© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p17

28/06/2013 16:41 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p17

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p17

    28/06/2013 16:41 par tellurikwaves

 

-Anthony Quinn had said about her, "Sometimes in motion pictures you love someone so much, but it doesn't work on the screen. And you don't like somebody and you're wonderful on the screen. The two greatest talents I worked with were Ingrid and Anna Magnani. But I would prefer to work with [Magnani], whom I didn't like, than Ingrid, whom I loved".
 
 
-On file at the Berlin Document Center, an archive of documents from the Nazi era, is a special certificate for her to appear in a German film. This must have been from a time very early in her career when she was still acting in Sweden, long before she came to America and is no reflection on her political views or ideals.
 
-Early in her career, when she did Swedish films, her nickname on set was "Betterlater" due to her saying after nearly every take, "I'll be better later.".
 
-In both her first American film (Envol vers le bonheur (1939) and her last feature film, (Sonate d'automne (1978), she played a concert pianist.
 
-Was 8 months pregnant with her daughter Pia Lindström when she completed filming En enda natt (1939).Returned to work 8 months after giving birth to her daughter Pia Lindström in order to film Envol vers le bonheur (1939).
 
-Her mother was German, her father was Swedish.
 
-Her children convinced her to write her autobiography.
 
-According to a biographer, she was fond of butter cookies.
 
-Was ranked 5th in the list of Best Classic Actress online poll chosen by the 12,000 readers of EW magazine, behind Katharine Hepburn, Audrey Hepburn, Bette Davis and Marilyn Monroe.
 
-Her mother, Friedel (née Adler) Bergman, died when she was only 3 years old and her father, Justus Bergman, died when she was 13.
 
-Luchino Visconti had wanted Ingrid Bergman and Marlon Brando for leads in Senso (1954), but when Bergman's husband 'Roberto Rossellini' would not permit her to appear in the film, Brando also bowed out.
 
Is one of 12 actresses to have won the Triple Crown of Acting (an Oscar, Emmy and Tony); the others in chronological order are Helen Hayes, Shirley Booth, Liza Minnelli, Rita Moreno, Maureen Stapleton, Jessica Tandy, Audrey Hepburn, Anne Bancroft, Vanessa Redgrave, Maggie Smith and Ellen Burstyn.
 
Bergman turned down the title role in Ma femme est un grand homme (1947), for which Loretta Young won an Oscar, and La fosse aux serpents (1948), for which Olivia de Havilland was nominated for an Oscar.
 
-Son Roberto "Robertino" Rossellini was engaged to Princess Caroline of Monaco in 1983.
 
-During the making of 'Goodbye Again', Bergman's co-star, 'Anthony Perkins' (who had an overwhelming fear of girls) was informed by friends that she was attracted to him, and thereafter he insisted that they were never alone when rehearsing love scenes.
 
-Was unable to attend the 1979 Academy Award ceremony (where she was nominated Best Actress for Sonate d'automne (1978)) due to illness.
 
-Was 3 months pregnant with her son Roberto when she completed filming Stromboli (1950).
Returned to work 18 months after giving birth to her son Roberto in order to begin filming Europe 51 (1952).
 
-Cary Grant was one of her favorite co-stars. As with Gary Cooper, Grant was comfortable with his stature (over six feet tall), so no lifts or barefoot scenes were necessary.
 
-One of six actors who were awarded with 3 acting Oscars, along with Meryl Streep, Jack Nicholson, Walter Brennan, Daniel Day-Lewis and Katharine Hepburn. Hepburn won 4 Oscars.
 
 
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p16

28/06/2013 16:27 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p16

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p16

    28/06/2013 16:27 par tellurikwaves

 

-Harpers & Queen magazine, along with the Getty Images Gallery, put a photographic exhibition together titled (April 2003) 'Queens of the 20th Century at Getty Images Gallery' in London which pay homage to 100 women who have defined style in the past, their ability to influence the wardrobes of their legions of fans and about "women with the most incredible sense of style". Ingrid Bergman was named first among other names like Katharine Hepburn, Grace Kelly, Madonna, Catherine Deneuve, Marilyn Monroe and Jane Fonda.
 
-Famed French director Jean Renoir adored Ingrid. When she was in desperate straits after splitting with Roberto Rossellini, Renoir quickly got to work and wrote two things for her, the film Elena et les hommes (1956) (Elena and Her Men) and the play "Carola".
 
