Maigret's The White Hat with an introduction from Barry Forshaw

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2021
  • Pre-order Maigret: The Complete Series on Blu-ray and DVD: bit.ly/2RMlEMK
    Barry Forshaw, author of Crime Fiction: A Reader’s Guide and a forthcoming study of Georges Simenon, provides an introduction to the BBC series of Maigret, before a free episode of the award-winning series, The White Hat.
    The White Hat:
    Maigret comes into conflict with a defence lawyer intent on scoring points in the media at the police's expense. Mme Maigret has her own problems when she looks after a baby abandoned in a public park.
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Комментарии • 400

  • @itsnotalwaysblackandwhite8624
    @itsnotalwaysblackandwhite8624 Год назад +18

    At home, Black and White TV is on, it’s BBC and 8 o’clock. The haunting theme starts with Rupert Davies is lighting his pipe. Settling in for another Maigret story. Very defiantly “The good old days”.

  • @jerrylev59
    @jerrylev59 10 месяцев назад +6

    "Perhaps you ought to consult yourself over your defense." That left a mark! 😆

  • @josephdondero6275
    @josephdondero6275 Год назад +42

    Madame Maigret really loved her husband. That is depicted in every episode in which she appears. ❤️

    • @jean6872
      @jean6872 8 месяцев назад

      Madame Maigret cooked chicken for her husband. She was terribly middle class in an English way.

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 8 месяцев назад

      And in the books its obvious he loved and valued her as well.

  • @alexdavies7394
    @alexdavies7394 Год назад +53

    Rarely - if ever - has an entire 1960s BBC TV series been found and returned to the BBC archive. It's a miracle! Welcome back "Maigret!"

    • @christinecremen4151
      @christinecremen4151 Год назад +4

      A miracle indeed!!

    • @PitchSkullBlack
      @PitchSkullBlack Год назад +4

      Well, there was a 1959 pilot episode apparently that is now lost, but the core series of 52 episodes is preserved. That, for a BBC series is still utterly incredible.

    • @alexdavies7394
      @alexdavies7394 Год назад +3

      @@PitchSkullBlack - True, although I'm not all that bothered about the missing pilot - it doesn't have Rupert Davies!

    • @Liberatus
      @Liberatus Год назад

      Greed, unfair,unforgivable

    • @judyplimpton9583
      @judyplimpton9583 Месяц назад

      I miss them so much 😢😢

  • @klausehrhardt4481
    @klausehrhardt4481 2 года назад +88

    One of Simenon´s features that always draw my attention was that his characters were not only well developed as to their motivations and ambition, but that they were also very well inserted in the social context. The crime being only the bait used to draw the observer´s attention into the complex fabric of human destinies. A new Balzac!

    • @monoecumsemper
      @monoecumsemper 2 года назад +5

      Very well said. And the second "bait" was an Inspector Maigret (as Simenon repeatedly said to RUPERT DAVIES: "you do not only play Maigret, you ARE Maigret", which speaks for itself), who would lead the path to what Simenon wanted to draw his readers' and viewers' attention to: the complex fabric of human destinies. Whenever film producers (or directors) came to choose an actor for the role of Maigret who used to kind of 'dominate' the film set and to play his role as leading personality, the whole project was doomed to failure. There were lots of 'movie icons' who just ruined everything pure and simple: Jean Gabin played Jean Gabin (three movies) and that was it. Humourless Jean Richard in his own TV series didn't do any better. Maigret's sense of humour is a literary means applied by Simenon to let co-actors and colleagues "breathe" and develop their share of personality in the whole plot. On the other hand, Forshaw mentions the "Mr. Bean" - Maigret series, where we have a "Maigret" that sadly walks right into all traps you could possibly think of. I can't remember one second in that unfortunate series when the egocentric "Mr Bean" (Rowan Atkinson I guess was too much attached to the role of his former great success) actually DID get anything right without turning even the smallest cut into a disaster. Thank God it's vanished from TV screens now. Long live RUPERT DAVIES in the role of Maigret. He is immortal.
      So, Rupert Davies the incomparable Maigret without serious competitors? Not quite, I'd say. Let me put it that way: supporters of Simenon and his 'Balzac' style will also remember Gino Cervi in the 1960's successful Italian version of Maigret, a true Maigret miles away from his great appearance as Peppone in 'Don Camillo and Peppone'. Rupert Davies couldn't put him to shade.

