Brelan d'as [fr] (France, 1952), anthology film, directed by Henri Verneuil, starring Michel Simon as Maigret
  • Forbidden Fruit (Le Fruit défendu, France, 1952), directed by Henri Verneuil
  • The Man Who Watched Trains Go By (UK, 1952), adapted from L'Homme qui regardait passer les trains, directed by Harold French
  • La neige était sale (France, 1953), directed by Luis Saslavsky
  • Maigret dirige l'enquête (France, 1956), adapted from Cécile est morte, directed by Stany Cordier, starring Maurice Manson as Maigret
  • A Life in the Balance (1955), adapted from Sept petites croix dans un carnet, directed by Harry Horner and Rafael Portillo
  • The Bottom of the Bottle (1956), adapted from Le fond de la bouteille, directed by Henry Hathaway
  • Le Sang à la tête (France, 1956), adapted from Le Fils Cardinaud, directed by Gilles Grangier and starring Jean Gabin
  • The Brothers Rico (1957), directed by Phil Karlson
  • Maigret Sets a Trap (Maigret tend un piège, France, 1958), written and directed by Jean Delannoy, starring Jean Gabin as Maigret, Edgar Award for Best Foreign Film from the Mystery Writers of America in 1959
  • The Stowaway (Australia, 1958), adapted from Le passager clandestin, directed by Lee Robinson and Ralph Habib
  • In Case of Adversity (En cas de malheur, France, 1958), directed by Claude Autant-Lara
  • Maigret et l'affaire Saint-Fiacre (France, 1959), written and directed by Jean Delannoy, starring Jean Gabin as Maigret
  • Le Baron de l'écluse (France, 1960), directed by Jean Delannoy and starring Jean Gabin
  • Maigret (UK, TV series, 51 episodes, 1960–1963), starring Rupert Davies as Maigret
  • The President (Le Président, France, 1961), directed by Henri Verneuil and starring Jean Gabin
  • The Passion of Slow Fire (La mort de Belle, France, 1961), directed by Édouard Molinaro
  • Emile's Boat (Le bateau d'Émile, France, 1962), directed by Denys de La Patellière
  • Maigret voit rouge (France, 1963), adapted from Maigret, Lognon et les gangsters, directed by Gilles Grangier, starring Jean Gabin as Maigret
  • Magnet of Doom (L'aîné des Ferchaux, France, 1963), directed by Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Le inchieste del commissario Maigret (Italy, TV series, 16 episodes, 1964–1972), starring Gino Cervi as Maigret
  • Three Rooms in Manhattan (Trois chambres à Manhattan, France, 1965), directed by Marcel Carné
  • Maigret und sein größter Fall [de] (West Germany, 1966), adapted from La Danseuse du Gai-Moulin, directed by Alfred Weidenmann, starring Heinz Rühmann as Maigret
  • Maigret a Pigalle (Italy, 1966), directed by Mario Landi, starring Gino Cervi as Maigret
  • Stranger in the House (UK, 1967), adapted from Les inconnus dans la maison, directed by Pierre Rouve
  • Les enquêtes du commissaire Maigret (France, TV series, 88 episodes, 1967–1990), starring Jean Richard as Maigret
  • Le chat (France, 1971), directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre
  • The Widow Couderc (La veuve Couderc, France, 1971), directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre
  • The Train (Le train, France, 1971), directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre
  • The Clockmaker (L'horloger de Saint-Paul, France, 1974), directed by Bertrand Tavernier
  • Armchair Cinema: The Prison (Euston Films/Thames Television, 1974), adapted from "La prison"
  • The Murderer [de] (West Germany, 1979), directed by Ottokar Runze
  • L'Étoile du Nord (France, 1982), directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre
  • The Hatter's Ghost (Les Fantômes du Chapelier, France, 1982), written and directed by Claude Chabrol
  • Équateur (France, 1983), written and directed by Serge Gainsbourg
  • Monsieur Hire (France, 1989), written and directed by Patrice Leconte
  • Seven Days After Murder (Azerbaijan & Russia, 1991), written by Rustam Ibragimbekov, directed by Rasim Ojagov
  • Maigret (France, TV series, 54 episodes, 1991–2005), starring Bruno Cremer as Maigret
  • Betty (France, 1992), written and directed by Claude Chabrol
  • El pasajero clandestino (Spain, 1995), adapted from Le passager clandestin, directed by Agustí Villaronga
  • La Maison du canal (France and Belgium, 2003), directed by Alain Berliner
  • Red Lights (France, 2004), directed by Cédric Kahn
  • The Man from London (Hungary, 2007), written and directed by Béla Tarr
  • The Blue Room (France, 2014), written and directed by Mathieu Amalric
  • La boule Noire (France, 2014), directed by Denis Malleval
  • Maigret (UK, TV series, since 2016), starring Rowan Atkinson as Maigret
  • Maigret (France, 2022), directed by Patrice Leconte and featuring Gérard Dépardieu as Maigret

Stage adaptations

  • The Red Barn, written by David Hare and based on the novel La Main (English title The Man on the Bench in the Barn). Directed by Robert Icke at the Lyttelton Theatre, London, in October 2016.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Georges Simenon para niños

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