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Film director Bergman dies at 89 | Film director Bergman dies at 89 |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Legendary film-maker Ingmar Bergman has died aged 89, according to a Swedish news agency. | Legendary film-maker Ingmar Bergman has died aged 89, according to a Swedish news agency. |
One of the key figures in modern cinema, his 60-year career has spanned intense classics like Cries & Whispers, The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries. | One of the key figures in modern cinema, his 60-year career has spanned intense classics like Cries & Whispers, The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries. |
He was nominated for nine Oscars himself, while his films won the best foreign film Oscar three times. | He was nominated for nine Oscars himself, while his films won the best foreign film Oscar three times. |
Bergman died at his home in Faro, Sweden, the Swedish news agency TT said, citing his daughter Eva Bergman. | Bergman died at his home in Faro, Sweden, the Swedish news agency TT said, citing his daughter Eva Bergman. |
The director was married five times, most recently to Ingrid von Rosen. | The director was married five times, most recently to Ingrid von Rosen. |
Bergman (right) worked closely with cinematographer Sven NykvistHe fathered eight children, including one who only found out she was his daughter at the age of 22. | |
Unsurprisingly, his work often explored the tensions between married couples. | Unsurprisingly, his work often explored the tensions between married couples. |
Acting student | Acting student |
Bergman was born in 1918. His father was a Lutheran chaplain to the Swedish royal family and a strict disciplinarian. | Bergman was born in 1918. His father was a Lutheran chaplain to the Swedish royal family and a strict disciplinarian. |
As a child, Bergman used to help a local projectionist with film screenings and he went on to train as an actor and director at the University of Stockholm. | |
He eventually became director of the Helsingborg City Theatre in 1944, the same year that saw his first film script, Frenzy, brought to the big screen by Alf Sjoberg. | He eventually became director of the Helsingborg City Theatre in 1944, the same year that saw his first film script, Frenzy, brought to the big screen by Alf Sjoberg. |
Bergman made his own directorial debut with Crisis in 1946, the first of more than 40 films he directed in his career. | Bergman made his own directorial debut with Crisis in 1946, the first of more than 40 films he directed in his career. |
But it was not until the appearance of two tales of all-consuming love affairs - Summer Interlude in 1951 and Summer with Monika in 1953 - that his cinematic work was celebrated. | But it was not until the appearance of two tales of all-consuming love affairs - Summer Interlude in 1951 and Summer with Monika in 1953 - that his cinematic work was celebrated. |
His reputation was confirmed by the international art-house hit The Seventh Seal in 1957. | |
The movie, currently back in cinemas to celebrate its 50th anniversary, is famous for the often-parodied scene in which one of the characters plays chess with death. | The movie, currently back in cinemas to celebrate its 50th anniversary, is famous for the often-parodied scene in which one of the characters plays chess with death. |
Bergman said he was "terribly scared of death" at the time. | |
Oscar success | |
He won his first Oscar for best foreign film in 1961 with The Virgin Spring, based on a 13th century Swedish ballad about a family taking revenge for their daughter's murder. | |
The following year, he repeated the feat with Through A Glass Darkly, which explores the effect of schizophrenia on both the patient and their family. | |
He remained popular throughout the 1970s, when he made several films in Germany while under self-imposed tax exile from Sweden. | |
On his return, he made possibly his most popular film, and the one with which he announced his retirement, Fanny and Alexander. | |
Told from the perspective of two children who suffer when their mother remarries a clergyman, the film is more warm-hearted and sentimental than Bergman's austere earlier work. | |
The cinematic version, cut down from a five-hour long TV mini-series, earned a third best foreign film Oscar in 1982. | |
'Depressed | |
After retiring from film-making, Bergman continued to work in theatre and television, with his last work, Saraband, shown on Swedish public television in December 2003. | |
When it aired, almost 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. | |
In a 70th birthday tribute in 1988, Woody Allen said Bergman was "probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera". | |
But Bergman confessed in 2004 that he could not bear to watch his own films because they made him depressed. | |
"I become so jittery and ready to cry... and miserable," he said. "I think it's awful," he said in a rare interview on Swedish TV. | |
According to the TT news agency, Bergman died peacefully on Faro Island - or Sheep Island - in the Baltic Sea. The director had settled on the island after filming several movies there. | |
The date of the funeral has not yet been set, but will be attended by a close group of friends and family, it was reported. |