    • @klausehrhardt4481
      @klausehrhardt4481 2 года назад +1

      @@monoecumsemper
      Gratias ago pro verbis tuae!
      So true about that second bait I dare to call it Maigret the catalyst.
      It is a pity and a shame to think that the only way so many people could have theirs history told aright - bits and pieces glued togheter in the whole of a picture - is to have Inspector Maigret on theirs tail.
      He is secular, not religious; relentless as a inquisitor, but not as cold and cruel; and even if he cannot possibly impose absolution of sins upon confession, he never takes anyone´s hope away. Gosh, I feel we sorely need more of those guys these days.
      Now it is my turn: I feel myself quite embarassed in having to confess that I hardly saw another cinematographical Maigret but that of Bruno Cremmer´s french acting subtitled into broken portuguese I happened to have bought a couple of years ago.
      Best wishes!

    • @stellabelorunova4547
      @stellabelorunova4547 2 года назад

      Very well sad

  • @janicebrowningaquino792
    @janicebrowningaquino792 Год назад +32

    Fabulous! I adore Rupert Davies in the role. I don’t know if I can bring myself to watch any other actors in the part, he is just SO perfect!

    • @latimeralder1
      @latimeralder1 9 месяцев назад +2

      I found Rowan Atkinson surprisingly good and very convincing. Try his potrayal

    • @tomcarberry4445
      @tomcarberry4445 8 месяцев назад +3

      I too watched the Maigret series with my parents back in the early 60s. While Michael Gambon and others played the character well, Rupert Davies set the Bar.

  • @johnnybrighton9156
    @johnnybrighton9156 2 года назад +62

    An excellent sample episode of a much loved series. Barry Forshaw doesn't mention this here, but owing to time pressures Rupert Davies couldn't do the reading he would have normally done to play the character, so visited Simenon in France. Simenon is reported to have been impressed by the casting and right away said: "Maigret - c'est Maigret!"

    • @jean6872
      @jean6872 8 месяцев назад +3

      Congratulations on your command of French.

  • @judeirwin2222
    @judeirwin2222 2 года назад +6

    Damned doctor didn’t even check for a pulse before pulling the sheet over the dying man.

    • @anthonyxuereb792
      @anthonyxuereb792 3 месяца назад

      It's not real sir, just television, we all know that he's still alive.

  • @bigred8438
    @bigred8438 2 года назад +9

    I am only 62 but I remember watching Maigret during the 1960's as it had been picked up by the publicly owned TV network here in Australia. I loved it.

    • @ausbrum
      @ausbrum Год назад

      Ewen Solon who played one of the team was a NZ actor, Ron Grainer, an Australian, wrote the theme music

  • @49mrbassman
    @49mrbassman 2 года назад +36

    I remember watching this series as a kid. It brings back so many memories. Also I think watching it now that I'm older the context in which I see it is so much better

  • @roderickfemm8799
    @roderickfemm8799 2 года назад +102

    I liked the Bruno Cremer series (in French, I needed subtitles but it made a difference) because he was the only actor I've seen who expressed the physical size that was described in the books, and the way he could use that size occasionally to intimidate witnesses or criminals. He also mastered the phlegmatic, philosophical approach that was Maigret's habit, the still point in the storm.

    • @ausbrum
      @ausbrum 2 года назад +4

      The Italian actor Gino Servi was, as I recall, even larger

    • @robin231176
      @robin231176 2 года назад +2

      @@ausbrum Cervi

    • @mariaacosta5700
      @mariaacosta5700 2 года назад +3

      I agree

    • @chrisodebeek787
      @chrisodebeek787 2 года назад +6

      Loved Cremer too.

    • @yanndick
      @yanndick 2 года назад +5

      Jean Richard for TV and Jean Gabin for cinema were great in the part too.

  • @bobbydorou8438
    @bobbydorou8438 2 года назад +23

    I remember with great affection watching on BBC TV this series with Rupert Davies, now knowing that once again I am able to view Maigret, just WONDERFUL.

    • @gordonnorris6991
      @gordonnorris6991 2 года назад +3

      Snap!

    • @bazza945
      @bazza945 2 года назад +2

      Amen to that. It was a weekly viewing highlight in the mid sixties.

  • @herbertluthe6850
    @herbertluthe6850 Год назад +9

    takes me back some 50 years when all episodes where broadcasted on German TV (ARD). those were peaceful evenings when my father and I perfectly agreed: very well played!

    • @herbertluthe6850
      @herbertluthe6850 Год назад +1

      @Syd McCreath 'The Avengers' liebe ich heute noch, besonders Emma Peel! Mein Vater konnte mit dem engl. Humor nichts anfangen.

  • @sallyolssen63
    @sallyolssen63 Год назад +4

    Superb Rupert Davies and the wonderful Luca!! Great plots--Those perfect French pronunciations...what a series!!!!

