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1207
- Biography -
Kirjasto
Swedish movie and theatre director,
playwright, screenwriter. Although Bergman is widely known as a film
director, he has also become one of the foreground figures of the
modern Swedish theatre. Bergman's artistic career includes about a
hundred stage performances, forty radio productions, fifty feature
films, and fifteen TV productions. In several books, from The
Magic Lantern (1987) to Private Conversations (1996)
Bergman has explored his childhood, his relationship to his father,
and the strained marriage of his parents.
"I want very much to tell, to
talk about, the wholeness inside every human being. It's a
strange thing that every human being has a sort of dignity or
wholeness in him, and out of that develops relationships to
other human beings, tensions, misunderstandings, tenderness,
coming in contact, touching and being touched, the cutting off
of a contact and what happens then." (Bergman in John
Simon's book Ingmar Bergman Directs,
1972)
Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala.
His father, Erik Bergman, was a Lutheran minister and chaplain to
the court of Sweden. Bergman was raised under strict discipline. His
mother Karin, née Åkerblom, came from a prosperous family; she was a
proud, strong-willed person, and the relationship between his
parents became mutually destructive. "Mother, You are my best friend,"
Bergnan wroto to her years later, as a grown-up man. From his
childhood pressures Bergman later drew material for his plays and
films. Many of Bergman's works have explored the father-god trauma,
among them the films Through a Glass Darkly (1961) and
Winter Light (1963).
At the age of 10 Bergman received as
a toy a laterna magica. He made dolls for his puppet theater
and saw in 1935 his first theater production, A Dream Play by
August Strindberg. Bergman studied literature and art at the
University of Stockholm. After graduation he became a trainee-director
at a Stockholm theater. During this period he published a few short
stories and wrote a number of plays including Kaspers död (1942)
and Jack among the Actors (1946). At the age of twenty-six
Bergman became the youngest theatre manager in Europe at the
Hälsingborg City Theatre in Sweden. He secured his position through
a large number of impressive works on stage, especially classical
plays. Bergman was manager of the Helsingborg city theatre
(1944-46), director at Gothenburg city theatre (1946-49), at Malmö
city theatre (1953-60) and at the Dramaten in Stockholm (1960-66),
the last three years as manager.
Bergman made his debut in film in
1944 as a screenwriter to the Alf Sjöberg film Hets (Frenzy).
In 1949 he directed the film Fängelse (The Devil's Wanton).
Swedish critics referred Bergman as "the puberty crisis director"
specializing in "delayed adolescence". The artistic breakthrough
came with the film Gycklarnas afton (1953, Sawdust and Tinsel).
In this film Bergman describes an artist's life as despised and
wasted. The background is a third class circus environment. "It is
true people often talk about 'decisive moments,'" Bergan said once.
"Dramatists in particular make much of this fiction. The truth is
probably that such moments hardly exist, but just looks as if they
do... The actual breakthrough is a fact far back in the past, far
back in obscurity." (from Private
Conversations, 1996)
His first international success was
Sommarnattens leende (1955, Smiles of the Summer Night). In
the story a country lawyer meets again a touring actress who was
once his mistress. He accepts an invitation for him and his young
wife to stay at her mother's country home for a weekend. Wild
Strawberries (1957) is considered a landmark film in Bergman's
career. It dealt with the subject of man's isolation, and like in
several films, Bergman used a journey as a plot structure. The
Seventh Seal (1957) won prizes at the Cannes Film Festival. It
explored the individual's relationship with God and the idea of
Death. In the story, set in the fourteenth century, a knight
challenges Death to a game of chess. Over the years Max von Sydow,
the knight of the film, came to be identified as Bergman's on-screen
alter ego. However, von Sydow has played also in action films.
Bibi Andersson, Harriet Andersson, Ingrid Thulin, and Liv Ullmann
became Bergman's favorite actresses and Sven Nykvist his regular
cameraman. Ullmann, his muse, later left the island of Farö, where
they lived, and gained international stardom. Their daughter Linn
became a novelist. In 1971 Bergman married Ingrid von Rosen; they
had already had an affair in the late 1950s. Bergman had four
previous marriages: with Else Fisher, Ellen Lundström, Gun Grut, and
Käbi Laretei. Ingrid von Rosen died of cancer in 1995.
"Film as dream, film as music.
