Ivar Johansson | |
---|---|
Born | 20 November 1889 |
Died | 6 December 1963 (aged 74) |
Occupation(s) | Editor Writer, Director |
Years active | 1924-1955 (film) |
Ivar Johansson (1889–1963) was a Swedish film director, screenwriter and editor.[1] He specalised in particularly in films shot on location in the Swedish countryside and directed Ingrid Bergman in her first dramatic role in Ocean Breakers in 1935.[2]
Selected filmography
- The People of Simlang Valley (1924)
- The Girl in Tails (1926)
- The Tales of Ensign Stål (1926)
- Gustaf Wasa (1928)
- The Realm of the Rye (1929)
- Skipper's Love (1931)
- The Storholmen Brothers (1932)
- Mother-in-Law's Coming (1932)
- Lucky Devils (1932)
- People of Hälsingland (1933)
- Boman's Boy (1933)
- The Song to Her (1934)
- Fired (1934)
- Ocean Breakers (1935)
- The Boys of Number Fifty Seven (1935)
- The Lady Becomes a Maid (1936)
- Mother Gets Married (1937)
- For Better, for Worse (1938)
- Storm Over the Skerries (1938)
- Between Us Barons (1939)
- Oh, What a Boy! (1939)
- The Crazy Family (1940)
- The Train Leaves at Nine (1941)
- We're All Errand Boys (1941)
- If I Could Marry the Minister (1941)
- Take Care of Ulla (1942)
- The Yellow Clinic (1942)
- Captured by a Voice (1943)
- Young Blood (1943)
- Eaglets (1944)
- The Forest Is Our Heritage (1944)
- The Österman Brothers' Virago (1945)
- Motherhood (1945)
- The Wedding on Solö (1946)
- Life in the Finnish Woods (1947)
- The Poetry of Ådalen (1947)
- Carnival Evening (1948)
- Big Lasse of Delsbo (1949)
- The Devil and the Smalander (1949)
- The Realm of the Rye (1950)
- Kalle Karlsson of Jularbo (1952)
- In Lilac Time (1952)
- Ursula, the Girl from the Finnish Forests (1953)
- The Red Horses (1954)
- People of the Finnish Forests (1955)
References
Bibliography
- Nelmes, Jill & Selbo, Jule. Women Screenwriters: An International Guide. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
- Paietta, Ann C.. Saints, Clergy and Other Religious Figures on Film and Television, 1895–2003. McFarland, 2005.
- Qvist, Per Olov & von Bagh, Peter. Guide to the Cinema of Sweden and Finland. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000.
External links
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