  • @slowsmile
    @slowsmile Год назад +8

    I grew up with Maigret in the UK when I was a kid. Probably the sort of TV that mum and dad could let their little lad watch with them. I wonder what time it went out in the evening?
    Many years later the theme tune was going round my head and an inspector calls was born. Are you a detective? Remember you never read this🤫 Thanks for the introduction Barry, very enlightening 👍

    • @NetworkDistributing
      @NetworkDistributing  Год назад +1

      Barry is a gem

    • @sevgican6133
      @sevgican6133 Год назад +1

      Hmm. My parents didn’t allow my older brother and me to watch these shows… we were packed off to bed… of course we would creep downstairs and here the music which we found enchantingly mysterious.

  • @OrchestrationOnline
    @OrchestrationOnline 2 года назад +29

    What's missing from Forshaw's analysis here is just how flexible Maigret books are in terms of subject matter, subgenre, and character focus. Sometimes Maigret is an enigmatic calculating machine - at other times he's someone who rights wrongs and keeps people trapped in horrible circumstances from being destroyed. Some novels are whodunits complete with rich snobs in parlour rooms - others are gritty crime fiction. Maigret covers everything from innocuous disappearances to gory serial killings. I would say that was Simenon's genius. He didn't allow his character or his style to get stuck in a rut.

    • @johnsrabe
      @johnsrabe 2 года назад +4

      I have read a lot of Maigret and never realized this point, even though it’s exactly why I like the books. I’d add that this approach also allows him (us) to explore more people and places, which also keeps it interesting. Thanks!

    • @rebeccaainslie4637
      @rebeccaainslie4637 2 года назад +2

      It keeps from becoming a television serial format by changing up so that one never knows what to expect!

  • @kh23797
    @kh23797 2 года назад +13

    Loved this! In 1962, Rupert Davies was 46. An inveterate pipe smoker, he died of cancer at only 60. In 1963, my French teacher told me he'd met Davies in a cross-Channel ferry bar. Both were well oiled (those crossings being _incredibly_ tedious) and the actor was merrily reminiscing about his career. As for Simenon, much modern French writing is liberally sprinkled with modernisms and argot, so comprehensibility is strained. Simenon's works, by contrast, are a refreshingly easy read for any older reader proficient in 'standard' French.

    • @markofsaltburn
      @markofsaltburn Год назад +2

      His appearance towards the end of his life suggested that he may have had alcohol dependency issues, which is sad.
      He was made for this role, and he lent Maigret a patient humanity that was largely missing in the performances of both Atkinson and Gambon, as good as they were.

    • @sandraelder1101
      @sandraelder1101 Год назад

      Why did people of that era always look 10+ years older than they really were?

    • @kh23797
      @kh23797 Год назад +3

      @@sandraelder1101 Or maybe they had it right, and it's simply that we look ten years _younger_ than we are? Fashions that oldsters like me wear today, such as T-shirts and jeans, would pretty much have been the preserve of the young in the sixties. When you got older, you were supposed to look the part. Now, we desperately hang on to any vestige we can of what Shakespeare called our 'lusty days', even if our aches and pains remind us that, sadly, we're just kidding ourselves.

    • @1kenneth1985
      @1kenneth1985 Год назад +3

      @@sandraelder1101 as I have read elsewhere: RDavies for e.g. had a few years in a POW/ war-prisioner-camp. When this series was filmed, WW II had ended less than 15 yrs earlier. - The harrowing war-time experience and hardships can be attributed to a more mature/worn demeanour. Deprivations leave their traces in faces & bodies. Plus: People wore 'grown up' clothing, instead of the current inistance of wearing 'short trousers' fore-evahh ...no matter what. Adding to a more age-appropriate look.
      Saluti -

  • @jenniferbate9682
    @jenniferbate9682 2 года назад +13

    I LOVED Rupert Davis.. I loved George Simenon’s Maigret books. Thank you so much for this, so interesting.

  • @anniemay4547
    @anniemay4547 2 года назад +7

    I can never get enough of maigret..

  • @arthurbaldwin1804
    @arthurbaldwin1804 2 года назад +34

    Rupert Davis will for me always be the iconic Maigert. The moment when he strikes the match on the wall to light his pipe just as the intro music pauses , just magic. Thank you for posting. Any chance of another?

  • @donnajarvis9542
    @donnajarvis9542 2 года назад +22

    I watched Rupert Davis as Maigret growing up in Ireland. It was a great series.

    • @jamessmith530
      @jamessmith530 2 года назад +1

      Me too in dublin

    • @donnajarvis9542
      @donnajarvis9542 2 года назад +1

      @@jamessmith530 glad to hear it. I was all the way up North, in Derry.

  • @maryearll3359
    @maryearll3359 2 года назад +23

    Thank you for this. Recovering from an accident, slept all day so up all night ! I've just found this; the iconic striking of the match on the wall I remember along with everyone else. Marvellous find - thank you so much for posting this, I can fill my wakeful night with delight.