-Was portrayed by daughter Isabella Rossellini in her tribute to her father, famed Italian director Roberto Rossellini, in Mon père a 100 ans (2005).
 
-The San Francisco Chronicle's "The Objects Of Our Affection" ranked her fourth in the female category after Audrey Hepburn, Sophia Loren and Marilyn Monroe.
 
-The British magazine 'Harpers and Queen' ranked her fifth on their 'The World's 50 most Alluring Women. Audrey Hepburn was first, followed by Ava Gardner, Julie Christie, and Catherine Deneuve.
 
-In Israel, under The Jewish National Fund, a memorial forest for Ingrid Bergman has been established as part of the Kennedy Memorial Forest near Jerusalem. On the plaque wrote, 'In Memory of Ingrid Bergman, A Great Actress and An Outstanding Person'.
 
-At Warner Brothers Studios in Burbank, there's a special area at the museum devoted strictly to Casablanca (1942) that includes Humphrey Bogart's and her clothes from the film, the film's script, its costumes, and even the small piano on which Sam "played it again" for Rick and Ilsa.
 
-Frank Sinatra was a good friend of hers.
 
-She considered herself somehow awkward because of her tallness. In Anastasia (1956) she suggested putting a little block under Yul Brynner. He refused, saying, "You think I want to play it standing on a box? I'll show the world what a big horse you are!".
 
-She was sitting in a Paris bathtub in 1957, listening to the Oscars broadcast on the radio, when she heard Cary Grant, her friend for many years, accept her Best Actress award. Her Les enchaînés (1946) and Indiscret (1958) costar also introduced her when she returned to the Oscars in 1959 to present Gigi (1958) with Best Picture honors. The standing ovation that followed was as thunderous as any in Oscar history.
 
-Although she played Helen Hayes' granddaughter in Anastasia (1956), she was less than 15 years younger than Hayes.
 
-Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume One, 1981-1985, pages 67-69. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998.
 
-In Italy, almost all her films were dubbed by Lidia Simoneschi. Only twice, was she dubbed by another Italian actress: Dhia Cristiani in Jeanne d'Arc (1948) and Giovanna Scotto in Casablanca (1942).
 
-Was the first choice to play Terry McKay in Elle et lui (1957).
 
-The very first Montreal World Film Festival was held in 1977. The festivities were opened by Bergman, who was joined by such greats as Fay Wray, Gloria Swanson, Howard Hawks and Jean-Luc Godard. It was the only non-competitive year of the festival's history.
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p15

28/06/2013 16:15 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p15

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p15

    28/06/2013 16:15 par tellurikwaves

 

-She and Roberto Rossellini made 6 movies together: Europe 51 (1952), Jeanne au bûcher (1954), La peur (1954), Nous, les femmes (1953), Stromboli (1950) and Voyage en Italie (1954).
 
-No relation to Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, although the fact that his wife was also a Swedish actress named Ingrid Bergman--also no relation--confused matters greatly.
 
-One of the first tall leading ladies in Hollywood in an era where most famous actresses were just over five feet.
 
-Was originally offered the role of Princess Dragonmiroff in Le crime de l'Orient-Express (1974). She later ended up playing Greta Ohlsson which won her an Oscar. Virtually all of her Oscar-winning performance is contained in a single scene: her interrogation by Poirot, captured in a single continuous take, nearly five minutes long.
 
-Upon accepting her Oscar for Le crime de l'Orient-Express (1974), she apologized to fellow actress Valentina Cortese, who was nominated for La nuit américaine (1973), saying that she would have deserved the award more.
 
-She is the favorite actress of poet Cheryl Scott.
 
-Her former French estate was up for sale for $3 million. The country compound, comprising five buildings on 18.5 acres in the pastoral town of Choisille, is located 30 minutes from the center of Paris. The property includes 10 bedrooms, eight bathrooms, a greenhouse, a 55-foot indoor-outdoor pool and a small barn.
 
-On Broadway, her portrayal of Joan of Arc, in Maxwell Anderson's "Joan of Lorraine", won her an Antoinette Perry award--the "Tony"--the highest honor in the American theater.
 
