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Death in Paradise is a British-French crime comedy drama television series created by Robert Thorogood, starring Ben Miller (Series 1–3), Kris Marshall (Series 3–6), Ardal O'Hanlon (Series 6–9), Ralf Little (Series 9–13) and Don Gilet (Christmas Special 2024−). The programme is filmed on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe and ...
1. 1. " Arriving in Paradise ". Charles Palmer. Robert Thorogood. 25 October 2011. ( 2011-10-25) 6.78. Charlie Hulme ( Hugo Speer ), a British detective inspector, is found murdered in a locked panic room on the Caribbean island of Saint Marie owned by the Lavenders, Sarah (Coralie Audret) and James ( Rupert Graves ).
Humphrey Goodman is a Police Detective from London who is assigned to Saint Marie after the murder of D.I. Richard Poole at the start of Series 3. Clues from Poole's investigation helped Goodman reveal the motive and the killer's identity, with Goodman commenting that Poole had essentially "solved his own murder."
15: A Deadly Curse (season two, episode four) A double murder has rocked Saint Marie, and there are reports of weird goings-on in the jungle. Camille suspects the ancient folklore of the island ...
It’s not like Death in Paradise is some kind of aberration. Think of Martin Clunes’s twee medical series Doc Martin, which stayed on the air for 18 years before coming to an end in 2022. At ...
Saint Marie is described in Episode 3.3 as a "pretty island" that is "situated in the Eastern Caribbean Sea " and "one-tenth the size of its north-west neighbour Guadeloupe ", which would make Saint Marie about 160 square kilometres (62 sq mi) in size. It is described in Episode 4.5 as being 70 miles (110 km) from Martinique .
Here are the real-life settings behind ‘Saint Marie’ island
In-universe information. Occupation. Detective Inspector. Duration. 2011–2014, 2021. Detective Inspector Richard Poole is a character in the crime drama television series Death in Paradise, portrayed by Ben Miller. Poole also appears in novels based on the TV series written by Robert Thorogood. [1]