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад +1

      And with any luck, gentle sleep will soon follow.

    • @maryearll3359
      @maryearll3359 2 года назад +1

      @@Sootaroot Thank you for your kimndness. I did. Thank you so much. ❤️😘

  • @MrDavidc
    @MrDavidc 2 года назад +6

    Brilliant. I've spent years looking for these videos and did manage to buy a few dvd's last year, but this is great.

  • @davidtanslow3584
    @davidtanslow3584 2 года назад +7

    It's timelessly reassuring whilst traveling in France a couple of years ago to hear the same police bells ringing as the gendarms race slowly past you in their important haste.

  • @robynconway1286
    @robynconway1286 2 года назад +27

    Thank you for your introduction Barry. Interesting. I remember watching when I was 5 in 1962. The striking match, pipe and music was mesmerising. And I love all TV Maigret series.

    • @jenniferbate9682
      @jenniferbate9682 2 года назад

      5 was very young to be watching murders. 😱

    • @ellenthorne8222
      @ellenthorne8222 2 года назад

      I was 4 in 1962 and though I don't remember the stories themselves I have a vivid memory of Rupert Davis striking the match on the wall.

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад

      @@ellenthorne8222 It was the highlight of Monday night viewing.

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад +3

      They always lost me after the striking match. I kept waiting for this Margaret character to turn up whose name they did not spell properly.

    • @ellenthorne8222
      @ellenthorne8222 2 года назад

      @@Sootaroot😂😂, I must admit I have to hear names several times or more because how the names are pronounced but spelled differently

  • @simeonsmith9112
    @simeonsmith9112 2 года назад +7

    This is pure delight! Please give us more.

  • @stewartsouth8119
    @stewartsouth8119 2 года назад +21

    I also watched these at the age of 10, probably not advisable, but in those day... I have recently purchased the entire set. LOVE THEM> I only had to wait 61 years. Thank you Network

    • @trinidad2450
      @trinidad2450 2 года назад +2

      Big smile! 😊

    • @QPRTokyo
      @QPRTokyo 2 года назад +1

      😀

    • @QPRTokyo
      @QPRTokyo 2 года назад +1

      I was six and I only saw the start. It was my bedtime. Now, I can watch them. 😀

    • @monoecumsemper
      @monoecumsemper 2 года назад

      with sadly no original copy surviving, the complete series of 52 early copies have been rescued from being lost for ever...: to put the crucial question, are you happy about the quality of the set they released on bluray?? If you ask me, network didn't exactly overspend on top quality digital remastering, which, as needs to be said to their credit, they frankly admit in the accompanying book....

  • @elba9066
    @elba9066 2 года назад +4

    Nice commentary from Barry Forshaw. Good to see this series of Maigret available again.

  • @bluezauza
    @bluezauza 2 года назад +2

    I fell in love with Maigret watching Bruno Cremer series. Then Rupert Davies. They are both so good. I grew up watching it since I was very young and he is too this day my favourite detective and his books my favourite books to go back to.

  • @writeract2
    @writeract2 2 года назад +9

    This is a treasure and a balm - what a pleasure - thank you.

  • @jamesjenner8159
    @jamesjenner8159 2 года назад +21

    I have several Maigret books, mostly in French, quite a few in English, the original Penguin paperbacks with photos from the tv series on the cover and a copy of L'Affaire Saint-Fiacre in Welsh. In a biography of Simenon i read that Rupert Davies had met him and he thought Davies' portrayal of Maigret was one of the best. Rupert Davies also played George Smiley in the Spy who came in from the cold. Also have a lot of Bruno Cremer without subtitles. This release has been a longtime coming!

    • @rhianwenj7597
      @rhianwenj7597 2 года назад

      Off to look for Welsh versions. Diolch.

    • @wordsculpt
      @wordsculpt 8 месяцев назад

      How wonderful ! I recently was able to pick up a volume in french to assist me in learning the language. If you ever tire of storing yours, let me know...I'm jealous !
      (Only 20 years to master the language, before I'm dead!)

  • @kimmccabe1422
    @kimmccabe1422 2 года назад

    Omg, Simenons book, Stain in the Snow was soo deep it still stays with me 30 yrs later!

  • @rosemaryjohnson2569
    @rosemaryjohnson2569 2 года назад +5

    Great introduction. I am from the Gambon era but I really enjoyed this. Remember reading the book. Thank you.

  • @bobbydorou8438
    @bobbydorou8438 2 года назад +141

    And Rowan Atkinson is so good at the portrayal of the French detective. I was surprised as to how good he played the character.