No for of art goes beyond ordinary consciousness as film does,
straight to pour emotions, deep into the twilight room of the
soul. A little twitch in our optic nerve, a shock effect: twenty-four
illuminated frames in a second, darkness in between, the optic
nerve incapable of registering darkness. At the editing table,
when I run the trip of film through, frame by frame, I still
feel that dizzy sense of magic of my childhood: in the darkness
of the wardrobe, I slowly wind one frame after another, see
almost imperceptible changes, wind faster - a movement." (from
The Magical Lantern,
1987)
Recurrent themes in Bergman's films
are men's and women's inability to communicate with each other,
metaphysical questions of guilt and the existence of God, and the
emotional cruelty of human beings. "For many years, I was on
Hitler's side, delighted by his success and saddened by his defeats,"
Bergman has revealed from his youth. Already from his early play
Jack among the Actors, Bergman showed his interest in the
ambiguous tension between artist and public. Persona (1966)
marked Bergman's departure from metaphysics toward the realm of
human psychology. At that time Bergman was leaving his post at the
Royal Dramatic Theater. He wrote the script in 1965 while
hospitalized; withdrawal and illness were also subjects of the film.
In his self-analysis and films about tensions between the sexes
Bergman has continued the psychological tradition of Strindberg.
Among Bergman's most probing and honest studies of middle-class
married couples from the 1970s is Scenes from a Marriage
(1974), starring Liv Ullmann, Erland Josephson, Bibi Anderson, and
Jan Malmsjö. Originally it was made as six TV episodes, but Bergman
later edited it into feature-length.
Despite Bergman's international
status, his films were not always positively received by critics in
Sweden. In 1962 the director Bo Widerberg published a pamphlet
attacking him for reinforcing national stereotypes and calling for a
new and more socially conscious national cinema. On the other hand,
Summer with Monika (1953) was attacked in the United States.
Its prints were confiscated in Los Angeles, and a judge declared
that the film appealed to potential sex murderers. Smiles of the
Summer Night was promoted as "a Swedish smorgasbord of sex, sin
and psychiatry..." In the 1970s and 1980s feminists criticized
Bergman's portrayal of women, although he has been considered among
the most sensitive interpreters of the inner world of women in
Europe. On artistic level the French film theorist Jean Mitry
considers The Silence (1963) the perfect example of
anticinema, a literary film, embodying everything which should be
avoided. "Then we have one of the sisters masturbating while down in
the street a tank which has been rolling through the town completely
on its own comes to halt, coincidentally right underneath of the
windows of her bedroom. No need to mention the sexual symbolism of
the tank's gun pointed in the direction of the bedroom, by why on
earth should that particular tank be rolling through the streets on
its own, except to create its petty effect and to symbolize
symbolically a symbolic menace? Etc." (from
The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema,
1997)
In 1976 Bergman was arrested by two
policeman and charged with income-tax fraud. He suffered a nervous
breakdown, closed his studio on the Baltic island of Fårö, and left
Sweden in protest. The charges were later dropped. Bergman made his
home in Munich, where he was a director at the Residenztheater. He
also made films, such as The Serpent's Egg (1977), which
dealt with the collapse of the German currency and other events of
the 1920s that paved the way for the Nazis.
Bergman once noted that the cinema
was like an exciting mistress to him, but the theatre was his
faithful wife. As a film director his greatest international success
was the autobiographical Fanny and Alexander (1983), which
received the Oscar for best foreign film. (See
also: Jörn Donner, exec. producer, Finnish
writer, and director.) Reviews were in general positive, and Bergman
was compared to Maz Ophuls, Federico Fellini, and Luchino Visconti.
However, Richard Grenier wrote in Commentary: "I don't
believe one word of this 'love' glup that runs from one end of the
film to the other. When Ingmar Bergman talked to me of God and death
I respected him despite his past political sympathies. But now that
he's prattling on about love, and gentle smiles, and fruit trees in
bloom, I think something in him snapped." (September 1983) In the
film a well-to-do Uppsala family comes together to celebrate
Christmas 1907. Statues come to life and the ghost of the departed
mingle freely with the living. Alexander, a 10-year old boy, clashes
with ironclad dogma and the icy Bishop Vergerus.
