Ingmar Bergman, legendary film director

Ingmar Bergman, legendary film director

STOCKHOLM – Swedish film director Ingmar Bergman, widely regarded as one of the great masters of modern cinema, died yesterday.

He was 89. Reaction from London, Paris and Copenhagen – where a Bergman acolyte, director Bille August, compared him to Akira Kurosawa and Federico Fellini – underscored his international influence.”The world has lost one of its very greatest filmmakers.He taught us all so much throughout his life,” said British actor and director Richard Attenborough.Bergman died at his home on the Baltic islet of Faro, north of the tourist island of Gotland, Sweden.Bergman, whose 1982 film ‘Fanny and Alexander’ won an Oscar for best foreign film, made about 60 movies before retiring from film making in 2003.In his films, Bergman’s vision encompassed all the extremes of his beloved Sweden: the claustrophobic gloom of unending winter nights, the gentle merriment of glowing summer evenings and the bleak magnificence of the island where he spent his last years.Bergman approached difficult subjects such as plague and madness with inventive technique and carefully honed writing, becoming one of the towering figures of serious film making.”He was one of the world’s biggest personalities.There were (Japanese film director Akira) Kurosawa, (Italy’s Federico) Fellini and then Bergman.Now he is also gone,” August, an Academy Award winner, told The Associated Press.”It is a great loss.I am in shock.”In the 1990s, August was considered Scandinavia’s heir after Bergman.”That is nonsense.There can only be one Ingmar Bergman.”‘TRUE GREAT’ French cinema specialist Laurent Delmas said France’s national cinema school required aspiring students to analyse a five-minute extract from a Bergman film as part of last year’s entrance exams.”There is not a serious French director out there who has not watched Bergman and taken elements – consciously or unconsciously – from him,” Delmas said.”They watched Bergman not to ape him but because there were blown away by the essential subjects of his films – death, relationships – by his stories and the way he filmed them.”Cannes Film Festival director Gilles Jacob called Bergman the “last of the greats, because he proved that cinema can be as profound as literature”.Bergman first gained international attention with 1955’s ‘Smiles of a Summer Night’, a romantic comedy that inspired the Stephen Sondheim musical ‘A Little Night Music’.His last work was ‘Saraband’, a made-for-television movie that aired on Swedish public television in December 2003.Nearly a million Swedes – or one in nine – watched the family drama, which was based on the two main characters from his previous TV series, ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.The show starred Liv Ullmann and Erland Josephson – two of Bergman’s favourite actors – who reprised their roles from ‘Scenes From a Marriage’, which was edited and released as a feature film in 1974.’The Seventh Seal’, released two years later, riveted critics and audiences.An allegorical tale of the medieval Black Plague years, it contains one of cinema’s most famous scenes – a knight playing chess with the shrouded figure of Death.”I was terribly scared of death,” Bergman said of his state of mind when making the 1957 film, which was nominated for an Academy Award in the best picture category.The film distilled the essence of Bergman’s work – high seriousness, flashes of unexpected humour and striking images.Though best known internationally for his films, Bergman was also a prominent stage director.He worked at several playhouses in Sweden from the mid-1940s, including the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm which he headed from 1963 to 1966.He staged many plays by the Swedish author August Strindberg, whom he cited as an inspiration.The influence of Strindberg’s gruelling and precise psychological dissections could be seen in the production that brought Bergman an even-wider audience: 1973’s ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.First produced as a six-part series for television, then released in a theatre version, it is an intense detailing of the disintegration of a marriage.Bergman showed his lighter side in the following year’s ‘The Magic Flute’, again first produced for TV.It is a fairly straight production of the Mozart opera, enlivened by touches such as repeatedly showing the face of a young girl watching the opera and comically clumsy props and costumes.Bergman remained active later in life with stage productions and occasional TV shows.He said he still felt a need to direct, although he had no plans to make another feature film.In the fall of 2002, Bergman, at age 84, started production on ‘Saraband’, a 120-minute television movie based on the two main characters in ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.In a rare news conference, the reclusive director said he wrote the story after realising he was “pregnant with a play”.”At first I felt sick, very sick.It was strange.Like Abraham and Sarah, who suddenly realised she was pregnant,” he said, referring to biblical characters.”It was lots of fun, suddenly to feel this urge returning.”EARLY YEARS The son of a Lutheran clergyman and a housewife, Ernst Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala on July 14 1918, and grew up with a brother and sister in a household of severe discipline that he described in painful detail in the autobiography ‘The Magic Lantern’.The title comes from his childhood, when his brother got a “magic lantern” – a precursor of the slide-projector – for Christmas.Ingmar was consumed with jealousy, and he managed to acquire the object of his desire by trading it for a hundred tin soldiers.The apparatus was a spot of joy in an often-cruel young life.Bergman recounted the horror of being locked in a closet and the humiliation of being