    • @sararevesz8926
      @sararevesz8926 2 года назад +16

      I loved it and so wanted more episodes!

    • @jenniferbate9682
      @jenniferbate9682 2 года назад +18

      Yes. I didn’t like him but when I saw him portray Maigret my opinion changed. He was great.

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 2 года назад +17

      I agree. It was an original take and had powerful storylines. The series suffered from people who couldn't unsee Atkinson as Blackadder and Mr Bean.

    • @bobbydorou8438
      @bobbydorou8438 2 года назад +15

      @@fredneecher1746 Mr. Bean absolutely DREADFUL.

    • @gailfisher1350
      @gailfisher1350 2 года назад +8

      I liked him in Black Adder. He was at his best then He later had a police officer roleI think if memory serves me at all, it was called The Thin Blue Line. But I could be wrong. After I watched a few episodes I lost my desire to watch him in anything more.

  • @thomasd2444
    @thomasd2444 3 месяца назад +1

    05:38 - Bruno Jean Marie Cremer (6 OCT 1929 - 7 AUG 2010) French actor best known for portraying Jules Maigret on French TV, from 1991 to 2005.

  • @IvyRoad
    @IvyRoad Год назад +12

    Thank you for your splendid introduction! It informed my viewing and enhanced my pleasure without giving anything away. Thoroughly enjoyable!

    • @john-paulderosa7217
      @john-paulderosa7217 Год назад +2

      I totally agree. Great job.

    • @IvyRoad
      @IvyRoad Год назад +2

      @@john-paulderosa7217 I usually find introductions tacked onto uploads tiresome. Not this time! The info added by Barry Forshaw is so interesting!

  • @Ndlanding
    @Ndlanding 2 года назад

    Great to watch Maigret after SO long. Thanks.

  • @robertdugmore5190
    @robertdugmore5190 2 года назад +34

    At last the Rupert Davies Maigret series ,been waiting years (I even signed a petition to get them released) Brilliant !

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад +1

      Why did the BBC never repeat them?

    • @robertdugmore5190
      @robertdugmore5190 2 года назад +1

      @@Sootaroot I don't know why they were never repeated the B.B.C wouldn't say.

    • @BackwardFinesse
      @BackwardFinesse 2 года назад +1

      @@Sootaroot Possibly copyright problems. Additionally, I have just found this on the Wikipedia note on the series: Simenon's wife, who managed his affairs, had put into the BBC contract that the series could only be shown once and the films must then be destroyed. Simenon was aghast when he heard of this but it was too late to change the contract. The series was long considered lost, although the British Film Institute held copies, and a few individual episodes have circulated on DVD.

    • @mattgibbs73
      @mattgibbs73 2 года назад +1

      @@BackwardFinesse I heard something around this but Simenon himself was very shrewd, I'd assumed it was he who'd played for further royalties off additional screenings, I never heard that they were supposed to be destroyed, indeed its obvious they weren't because they were sold to Germany and shown in other commonwealth countries, and weren't 4 repeated specially on the Beeb as well?

    • @mikewellwood1412
      @mikewellwood1412 2 года назад

      Well done!

  • @grahamdavidcowley
    @grahamdavidcowley 2 года назад +18

    I have a full set of these novels in French. I also have all the books translated into English. I love Maigret stories. I also like Simenon's novels.

    • @helenswan705
      @helenswan705 Год назад

      the audio books/dramas are pretty good too

  • @annepassman946
    @annepassman946 Год назад +3

    Apparently when Simenon saw Rupert Davies he exclaimed "he is Maigret". The 3, Maigret, Lucas and Lapointe were wonderful

  • @amsbestunderstanding1646
    @amsbestunderstanding1646 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful! thanks for sharing this!!!

  • @dulcineadurance1391
    @dulcineadurance1391 2 месяца назад

    i only first discovered Maigret with Michael Gambon who was wonderful and I love that series ... liked the Rowan's versions too but just now discovering these with Rupert Davies and also Jean Gabin ... finally read The Toy Village ... wonderful

  • @jenniferpierno6108
    @jenniferpierno6108 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for posting this. Love it.

  • @damianmagee1581
    @damianmagee1581 2 года назад +16

    Great Introduction by Barry, as a student of tv history I learn few things. The sample episode bring back memories I can't wait watch the deluxe series that I brought .

  • @gailfisher1350
    @gailfisher1350 2 года назад +5

    Very enthralling. Like the actress who plays the inspector's wife. She's a good actress.

    • @ausbrum
      @ausbrum Год назад

      Helene Shinger

  • @peterleaver541
    @peterleaver541 2 года назад +2

    Wonderful news!!! I love Maigret and loved the Rupert Davies series as a kid.

