- Oliveira de Figueira
Oliveira de Figueira is a
fictional character from "The Adventures of Tintin " series ofcomic books , written and drawn byHergé .Travelling Salesman
A native of
Portugal , Oliveira de Figueira is a friendly salesman who can sell even the most trivial of items, fromumbrella s to roller skates, toArab patrons.He and Tintin first meet in "
Cigars of the Pharaoh " (1932). Tintin andSnowy have been cast adrift in theRed Sea when they are picked up by adhow . De Figueira is a passenger, and quickly talks Tintin into buying a variety of superfluous objects, Tintin taking the misguided impression that he has not been conned into buying anything useless.In the original edition of "Cigars of the Pharaoh", published in black-and-white in the 1930s, de Figueira claims to have left
Europe due to theGreat Depression and the fact that there was little competition off the coast ofArabia .Tintin later discovers that the ship is smuggling weapons to warring Arab tribes and informs
Rastapopoulos , whom he has recently met and misguidedly believes to be well-intentioned.In the original edition of "Cigars of the Pharaoh", the gang of drug smugglers that Tintin confronts are also engaged in smuggling weapons to warring Arabs (a newspaper article implies that it was a major issue at the time). When they meet on the film set, Rastapopoulos tells Tintin that he has been asked by people in high places to look out for smugglers and asks him to search the ship, which he does when the crew is ashore. In the edition most commonly available today, the weapons are found by chance when Snowy chases the ship's cat into the hold.
There is no direct indication in either edition that de Figueira was involved in the arms smuggling; but at the meeting of the gang's hooded leaders, one of them (presumably the Arab colonel) claims to have disposed of the captain of the sailing ship and of "his Portuguese second-in-command", though he also claims that Tintin is dead, unaware that he is attending the meeting in disguise. The fates of the captain and the Portuguese are not mentioned in the later colourised edition most commonly available today.
hopkeeper
Tintin meets de Figueira again in "
Land of Black Gold ", and finds him to be a shopkeeper and retailer/supplier to most of the local dignitaries.On the promise that Tintin would arrange for him to become the supplier to
Emir Ben Kalish Ezab , de Figueira agrees to help Tintin infiltrate the residence ofDr. J.W. Müller , where Tintin rescues the Emir's kidnapped son and exposes his operation to disrupt oil supplies. De Figueira's gift of gab proves invaluable, as he is able to keep Müller's men occupied with an unending and extremely moving story about the origins of his "nephew", the disguised Tintin, who searches the residence in the meantime.Oliveira de Figueira makes a third appearance in "
The Red Sea Sharks ", set in the mid-1950s. Khemed is now under the rule ofSheikh Bab El Ehr , an enemy of both the Emir and Tintin. De Figueira shelters Tintin andCaptain Haddock from the Sheikh's soldiers, and informs them of the political events that led to the Emir's deposal. He also arranges for them to contact the Emir and escape the city undetected, as they have a price on their heads. This escape involves them dressing up as veiled women and carrying water jugs on their heads, though this involves a whole day's worth of practice, thus destroying Oliveira's entire stock.He is one of the people to send Haddock greetings in "
The Castafiore Emerald " when the press wrongly reports his engagement toBianca Castafiore .Other Versions
In the first Portuguese edition of "
Cigars of the Pharaoh ", published by O Papagaio, he is fromSpain , fleeing theSpanish Civil War .He is incorrectly named Oliveira da Figueira in his initial appearances. For "
The Red Sea Sharks " Hergé changed his name to the correct Portuguese spelling of Oliveira de Figueira.
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