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  1. Wanda Kosakiewicz (Ukrainian: Ванда Козакевич; 1917–1989), French theatre actress in the 1940s, was one of Jean-Paul Sartre's love interests and Olga Kosakiewicz's sister. Sartre wrote that she was one of the reasons that his friendship with Albert Camus went sour.

  2. She Came to Stay (French, L'Invitée) is a novel written by French author Simone de Beauvoir first published in 1943. The novel is a fictional account of her and Jean-Paul Sartre 's relationship with Olga Kosakiewicz and Wanda Kosakiewicz .

  3. In 1933, when she was teaching in Rouen, Beauvoir had a seventeen-year-old student named Olga Kosakiewicz, a daughter of a Russian émigré who had been dispossessed by the Revolution.

  4. Olga Kosakiewicz ( Ukrainian: Ольга Козакевич; 6 November 1915 – 1983) was a French theater actress . Biography. She and her sister Wanda Kosakiewicz were born in Kyiv as daughters of the Frenchwoman Marthe Kosakiewicz and the Belarusian emigrant from Kyiv Victor Kosakiewicz.

  5. "L'Invitée" ("She Came to Stay") is not exactly a roman à clef, but it is heavily autobiographical, as Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre really were in a strange ménage à trois with a younger woman named Olga Kosakiewicz (and eventually Olga's sister Wanda) for many years.

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  6. 22 de sept. de 2023 · Sartre recovers from his unsuccessful pursuit of Olga Kosakiewicz by chasing her younger sister, Wanda, whom he finally gets to sleep with her.

  7. 29 de sept. de 2005 · So after Beauvoir slept with her 17-year-old student, Olga Kosakiewicz, Sartre tried to seduce Olga, too. When Olga rejected him, he seduced Olga's sister, Wanda.