  • @stevengrotte2987
    @stevengrotte2987 2 года назад +1

    THANK YOU, MANY MORE PLEASE!

  • @gordanamagdalena4149
    @gordanamagdalena4149 2 года назад +4

    Seen most of actors playing Maigret but for me definitely best Michael Gambon, just as I imagine him. Got most of DVDs , French & British , will buy Davis’s too.

    • @davidcoard1978
      @davidcoard1978 Год назад

      Yes Gambon's portrayal puts across Maigret's humanity.

  • @harrytpk
    @harrytpk Год назад +2

    I’m an American old enough to remember the 1960’s very well I had never heard of Maigret till I happened upon this series and there very enjoyable and very well acted Rupert Davies plays the part so well, Maigrets wife and Maigrets chief assistant are very well played also, really enjoyed the programs these episodes disappeared from RUclips a few days ago, must have been a copyright infringement or something this is the only one that’s available with Rupert Davies now, too bad

  • @rogersledz6793
    @rogersledz6793 Год назад

    Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!

  • @maureenbrophy7852
    @maureenbrophy7852 7 месяцев назад

    I have so enjoyed all his books & tv 👏👏👏

  • @marieeaton-smith5168
    @marieeaton-smith5168 2 года назад +1

    So good, thank you.

  • @yolainesene8691
    @yolainesene8691 9 месяцев назад

    Great ! Thank you

  • @donnajarvis9542
    @donnajarvis9542 2 года назад +7

    This is wonderful.

  • @pattiwhite9575
    @pattiwhite9575 10 месяцев назад

    Rupert Davies did an excellent job of portraying the detective. I have watched most of the episodes that I found on a RUclips channel that is no longer. through season 3 I wish I knew how to watch more.

    • @edwinhardman1509
      @edwinhardman1509 9 месяцев назад

      Likewise.However, if you are patient enough join Talking Pictures, it's free and the Rupert Davies episodes currently appear on Saturday evenings at 8 O'clock. There are also a number of back editions on 'encore' on the same channel.

  • @bobmetcalfe9640
    @bobmetcalfe9640 7 месяцев назад

    When I was a kid I watched every episode of this bar one - we fell asleep halfway through that one for some strange reason.😁

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 2 года назад

    I'm a fan of Morse with John Thaw and remember as young person watching Rupert Davis and later Micheal Gambon.. my mum was a great fan of Rupert Davis....a much underrated actor I believe...

  • @marcdenton2996
    @marcdenton2996 Год назад +2

    What an exemplary introduction!

  • @kathleenellenford4816
    @kathleenellenford4816 5 месяцев назад

    ❤Thank you always, Barry Forshaw muchly much..

  • @robinstevens7651
    @robinstevens7651 2 года назад +11

    Hope they will also release a Maigret Jean Gabin set..

  • @jackieokcal4888
    @jackieokcal4888 2 года назад +8

    I first learned of Maigret by watching the Rowan Atkinson movies which I thoroughly enjoyed. I'm looking forward to seeing the original versions now. Thank you for the introduction to this

    • @robinstevens7651
      @robinstevens7651 2 года назад +2

      please check the Bruno Cremer version too!

    • @edwinhardman1509
      @edwinhardman1509 9 месяцев назад

      For me, Rowan Atkinson is too dark. Michael Gambon is better but Rupert Davies takes the gold medal.

  • @betsya7054
    @betsya7054 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @lucindawilson5510
    @lucindawilson5510 Год назад +1

    absolutely fabulous thank you.

  • @stoneangel777
    @stoneangel777 2 года назад +1

    Thanks Barry.I love Maigret

  • @joanhyde1745
    @joanhyde1745 2 года назад +4

    Here is a wonderful example really effective, delightfully storytelling, wonderfully acted.

  • @johnalexander9340
    @johnalexander9340 2 года назад +1

    I love subtitles. Don’t be afraid to read. ( or should I say lazy ) It’s wonderful seeing these old films in black and white and France post world war 2. I enjoy foreign films from many countries. Just because you don’t speak the language, does not mean you can’t enjoy their art.

  • @nixonradio
    @nixonradio 5 месяцев назад

    I'm half a century too young to have seen Rupert Davies at the time, but now he's the Maigret I picture when I read the books.

  • @henrimatisse7481
    @henrimatisse7481 2 года назад +7

    Whenever I'd open another Simenon novel of his detective Maigret I'd feel like I was traveling to France to Paris or whatever part of the country the writer was taking me. Very exciting!

  • @ashaleewai8735
    @ashaleewai8735 Год назад

    Oh, that was great, thanks!

  • @littlebrookreader949
    @littlebrookreader949 2 года назад +3

    This was great!

