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Jean-Pierre Conty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jean Pierre Conty
Born
Jean Pierre Walrafen

9 December 1917
Died9 September 1984(1984-09-09) (aged 66)
OccupationWriter

Jean Pierre Conty, real name Jean Pierre Walrafen, (9 December 1917 - 12 September 1984) was a 20th-century French writer, famous for his spying novels.

The hero of most of his novel is Mr. Suzuki, a Japanese spy. He has also published under the pen name Jean Crau .[1]

Works

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Novels

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Theatre

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In 1954, his play Affaire vous concernant is directed by Pierre Valde at the Théâtre de Paris. In 1965, he coauthored with Jean Bernard-Luc, a comédie-vaudeville which has now become a classic of the genre : Quand épousez-vous ma femme ?, staged on theatre with Michel Serrault, Jean-Pierre Darras and Maria Pacôme.[2]

Comic strips

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Several adaptations in comic strips of the series Mr. Suzuki have been made by Jacomo:[3]

  • 1974 : La nuit rouge de Mr. Suzuki, Artima
  • 1975 : Mr. Suzuki a la dent dure, Artima
  • 1975 : Mr. Suzuki et la ville fantôme, Artima
  • 1977 : Mr. Suzuki lance un sos, Artima
  • 1977 : Mr. Suzuki lance un sos (2), Artima

Cinema

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Robert Vernay has directed the cinematographic adaptation of Monsieur Suzuki prend la mouche in 1960 under the title: Monsieur Suzuki [fr] with Jean Thielment, Ivan Desny, Pierre Dudan and Claude Farell.

Prizes and awards

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In 1953, he was awarded the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for his novel Opération Odyssée.[4]

References

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  1. ^ "Jean-Pierre CONTY".
  2. ^ "Jean Bernard-Luc - DvdToile".
  3. ^ "Suzuki (1re série - Arédit) - BD, informations, cotes".
  4. ^ "Palmarès du Grand Prix de Littérature Policière - Factibus". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2016-04-22.
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