made to wear a skirt as punishment for wetting his pants.He broke with his parents at 19 and remained aloof from them, but later in life sought to understand them.The story of their lives was told in the television film ‘Sunday’s Child’, directed by his own son Daniel.The director said he had coped with the authoritarian environment of his childhood by living in a world of fantasies.When he first saw a movie he was greatly moved.”Sixty years have passed, nothing has changed, it’s still the same fever,” he wrote of his passion for film in the 1987 autobiography.But he said the escape into another world went so far that it took him years to tell reality from fantasy, and Bergman repeatedly described his life as a constant fight against demons, also reflected in his work.The demons sometimes drove him to great art – as in ‘Cries and Whispers’, the deathbed drama that climaxes when the dying woman cries “I am dead, but I can’t leave you.”Sometimes they drove him over the top, as in ‘Hour of the Wolf’, where a nightmare-plagued artist meets real-life demons on a lonely island.REAL-LIFE TORMENTORS Bergman also waged a fight against real-life tormentors: Sweden’s powerful tax authorities.In 1976, during a rehearsal at the Royal Dramatic Theatre, police came to take Bergman away for interrogation about tax evasion.The director, who had left all finances to be handled by a lawyer, was questioned for hours while his home was searched.When released, he was forbidden to leave the country.The case caused an enormous uproar in the media and Bergman had a mental breakdown that sent him to hospital for over a month.He later was absolved of all accusations and in the end only had to pay some extra taxes.In his autobiography he admitted to guilt in only one aspect: “I signed papers that I didn’t read, even less understood.”The experience made him go into voluntary exile in Germany, to the embarrassment of the Swedish authorities.After nine years, he returned to Stockholm, his long-time base.It was in the Swedish capital that Bergman broke into the world of drama, starting with a menial job at the Royal Opera House after dropping out of college.Bergman was hired by the script department of Swedish Film Industry, the country’s main production company, as an assistant script writer in 1942.In 1944, his first original screenplay was filmed by Alf Sjoeberg, the dominant Swedish film director of the time.’Torment’ won several awards including the Grand Prize of the 1946 Cannes Film Festival, and soon Bergman was directing an average of two films a year as well as working with stage production.After the acclaimed ‘The Seventh Seal’, he quickly came up with another success in ‘Wild Strawberries’, in which an elderly professor’s car trip to pick up an award is interspersed with dreams.Other noted films include ‘Persona’, about an actress and her nurse whose identities seem to merge, and ‘The Autumn Sonata’, about a concert pianist and her two daughters, one severely handicapped and the other burdened by her child’s drowning.Nampa-APReaction from London, Paris and Copenhagen – where a Bergman acolyte, director Bille August, compared him to Akira Kurosawa and Federico Fellini – underscored his international influence.”The world has lost one of its very greatest filmmakers.He taught us all so much throughout his life,” said British actor and director Richard Attenborough.Bergman died at his home on the Baltic islet of Faro, north of the tourist island of Gotland, Sweden.Bergman, whose 1982 film ‘Fanny and Alexander’ won an Oscar for best foreign film, made about 60 movies before retiring from film making in 2003.In his films, Bergman’s vision encompassed all the extremes of his beloved Sweden: the claustrophobic gloom of unending winter nights, the gentle merriment of glowing summer evenings and the bleak magnificence of the island where he spent his last years.Bergman approached difficult subjects such as plague and madness with inventive technique and carefully honed writing, becoming one of the towering figures of serious film making.”He was one of the world’s biggest personalities.There were (Japanese film director Akira) Kurosawa, (Italy’s Federico) Fellini and then Bergman.Now he is also gone,” August, an Academy Award winner, told The Associated Press.”It is a great loss.I am in shock.”In the 1990s, August was considered Scandinavia’s heir after Bergman.”That is nonsense.There can only be one Ingmar Bergman.”‘TRUE GREAT’ French cinema specialist Laurent Delmas said France’s national cinema school required aspiring students to analyse a five-minute extract from a Bergman film as part of last year’s entrance exams.”There is not a serious French director out there who has not watched Bergman and taken elements – consciously or unconsciously – from him,” Delmas said.”They watched Bergman not to ape him but because there were blown away by the essential subjects of his films – death, relationships – by his stories and the way he filmed them.”Cannes Film Festival director Gilles Jacob called Bergman the “last of the greats, because he proved that cinema can be as profound as literature”.Bergman first gained international attention with 1955’s ‘Smiles of a Summer Night’, a romantic comedy that inspired the Stephen Sondheim musical ‘A Little Night Music’.His last work was ‘Saraband’, a made-for-television movie that aired on Swedish public television in December 2003.Nearly a million Swedes – or one in nine – watched the family drama, which was based on the two main characters from his previous TV series, ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.The show starred Liv Ullmann and Erland Josephson – two of Bergman’s favourite actors – who reprised their roles from ‘Scenes From a Marriage’, which was edited and released as a feature film in 1974.’The Seventh Seal’, released two years later, riveted critics and audiences.An allegorical