  • @AureliaPempenic64
    @AureliaPempenic64 2 года назад

    Thanks, very good Maigret!

  • @klackon1
    @klackon1 2 года назад +27

    I used to watch the original series when I was a young lad. Rupert Davies was very good in the role; but Michael Gambon, brilliant actor that he is, was simply superb in the 1992 - 93 series - he really was Maigret. Rowan Atkinson's portrayal was pretty good, but certainly overshadowed by Michael Gambon.

    • @gordanamagdalena4149
      @gordanamagdalena4149 2 года назад +8

      Gambon is Maigret for me & I saw them all

    • @swerne01
      @swerne01 2 года назад +2

      I'm always shocked whwn people talk about Maigret TV series and don't even mention Bruno Cremer. He puts everyone else who's ever played Maigret firmly in second place or worse. Even without Cremer, Gambon is terrible. He plays Maigret as a buffoon. If you've ever read Simenon, there was one thing that Maigret never was- a buffoon.

    • @mattgibbs73
      @mattgibbs73 2 года назад +1

      @@swerne01 interesting take on it, I took it that what he did was give a great impression of someone who isn't thinking very deeply on the surface - perhaps portraying himself like that to put others off guard. As a young teen it was my introduction to Simenon and I eagerly awaited it each week.

    • @swerne01
      @swerne01 2 года назад +1

      @@mattgibbs73 That's interesting also. I'm curious to know if you've ever read any of the original Simenon stories

    • @mattgibbs73
      @mattgibbs73 2 года назад +1

      @@swerne01 certainly, since then I've acquired all the green Maigret penguins, plus a lot of the crine noir novels, 60 odd of the new translations and around 60 odd first editions. I particularly like The Stain on the Snow and Cecile is Dead amongst many others. Cheers 😉

  • @danicornea
    @danicornea 2 года назад +11

    My favourite is Michael Gambon....Nevertheless I enjoy it this a lot....please more films about Jules Maigret.....thanks....

    • @jenniferpierno6108
      @jenniferpierno6108 2 года назад +1

      I liked Michael Gambon too. I also love the audio books read by Gareth Armstrong.

    • @danicornea
      @danicornea 2 года назад

      @@jenniferpierno6108 : Greetings from Bucharest....Still, I prefer the movie instead of audiobook....☺👍👏

    • @evelynwaugh4053
      @evelynwaugh4053 2 года назад

      Did you see Michael Gambon in The Singing Detective? It was wonderful.

  • @schwadevivre4158
    @schwadevivre4158 2 года назад +2

    I remember watching this on an old 405 line TV and occasionally having to hold the "Rabbit Ears" aerial in a strange position

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад

      Those happy days when there was only 405 line tv and one channel.

  • @Sootaroot
    @Sootaroot 2 года назад +1

    I was glad that in his summary of Maigret productions, Barry Forshaw included the 1988 tv movie portrayal by Richard Harris, which is not referred to in the comments here. It was not well received at the time, because inevitable comparisons were made with the Rupert Davies version which was then only two decades earlier, and a stand-alone story always has a tough challenge compared to a series in which Richard Harris could have developed the character. Think of the role Telly Savalas played in The Marcus-Nelson Murders. His detective was not that memorable, but it was given enough of a chance to be expanded into a series, and Kojak became part of tv tec history.

  • @IK121266
    @IK121266 Год назад

    Brilliant, thank you!

  • @karenhaver6827
    @karenhaver6827 2 года назад

    Most enjoyable cheers 👍

  • @clouds882
    @clouds882 2 года назад +3

    Michael Gambon's Maigret was the absolute best for me.

  • @peterjhillier7659
    @peterjhillier7659 2 года назад

    Maigret was a Family favourite shown at 20:00 on Mondays I believe, it seemed so French,, Rupert Davis provided the best Portrayal of the Character, imagine our disappointment when the Series finished and was replaced by Perry Mason. Thank you for sharing.

    • @mikewellwood1412
      @mikewellwood1412 2 года назад

      I was always fascinated by Lucas's hat. I don't think I've ever seen anyone else wear a hat quite like that. :-)))

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam 7 месяцев назад

    Marvelous series. Someone must post it all on RUclips. What are you waiting fot?

  • @yomama8873
    @yomama8873 Год назад +1

    Thank you 🤩🤩💖

  • @esmeephillips5888
    @esmeephillips5888 8 месяцев назад

    The nifty script adaptation praised in the intro was by Roger Burford, who became the series's main writer. He was a friend of Christopher Isherwood and founded the Kinema Club at Cambridge University, which led to both men becoming screenwriters. Isherwood's memoir 'Lions and Shadows' calls him Roger East, which he adopted as his nom de plume.
    'The White Hat' was directed by Gerry Glaister, who went on to create and produce popular middlebrow BBC series such as 'The Brothers' and 'Howards Way'.