-Shares the distinction with actors José Ferrer, Helen Hayes and Fredric March of being the first winners of acting Tony Awards when the annual event was established in 1947.
 
-Took acting class from Michael Chekhov in Hollywood.
 
Bergman and Humphrey Bogart were voted the second greatest on-screen couple of all time in a poll commissioned by British chain store Woolworths for their work in Casablanca (1942). (2005)
 
In DigitalDreamDoor's 100 Greatest Female Acting Performances, she was ranked 7# for Hantise (1944), 20# for Casablanca (1942), 62# for Anastasia (1956), 67# for Les enchaînés (1946), 74# for La maison du docteur Edwardes (1945) and 86# for Sonate d'automne (1978).
 
-In DigitalDreamdoor's 100 Greatest Movie Actresses, Bergman ranked third, only Katharine Hepburn and Meryl Streep topped her in the list.
 
-Took a $7000 pay cut to appear in Casablanca (1942). David O. Selznick gave her the role, not giving her an option to take it or not.According to her daughter, whenever anyone would come up to her and say "I loved you in Casablanca (1942)", she would look at them like she didn't know what they were talking about.
 
-At Stockholm Arlanda airport, there is a large billboard; "Welcome To My Hometown, Ingrid Bergman, legend".
 
-Aigner's Autumn/Winter collection was held at a runway on the Cavenagh Bridge next to the Fullerton Hotel in Singapore. The collection is inspired by Bergman, with relaxed elegance, sophistication and, of course, the trenchcoat from her scene in Casablanca (1942). The "It" bag this season is the Stromboli (named after Stromboli (1950), another of Bergman's famous movies).
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p14

28/06/2013 15:59 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p14

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p14

    28/06/2013 15:59 par tellurikwaves

 

-Cary Grant remembered that she had come on the set one morning and was simply out of it: "We went over and over the scene, and she was in some sort of haze. You know, she just wasn't there. But [director] Alfred Hitchcock didn't say anything. He just sat there next to the camera, pulling on his cigar. Finally, around 11 a.m., I began to see in Ingrid's eyes that she was starting to come around. And for the first time all morning, the lines were coming out right. And just then Hitchcock said, 'Cut.' Hitch just sat and looked up at Ingrid and said, quietly, 'Good morning, Ingrid' ".
 
-In 1971, when Daily Variety had noted filmmakers select the best films and performers of the sound era, she was named Best Actress.
 
-She had a reputation as a tough negotiator. David O. Selznick said of her, "Her angelic nature is not above being tarnished by matters of mere money".
 
-Her arrival for her first day's work; wheeled into the studio on a bicycle and wearing sunglasses.
 
-Her 1980 autobiography, "My Story", was a best-seller.
 
-Lived in five interesting cities in five different countries; Stockholm, Hollywood, Rome, Paris and London.
 
-When David O. Selznick told his prospective new 23-year-old star that they would have to change her name, cap her teeth and pluck her eyebrows, she threatened to return to Sweden.
 
-Received the (at the time) enormous amount of $129,000 for her role in Maxwell Anderson's "Joan of Lorraine" on Broadway. She also received at least 21 awards for that play.
 
-To promote her film Jeanne d'Arc (1948), the studio placed an eight-story-high figure of her in white plastic armor in New York City's Times Square, at a cost of $75,000.
 
-She and her third husband, Lars Schmidt, had their own island called Danholmen, off the coast of Sweden.
 
-She was voted the 12th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
 
In 1960 she became the third performer to win the Triple Crown of Acting: Oscars for Hantise (1944), Anastasia (1956), Le crime de l'Orient-Express (1974), a Tony for "Joan of Lorraine" (1947) and Emmys in 1960 and 1982.
 
-Won Broadway's 1947 Tony Award as Best Actress (Dramatic) for "Joan of Lorraine" - an award shared with Helen Hayes. They would later co-star in Anastasia (1956), for which she won her second Oscar.
 
-Was a good friend of author Ernest Hemingway, whom she called "Papa." He, in turn, called her "Daughter.".
 
-Bergman was making Cloches de Ste Marie (1945), the sequel to La route semée d'étoiles (1944), when the 1944 Academy Awards ceremony took place. She, co-star Bing Crosby and director Leo McCarey had all been nominated for Oscars, Crosby and McCarey for La route semée d'étoiles (1944). They all won that night, Bergman for Hantise (1944), the first of her three Academy Awards. When she picked up her Best Actress statuette, she said, "I'm afraid that if I went on the set tomorrow without an Oscar, neither of them would speak to me.".

