Theatre, 1943

Niels Ebbesen

Back in Stockholm after a summer of outdoor theatre, Bergman strikes out with his biggest production yet.

'A successful masterpiece.'
Per Gunnar Pettersson, Aftonbladet

About the production

In 1942, during the German occupation of Denmark in the Second World War, a play about Ebbesen's rebellion was penned by the dramatist Kaj Munk. The Nazis confiscated the play on its day of publication and executed the playwright in April 1944. The German Legation in Stockholm tried to stop the studio production of the play, whilst no other Swedish stage would perform Munk's play at the time of Bergman's production. After Munk's murder, Dramatikerstudion was asked by the Danish Embassy to present a re-run of Niels Ebbesen.

The political timeliness of the Munk production both as an anti-Nazi statement and as a critical challenge of the current Royal Dramatic Theatre policy shared review space with performance analyses. [...…] But Bergman himself was so absorbed in directorial matters that he was hardly aware of any possible political repercussions of his production of Niels Ebbesen. 'I myself didn't understand that there was any risk in it.'

Sources

  • The Ingmar Bergman Archives.

Collaborators

  • Anders Ek, Niels Ebbesen
  • Dagny Lind, Gertrud
  • Bibi Lindqvist, Ruth
  • Bengt Dalunde, Ebbe
  • Karl-Erik Flens, Ove Haase
  • Georg Årlin, Ove Haase
  • Curt Edgard, Niels Bugge
  • Sture Ericson, Father Lorents
  • Martin Ericsson, Father Lorents
  • Toivo Pawlo, Count Gerhard
  • Alf Kjellin, Vitinghofen
  • Palle Granditsky, von Döbelin
  • Elis Hahne
  • Sif Ruud, Peasant
  • Birger Malmsten, Young peasant
  • Kaj Munk, Author
  • Else Fisher, Choreography
  • Ingmar Bergman, Director
  • Gunnar Lindblad, Designer