  • @kathyfugere6085
    @kathyfugere6085 24 дня назад

    There was also " Le Gentleman Cambrioleur " de Aresene Lupin . Also borrowed in Father Brown

  • @IK-so2bm
    @IK-so2bm 2 года назад +5

    Also, to be added, Simenon's Maigret laconic novels gave rise to the 40's American Film Noir and then in turn to French's own great Film Noir which paid homage to the American model, very much like the Spaghetti Westerns.

    • @Cryptonymicus
      @Cryptonymicus 2 года назад +1

      Hammett, Cain, Chandler.

    • @IK-so2bm
      @IK-so2bm 2 года назад

      @@Cryptonymicus And many other just as great so-called pulp fiction writers, most of whom survived on pennies per written page.

  • @grindupBaker
    @grindupBaker 2 года назад

    The fabled old classics Superman & Halloween II are on the bookshelf.

  • @charliemaguire2210
    @charliemaguire2210 2 года назад

    the role he will forever be associated with, i believe there was a one off theatre 625 version where he reprises the role in colour on BBC2 in 1968, i'd loved to have seen that, sadly like most early colour recordings it is missing presumed wiped, probably for pot black or the horse of the year show.

  • @susannah1948
    @susannah1948 Год назад +1

    Loved these versions…….

  • @41divad
    @41divad 8 месяцев назад

    All of the regulars are excellent. The witticsms are frosting

  • @barbarawillis5187
    @barbarawillis5187 2 года назад +1

    I enjoyed this episode.

  • @tamdsms
    @tamdsms 2 года назад +2

    This episode was first broadcast by the BBC, Jan. 8, 1962. It begins at (10:53), it you want to skip the introduction.

    • @Mutasis_Mutandis
      @Mutasis_Mutandis 2 года назад

      Thank you!!

    • @tamdsms
      @tamdsms 2 года назад

      @@Mutasis_Mutandis My pleasure! Kind regards!

  • @johnhannay16
    @johnhannay16 2 года назад

    Superb.

  • @gwenmitchell1466
    @gwenmitchell1466 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love love love it

  • @neilannat9869
    @neilannat9869 2 года назад +1

    Splendid news! I was allowed to stay up late to watch Maigret. I thought that most of the recordings had been wiped - why on earth has the BBC sat on the recordings in their archives for so long?

  • @thomasd2444
    @thomasd2444 9 месяцев назад

    jThere are two great Maigret adaptations available online or in DVDs from the 1990s, the British version done by Granada for two seasons in 1992, starring Michael Gambon, and the Dune French version that lasted from 1991 until 2005 with Bruno Cremer.

  • @MishMash22
    @MishMash22 Год назад

    I’m watching this on Sky at the moment. The entire 60’s series is being played.

    • @NetworkDistributing
      @NetworkDistributing  Год назад

      How are you finding it?

    • @MishMash22
      @MishMash22 Год назад

      @@NetworkDistributing it’s Sky channel 328

    • @MishMash22
      @MishMash22 Год назад

      @@NetworkDistributing it’s excellent quality too and has subtitles

  • @xenocampanoli815
    @xenocampanoli815 Год назад +2

    The episode with Edna Petrie fascinates me, and I cannot help but conceive the world missed out on a vastly interesting set of play-works by not using Ms. Petrie more than I am aware.

  • @robertfletcher4065
    @robertfletcher4065 2 года назад +3

    I really enjoyed Rowan Atkins has Maigret. Especially how Rowan Atkins portrayed Maigret as a quite and thoughtful character. I think Mr Atkins played the character better and the supporting actors did exceptionally well in adding to the flavour. Yes I have seen these versions featured and read some of the books.

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад

      Unfortunately Rowan Atkins never got his career back on track after people kept confusing him with that gormless fellow who played Mister Bean.

  • @johnnyllooddte3415
    @johnnyllooddte3415 2 года назад

    woww more please

  • @pegjames188
    @pegjames188 2 года назад +2

    Actually happened to me, had to do a roof repair a car was parked where we needed access knocked on door woman with a baby in a white shawl said certainly could I hold the baby :only a couple of months old ; while she moved the car. Down the road she drove I thought she'd turn ,no ,she carried on out of sight 5 minutes, 10 minutes, started to wonder , finally she returned and thanked me as she had nipped to the shops for baby food as her husband had forgotten and gone to work.

    • @Sootaroot
      @Sootaroot 2 года назад

      What a liberty. I would like to be the first to say you were left holding the baby, but I bet I'm not.

  • @avicennitegh1377
    @avicennitegh1377 Год назад +2

    wonderful intro