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p13

28/06/2013 15:48 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p13

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-anecdotes etc.. p13

    28/06/2013 15:48 par tellurikwaves

 

-Industrialist Howard Hughes once bought every available seat from New York to Los Angeles to be sure she would accept a ride in his private plane.
 
-During the making of Casablanca (1942), Humphrey Bogart's wife Mayo Methot continually accused him of having an affair with Bergman, often confronting him in his dressing room before a shot. Bogart would come onto the set in a rage.
 
-Her daughter, Pia Lindström, with first husband Petter Lindstrom, is a television personality and actress. Another daughter, Isabella Rossellini, became a model and actress, and has appeared in such films as Blue Velvet (1986), Ludwig van B. (1994), "Merlin" (1998) and Don Quixote (2000) (TV).
 
-MGM had originally cast her in the Beatrix Emery role in Dr. Jekyll et Mr. Hyde (1941) and Lana Turner in the Ivy Peterson role. Bergman felt the role of Ivy was more challenging and persuaded the studio to let her switch roles with Turner.
 
-She has the distinction of having inadvertently been one of the first Hollywood performers to help break down the studio contract system.
 
-On the first anniversary of her death, stars, friends and family came to Venice Film Festival to honor her. Among the many guests were Gregory Peck, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Matthau, Charlton Heston, Roger Moore, Claudette Colbert, Olivia de Havilland and Prince Albert of Monaco.
 
-Swedes are very proud of Bergman. They even have "Ingrid Bergman Square" with a statue of the screen goddess looking out over the water to her former home. Her ashes were scattered over the sea nearby.
 
-Was named #4 on The Greatest Screen Legends actress list by the American Film Institute.
 
-To prepare for her role of Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, in A Woman Called Golda (1982) (TV), she traveled around Israel and interviewed those who had known Golda. She spent hours studying old newsreels to master Golda's mannerisms. She was 66 years old at the time.
 
-Her father encouraged her play-acting and even helped her find funny hats and costumes to dress up in while he photographed her.
 
-Received a fan letter from James Stewart on his way to combat duty for World War II (1943).
 
-One day at the studio she hooked bumpers with another car. A studio policeman found her tugging and heaving with all her might. The policeman said, "Darndest thing I ever saw. First film star I ever knew that didn't mind getting her hands dirty".
 
-Enjoyed working with Gary Cooper, for she did not have to take off her shoes.
 
-Received a fascinating 1939 telegram from the great Greta Garbo reading, "I would like to see you when I am free, if you would be willing".
 
-Visited Hotel Panamonte in Panama twice, and so the suite was named after her. Flavored with vibrations from Hollywood's "Golden Heyday," her luxurious rooms retain their original décor.
 
-Cannes jury secretary Christiane Guespin was remembering all the different stars at the festival and she said the most impressive was Bergman back in 1973 when she was President of the jury. Guespin said,"Every night,when she arrived at the evening screenings, people would stand and give her an ovation and applause. Every single night. I have never seen that happen for anyone else".

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p12

28/06/2013 15:38 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p12

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p12

    28/06/2013 15:38 par tellurikwaves

Trivia (suite)

 

-Turned down the role opposite Charlton Heston in La planète des singes (1968).
 
-Bergman and Sean Connery had topped a list of "greatest actors of all time" compiled by 50,000 readers of German magazine Funk Uhr.
 
-She and her husband were often invited to dinner parties at the home of Alfred Hitchcock. According to those present, she never seemed to notice that her host was sulking because of his crush on her.
 
-Was fluent in English, Swedish, French, German and Italian.
 
-Sergio Scaglietti, Ferrari's master coachbuilder and aluminum sculptor, shaped some the most beautiful Ferraris of the '50s and '60s, including the 375MM built in 1954 for her. That "Ingrid" car has, in turn, inspired the proportions of today's 612 Scaglietti, the largest Ferrari ever (there's even a silver "Ingrid" paint option).
 
-At her funeral service held at Saint Martin's-in-the-fields Church, there was nothing that was as touching as the moment when, a violin played the strains of 'As Time Goes By'.
 