tale of the medieval Black Plague years, it contains one of cinema’s most famous scenes – a knight playing chess with the shrouded figure of Death.”I was terribly scared of death,” Bergman said of his state of mind when making the 1957 film, which was nominated for an Academy Award in the best picture category.The film distilled the essence of Bergman’s work – high seriousness, flashes of unexpected humour and striking images.Though best known internationally for his films, Bergman was also a prominent stage director.He worked at several playhouses in Sweden from the mid-1940s, including the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm which he headed from 1963 to 1966.He staged many plays by the Swedish author August Strindberg, whom he cited as an inspiration.The influence of Strindberg’s gruelling and precise psychological dissections could be seen in the production that brought Bergman an even-wider audience: 1973’s ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.First produced as a six-part series for television, then released in a theatre version, it is an intense detailing of the disintegration of a marriage.Bergman showed his lighter side in the following year’s ‘The Magic Flute’, again first produced for TV.It is a fairly straight production of the Mozart opera, enlivened by touches such as repeatedly showing the face of a young girl watching the opera and comically clumsy props and costumes.Bergman remained active later in life with stage productions and occasional TV shows.He said he still felt a need to direct, although he had no plans to make another feature film.In the fall of 2002, Bergman, at age 84, started production on ‘Saraband’, a 120-minute television movie based on the two main characters in ‘Scenes From a Marriage’.In a rare news conference, the reclusive director said he wrote the story after realising he was “pregnant with a play”.”At first I felt sick, very sick.It was strange.Like Abraham and Sarah, who suddenly realised she was pregnant,” he said, referring to biblical characters.”It was lots of fun, suddenly to feel this urge returning.”EARLY YEARS The son of a Lutheran clergyman and a housewife, Ernst Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala on July 14 1918, and grew up with a brother and sister in a household of severe discipline that he described in painful detail in the autobiography ‘The Magic Lantern’.The title comes from his childhood, when his brother got a “magic lantern” – a precursor of the slide-projector – for Christmas.Ingmar was consumed with jealousy, and he managed to acquire the object of his desire by trading it for a hundred tin soldiers.The apparatus was a spot of joy in an often-cruel young life.Bergman recounted the horror of being locked in a closet and the humiliation of being made to wear a skirt as punishment for wetting his pants.He broke with his parents at 19 and remained aloof from them, but later in life sought to understand them.The story of their lives was told in the television film ‘Sunday’s Child’, directed by his own son Daniel.The director said he had coped with the authoritarian environment of his childhood by living in a world of fantasies.When he first saw a movie he was greatly moved.”Sixty years have passed, nothing has changed, it’s still the same fever,” he wrote of his passion for film in the 1987 autobiography.But he said the escape into another world went so far that it took him years to tell reality from fantasy, and Bergman repeatedly described his life as a constant fight against demons, also reflected in his work.The demons sometimes drove him to great art – as in ‘Cries and Whispers’, the deathbed drama that climaxes when the dying woman cries “I am dead, but I can’t leave you.”Sometimes they drove him over the top, as in ‘Hour of the Wolf’, where a nightmare-plagued artist meets real-life demons on a lonely island. REAL-LIFE TORMENTORS Bergman also waged a fight against real-life tormentors: Sweden’s powerful tax authorities.In 1976, during a rehearsal at the Royal Dramatic Theatre, police came to take Bergman away for interrogation about tax evasion.The director, who had left all finances to be handled by a lawyer, was questioned for hours while his home was searched.When released, he was forbidden to leave the country.The case caused an enormous uproar in the media and Bergman had a mental breakdown that sent him to hospital for over a month.He later was absolved of all accusations and in the end only had to pay some extra taxes.In his autobiography he admitted to guilt in only one aspect: “I signed papers that I didn’t read, even less understood.”The experience made him go into voluntary exile in Germany, to the embarrassment of the Swedish authorities.After nine years, he returned to Stockholm, his long-time base.It was in the Swedish capital that Bergman broke into the world of drama, starting with a menial job at the Royal Opera House after dropping out of college.Bergman was hired by the script department of Swedish Film Industry, the country’s main production company, as an assistant script writer in 1942.In 1944, his first original screenplay was filmed by Alf Sjoeberg, the dominant Swedish film director of the time.’Torment’ won several awards including the Grand Prize of the 1946 Cannes Film Festival, and soon Bergman was directing an average of two films a year as well as working with stage production.After the acclaimed ‘The Seventh Seal’, he quickly came up with another success in ‘Wild Strawberries’, in which an elderly professor’s car trip to pick up an award is interspersed with dreams.Other noted films include ‘Persona’, about an actress and her nurse whose identities seem to merge, and ‘The Autumn Sonata’, about a concert pianist and her two daughters, one severely handicapped and the other burdened by her child’s drowning.Nampa-AP

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