After returning to Sweden, Bergman
wrote film scripts for Billie August and Daniel Bergman and directed
at the Royal Swedish Theatre. The Swedish Film Institute launched a
new Ingmar Bergman prize to be awarded annually. In 1988 appeared
Bergman's autobiography, The Magic Lantern. It was followed
by his film memoir Images: My Life in Film (1993). Bergman's
novel The Best Intentions (1993) was based on his parents'
lives, and the screenplay for the 1992 film on the same subject.
Private Conversations (1996) dealt with the extra-marital affair
of Ingmar's mother, Anna with a student-priest, Thomas.
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Ingmar Bergman en una
de sus últimas fotos |
In October 2001 Bergman announced his
plans to make a sequel to Scenes from a Marriage with the 78-year
old Erland Josephson and the 62-year old Liv Ullmann who also were
members of the original cast in 1973. He wrote the screenplay for
Liv Ullmann's film Faithless (2000) and two years later
Bergman had a new television film under way - Saraband
(2003), saying it would be his last picture. Bergman shot the
chamber piece on digital video. "Saraband may be Bergman's
final primal scream, which his art and craft give the severe majesty
of a Bach sello suite," wrote Richard Corliss in
Time (August 29, 2005).
Bergman has spent his time on Farö mostly reading and talking with
his friends on the phone.
For further reading:
Tre dagböcker by Maria von Rosen
(2004); The Films of Ingmar Bergman by Jesse Kalin (
2003); Ingmar Bergman: His Life and Films by Jerry
Vermilye (2002); I begynnelsen var ordet. Ingmar Bergman och
hans tidigare författarskap by Maaret Koskinen (2002);
Ingmar Bergman: Magician and Prophet by Mark Gervais (1999);
Ingmar Bergman: His Films and Career by Jerry Vermilye
(1998); Gender and Representation in the Films of Ingmar
Bergman by Marilyn Johns Blackwell (1997); Between stage
and Screen by Egil Tornqvist (1996); Spel och speglingar.
Ingmar Bergmans filmiska estetik by Maaret Koskinen (1993);
Ingmar Bergman by Peter Cowie (1992), Ingmar Bergman
by Lise-Lote Marker and Frederick J. Marker (1992); The
Influence of Existentialism on Ingmar Bergman by Charles B.
Ketcham (1988); Ingmar Bergman: A guide to References and
Resources by Birgitta Steene (1982); Ingmar Bergman
by Peter Cowie (1982); Ingmar Bergman Directs by John
Simon (1972); Djävulens ansikte by Jörn Donner (1962) -
Bergman's influence on other directors:
Woody Allen, Andrei Tarkovsky - see under Arkady Strugatski
- Note: Eino
Kaila's Persoonallisuus
(translated into Swedish under the title
Personlighetens psykologi)
was among the works, that Ingmar Bergman highly valued.
Films:
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HETS, 1944 (Frenzy) - screenplay,
dir. by Alf Sjöberg
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KRIS, 1946 (Crisis)
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DET REGNAR PÅ VÅR KÄRLEK, 1946 (It
Rains on Our Love)
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SKEPP TILL INDIALAND, 1947 (Ship
to India)
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KVINNA UTAN ANSIKTE, 1947 (Woman
Without a Face)
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EVA, 1948 - co-sc.
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MUSIK IN MÖRKER, 1948 (Music in
Darkness/Night is My Future)
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HAMNSTAD, 1948 (Port of Call)
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FÄNGELSE, 1949 (The Devil's
Wanton)
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TILL GLÄDJE, 1949 (To Joy)
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SÅNT HÄNDER INTE HÄR, 1950 (This
Can't Happen Here)
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MEDAN STADEN SOVER, 1950 (While
the City Sleeps) - synopsis
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FRÅNSKILD, 1951 (Divorced) -
story, co.sc.
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SOMMARLEK, 1951 (Summer
Interlude)
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KVINNORS VÄNTAN, 1952 (Waiting
Women)
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SOMMAREN MED MONIKA, 1953 (Summer
with Monika)
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GYCKLARNAS AFTON, 1953 (Sawdust
and Tinsel / The Naked Night)
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EN LEKTION I KÄRLEK, 1954 (A
Lesson in Love)
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SOMMARNATTENS LEENDE, 1955
(Smiles of a Summer Night)
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KVINNODRÖM, 1955 (Journey into
Autumn)
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SISTA PARET UT, 1956 (The Last
Couple Out) - story, co-sc.