-She wasn't nominated for Best Actress in her role as the sultry Ilsa, but for her role in Pour qui sonne le glas (1943), losing to her close friend Jennifer Jones for Le chant de Bernadette (1943). It was also newcomer Jones' 25th birthday, and after winning when Bergman congratulated her, she apologized, saying, "Ingrid, you should have won." Bergman said, "No, Jennifer, your Bernadette was better than my Maria.".
 
-She broke her foot at the beginning of the American run of "The Constant Wife" and played the next five weeks in a wheelchair.
 
-Her daughter, Pia Lindström accepted her Best Leading Actress Emmy for A Woman Called Golda (1982) (TV) posthumously. Bergman died 3 weeks prior to the ceremony, after the ballots were cast.
 
Cary Grant, her great friend, accepted her Anastasia (1956) Oscar at the 29th Annual Academy Awards (1957).
 
-On their last meeting, Alfred Hitchcock was in tears, terrified of his impending death. Suffering from the cancer that would kill her, Bergman told him, "But of course you are going to die sometime, Hitch, we are all going to die." She later recalled that the comment seemed to bring him peace; it was a bittersweet goodbye. Hitchcock died in 1980, followed by Bergman in 1982.
 
Her famous love affair with the war photographer, Robert Capa was the basis for Alfred Hitchcock's Fenêtre sur cour (1954).
 
When Ernest Hemingway told her she would have to cut off her hair for the role of Maria in Pour qui sonne le glas (1943), she shot back, "To get that part, I'd cut my head off!" She would rehearse tirelessly until any hour of the night, begging to repeat a scene long after the director was satisfied.
 
Her luck was as phenomenal as her talent. In New York City, a Swedish couple praised a film of hers to their son, an elevator operator in the apartment building where one of film producer David O. Selznick's young talent scouts lived. Six months later, Ingrid was on her way to Hollywood. "I owe my whole career to that elevator boy", she would say laughingly.
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p11

28/06/2013 04:15 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p11

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc.. p11

    28/06/2013 04:15 par tellurikwaves

 

Trivia
 
Spouse
Lars Schmidt (21 December 1958 - 1 February 1978) (divorced)
Roberto Rossellini(24 May 1950 - 7 November 1957) (divorced) 3 children
Dr. Petter Aron Lindström (10 July 1937 - 1 March 1950) (divorced) 1 child
 
Trade Mark
Tall, naturally-curvaceous frame
Height
5' 9" (1.75 m) 
 
-Performances in dramas where her characters were put through harrowing emotional ringers
 
-Mother of Isabella Rossellini, Isotta Rossellini and Pia Lindström (born 1938). Also, mother of Roberto Ingmar Rosselini (born 1950).
 
-In 1933 she enrolled in the Royal Theatre of Dramatic Art but later changed to films instead.
 
-Married Lars Schmidt in Caxton Hall next to Westminster Abbey, London, England, UK.
 
-Folk singer Woody Guthrie wrote a song in praise of her, titled "Ingrid Bergman," but died before he had a chance to record it. The song can now be heard on Billy Bragg's "Mermaid Avenue" CD.
 
-Ashes scattered at sea off the coast of Sweden.
 
-Chosen by Empire magazine as one of the 100 Sexiest Stars in film history (#30). [1995]
 
-Attempts were made by Hollywood producers to change her name in 1939, with possibilities discussed such as Ingrid Berriman and Ingrid Lindstrom (actually her legal married name). Bergman refused, in part because she felt she had worked too hard to establish herself as an actress in Europe under her real name.
 
-She played the part of Joan of Arc three times in her career: on stage in 1946 (in Maxwell Anderson's 'Joan of Lorraine') and on film in 1948 (Jeanne d'Arc and 1954 (Jeanne au bûcher (1954).
 
-Former mother-in-law of Martin Scorsese when he was Isabella Rosselini's husband
 
-Has a type of rose named after her, called the Ingrid Bergman rose.
 
