Bergman: from tormented childhood to film icon
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Considered by some to be the greatest film-maker ever, Ingmar Bergman exorcised a traumatic childhood through cinematic masterpieces that explored sexual anxiety, loneliness and the search for meaning in life.
Bergman died on Monday. He was 89.
In a career spanning half a century, in which he produced more than 50 films and 125 theatre productions, Bergman became Scandinavia's most acclaimed cultural personality.
Films such as "Wild Strawberries", "Scenes From a Marriage", and his great classic, "Fanny and Alexander", elevated him to be one of the masters of cinema though it brought Sweden, his country, a reputation for melancholy.
His private life often thrust him into the limelight. He was married five times to beautiful and talented women and had many liaisons with his leading actresses.
He influenced scores of film-makers, including Woody Allen, who idolised Bergman and paid homage to the Swedish director's classic "The Seventh Seal" with his early comedy "Love and Death".
"Above all there's Ingmar Bergman, who is probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera," said American Allen in a birthday greeting for Bergman when he turned 70.
Ernst Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala on July 14, 1918. His father, a Lutheran minister who became chaplain to the Swedish King, caned and humiliated the sickly boy.
"It was a life-and-death struggle: either the parents were broken or the child was broken," Bergman later recalled. Continued...