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DET SJUNDE INSEGLET, 1957 (The
Seventh Seal)
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SMULTRONSTÄLLET, 1957 (Wild
Strawberries)
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NÄRA LIVET, 1958 (So Close to
Life, based on a novel by Ulla Isaksson)
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ANSIKTET, 1958 (The Face)
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JUNGFRUKÄLLAN, 1960 (The Virgin
Spring)
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DJÄVULENS ÖGA, 1960 (The Devils
Eye)
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LUSTGARDEN, 1961 (Pleasure
Garden) - co-sc.
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SÅSOM I EN SPEGEL, 1961 (Through
a Glass Darkly)
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NATTVARDSGÄSTERNA, 1962 (Winter
Light)
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TYSTNADEN, 1963 (The Silence)
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FÖR ATT INTE TALA OM ALLA DESSA
KVINNOR, 1964 (Now About These Women)
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PERSONA, 1966
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STIMULANTIA, 1967
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VARGTIMMEN, 1968 (Hour of the
Wolf)
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SKAMMEN, 1968 (Shame)
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RITEN, 1969 (The Rite)
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FÅRÖDOKUMENT 1969, 1970 (The Fårö
Documentary)
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BERÖRINGEN, 1971 (The Touch)
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VISKNINGAR OCH ROP, 1972 (Cries
and Whispers)
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SCENER UR ETT ÄKTENSKAP, 1973
(Scenes from a Marriage)
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TROLLFLÖJTEN, 1974 (The Magic
Flute)
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ANSIKTE MOT ANSIKTE, 1975 (Facee
to Face)
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HÖSTSONATEN, 1978 (Autumn Sonata)
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AUS DEM LEBEN DER MARIONETTEN,
1980 (From the Life of the Marionettes)
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FANNY OCH ALEXANDER, (1983) -
Academy award for the best foreign film
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EFTER EN REPETITIONEN, 1983
(After the Rehearsal)
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BERGMAN'S LIST, 1995 (ed. by
Gunnar Bergdahl, foreword by Woody Allen, afterword by Jörn
Donner)
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DE TVÅ SALIGA, 1986
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DOKUMENT FANNY OCH ALEXANDER,
1986 (Document Fanny and Alexander)
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KARINS ANSIKTE, 1985 (Karin's
Face)
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THE BEST INTENTIONS, 1992 -
screenplay
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LARMAR OCH GÖR SIG TILL, 1997
(television film)
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screenplay: TROLÖSAN, 2000 (dir.
by Liv Ullman, starring Erland Josephson, Lena Endre)
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BILDMAKARNA, 2000 (television
film, based on Per Olov Enquist's play, performed in Dramaten)
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SARABAND, 2003 (television film
starring Liv Ullmann and Erland Josephson)
Plays, memoirs:
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KASPERS DÖD, 1942
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JACK HOS SKÅDESPELARNA, 1946
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MIG TILL SKRÄCK..., 1947
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KAMMA NOLL, 1948
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MORALITETER, 1948 (the three
morality plays include Rakel och biografivaktmästaren,
Dagenslutar tidigt and Mig till Skräck...)
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STADEN, 1950-51
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MORDET I BARJÄRNA, 1952
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TRÄMÅLNING, 1954 - Woodpainting
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screenplay: Nära livet, 1958 (with
Ulla Isaksson)
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screenplay: The Seventh Seal,
1960
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screenplay: Wild Strawberries,
1960
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screenplay: The Magician, 1960
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BERGMAN OM BERGMAN, 1970 (ed. by
Stig Björkman)
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EN PASSION, 1972
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UR MARIONETERNAS LIV, 1980
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LATERNA MAGICA, 1987 - The Magic
Lantern (autobiography)
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BILDER, 1990 - Images: My Life in
Film
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DEN GODA VILJAN - The Best
Intentions, 1993 (novel, written as a script for the film by
Billie August, which won the Golden Palm Award at Cannes in
1992. Translated by Joan Tate)
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SÖNDAGSBARN - Sunday's Children,
1994 (translated by Joan Tate, made into a film directed by
Daniel Bergman)
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ENSKILDA SAMTAL, 1996 - Private
Conversations
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SARABAND, 2003 - Sarabande (suom.
Petteri Granström)
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TRE DAGBÖCKER, 2004 (with Ingrid Bergman) - Kolme
päiväkirjaa (suom. Marita Salminen)
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