-Many of her shorter male co-stars, such as Humphrey Bogart and Claude Rains, had to wear lifts to avoid looking small next to this 5' 10" beauty.
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p10)

27/06/2013 16:52 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p10)

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p10)

    27/06/2013 16:52 par tellurikwaves

 

Quotes about Ingrid Bergman:
 
"She has a combination of rare beauty, freshness, vitality and ability that is as uncommon as a century plant in bloom." 
--film critic Wanda Hale 
 
"There are only seven movie stars in the world whose name alone will induce American bankers to lend money for movie productions, and the only woman on the list is Ingrid Bergman." 
--actor Cary Grant 
 
"She had an extraordinary quality of purity and nobility and a definite star personality that is very rare." 
--producer David O. Selznick
 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p9)

27/06/2013 09:16 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p9)

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p9)

    27/06/2013 09:16 par tellurikwaves

Filmographie

1982 A Woman Called Golda" (TV) Golda Meir
1978 "Hoestsonaten" (Sonate d'automne) Charlotte
1976 "A Matter of Time" Countess Sanziani
1974 "Murder on the Orient Express" Greta Ohlsson
1973  "The Hideaways"  Mrs. Frankweiler 
1970   "Walk in the Spring Rain" Libby Meredith 
1969  "Cactus Flower"  Stephanie Dickinson 
1967  "Fugitive in Vienna"     ?
1967 "The Human Voice" (TV)    ?
1967  "Stimulantia"  Mathilde Hartman 
1965  "The Yellow Rolls-Royce"  Gerda Millet
1964  "The Visit"  Karla Zachanassian 
1963 "Hedda Gabler" (TV)  Hedda Gabler 
1961   "Aimez-vous Brahms?" "Goodbye Again"  Paula Tessier 
1961  "Twenty-four Hours in a Woman's Life" (TV)  
1959  "The Turn of the Screw "(TV)  Governess
1958   "The Inn of the Sixth Happiness" Gladys Aylward 
1956   "Anastasia"  Anastasia 
1956  "Elena et les Hommes"  Paris Does Strange Things   Elena Sokorowska 
1955  "La Paura" [aka Angst; Fear]  Irene Wagner 
1954  "Giovanna d'Arco al Rogo"  "Joan of Arc at the Stake"]  Jeanne d'Arc 
1953  "Siamo Donne"  "We, the Women"]   
1953   "Viaggio in Italia"   "Voyage to Italy"]  Katherine Joyce 
1952  "Europa '51" [aka "The Greatest Love"]  Irene Girard 
1949  "Stromboli"  Karin 
1949  "Under Capricorn"  Henrietta Flusky 
1948 "Joan of Arc"  Jeanne d'Arc 
1948  "Arch of Triumph"  Joan Madou 
1946  "Notorious"  Alicia Huberman 
1945  "The Bells of St. Mary's"  Sister Benedict 
1945  "Saratoga Trunk"  Clio Dulaine 
1945  "Spellbound"  Dr. Constance Peterson 
1944  "Gaslight" Paula Alquist 
1943  "For Whom the Bell Tolls"  Maria 
1942  "Casablanca"  Ilsa Lund Laszlo 
1941  "Adam Had Four Sons"  Emilie Gallatin 
1941  "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"  Ivy Peterson 
1941  "Rage in Heaven"  Stella Bergen 
1940  "Juninatten"[aka "June Night"]  Kerstin Nordback 
1939  "Intermezzo" (remake USA)  Anita Hoffman 
1939  Enda Natt  Eva 
1938  "Dollar" Julia Balzar 
1938  "En Kvinnas Ansikte" [aka "A Woman's Face"]  Anna Holm 
1938   "Die Vier Gesellen"  Marianne 
1936  "Intermezzo" (Sweden)  Anita Hoffman 
1936  "Pa Solsidan"  Eva Bergh 
1935  "Branningar"  Karin Ingman 
1935  "Munkbrogreven"  Elsa Edlund 
1935  "Swedenhielms"  Astrid 
1935  "Valborgsmassoafton"  Lena Bergstrog 
1932 "Landskamp" Girl waiting in line 
Aka  Also Known as (Egalement connu comme...sous  le nom de)

 

© DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p8)

27/06/2013 04:29 par tellurikwaves

  • © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p8)

    © DR - Ingrid Bergman / Bio-citations etc..(p8)

    27/06/2013 04:29 par tellurikwaves

 Quotes by Ingrid Bergman:

 
"Happiness is good health and a bad memory." 
 
"A kiss is a lovely trick designed by nature to stop speech when words become superfluous." 
 
"I've never sought success in order to get fame and money; it's the talent and the passion that count in success." 
 
"I have no regrets. I wouldn't have lived my life the way I did if I was going to worry about what people were going to say." 
 
"It is not whether you really cry. It's whether the audience thinks you are crying." 
 
"I have had my different husbands, my families. I am fond of them all and I visit them all. But deep inside me there is the feeling that I belong to show business." New York Times, April 20, 1975.
 
"I've gone from saint to whore and back to saint again, all in one lifetime."
 
The best way to keep young is to keep going in whatever it is that keeps you going. With me that's work, and a lot of it. And when a job is finished, relax and have fun.
 
 
[to daughter Isabella Rossellini, on acting] Keep it simple. Make a blank face and the music and the story will fill it in.
 
Be yourself. The world worships the original.
It is not whether you really cry. It's whether the audience thinks you are crying.
 
 
You must train your intuition - you must trust the small voice inside you which tells you exactly what to say, what to decide.
 
People didn't expect me to have emotions like other women.
 
I've never sought success in order to get fame and money; it's the talent and the passion that count in success.
 
I remember one day sitting at the pool and suddenly the tears were streaming down my cheeks. Why was I so unhappy? I had success. I had security. But it wasn't enough. I was exploding inside.
 
I have no regrets. I wouldn't have lived my life the way I did if I was going to worry about what people were going to say.
 
 
I don't regret a thing I've done. I only regret the things I didn't do.
 
Until 45 I can play a woman in love. After 55 I can play grandmothers. But between those ten years, it is difficult for an actress.
 
I don't worry about it because we are all growing old. If I were the only one I would worry. But we're all in the same boat, and all of my friends are coming with me. We all go toward old age. How many years left we don't know. We just have to accept it.
 
 
I was the shyest human ever invented, but I had a lion inside me that wouldn't shut up.
 
In Paris, when the picture came out [Casablanca (1942)], they weren't too pleased with it. They didn't like the political point of view. The picture was taken off immediately and was never sold to television. A while ago, it was brought in and opened in five theatres in Paris, as a new movie. They had a big gala opening where I appeared and people were absolutely crazy about it.
 
 
Film as dream, film as music. No art passes our conscience in the way film does, and goes directly to our feelings, deep down into the dark rooms of our souls.
 
 
There are advantages to being a star, though - you can always get a table in a full restaurant.
 
Hollywood was a terribly lonely place for me. I had wonderful associations with Humphrey Bogart, Gregory Peck, and all the others while I worked with them, but after they left the studios at night, they retired to their own circle of friends.
 
I always felt guilty. My whole life.
 
I don't think anyone has the right to intrude in your life, but they do. I would like people to separate the actress and the woman.
 
I can do everything with ease on the stage, whereas in real life I feel too big and clumsy. So I didn't choose acting; acting chose me.
 
I have grown up alone. I've taken care of myself. I worked, earned money and was independent at 18.
 
I made so many films which were more important, but the only one people ever want to talk about is that one with [Humphrey Bogart].
 
Having a home, husband, and child ought to be enough for any woman's life. I mean, that's what we are meant for, isn't it? But still I think every day is a lost day. As if only half of me is alive. The other half is pressed down in a bag and suffocated.If you took acting away from me, I'd stop breathing.Acting is the best medicine in the world - if you're not feeling well, it goes away because you are busy thinking about something that isn't yourself. We actors are very fortunate people.
 
 
[Cary Grant] is quite remarkable, you know. I think [Audrey Hepburn] is now too old for him, and in his next picture he will be making love to someone like Jane Fonda.
 
 
No form of art goes beyond ordinary consciousness as film does, straight to our emotions, deep into the twilight of the soul.
 
 
I always wanted to do comedies but nobody discovered this until my old age. They think all Swedes are like [Greta Garbo].
 
 
I am happy I was born Swedish because this means having a tough education -- at least it was in my time. But I couldn't live there,even when I was in my 20s.Sweden is too far from the rest of the world psychologically There you feel confined on an island.
 
 
I work so hard before the camera and on the stage that I have neither the desire nor the energy to act in my private life
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Cancer victims who don't accept their fate, who don't learn to live with it, will only destroy what little time they have left.
 
Time is shortening. But every day that I challenge this cancer and survive is a victory for me.