FilmScenes from a Marriage < Sources of inspiration

Scenes from a Marriage

Sources of inspiration

 

AB Svensk Filmindustri

Scenes from a Marriage originates from the image of a successful and happily married couple sitting on a green velvet sofa being photographed for a magazine feature. This image provides the opening scene of the series. Bergman claimed to have met those people before. He had been friends with a Danish couple who were always pleasant, bountiful, and who never got drunk, just charmingly tipsy. They always said the right things, and even when they had the flu they still managed to be chirpy.

"I remember they irritated me so intensely, that I once tried to seduce the wife (this is over twenty years ago). I failed, of course, and that made me even more annoyed. I did it in pure desperation just to bloody well show them. Suddenly I pictured them sitting in my old sofa and being interviewed. And I thought: 'now I'll get them…"

 

AB Svensk Filmindustri

Many people regarded Scenes from a Marriage as a new departure in Bergman's work. No God, no Bergmanesque introspection, just a television series about "people like you and me", as one journalist put it. Bergman concurred, recognising that it was the first time – "to his surprise" – that he had written something about people outside his own life: "I've used my own and other people's experiences. But I haven't projected myself and my own life into this." Yet when he was asked why it was that Scenes from a Marriage was so different from the Bergman films that people were used to, he replied: "Well, you know, you're getting the same old bastard really. These are just some other things that have been there all the time, but have only just come up to the surface." Bergman's interviewer continued along the same lines, light-heartedly questioning the non-appearance of God, neither in conversation, nor even disguised as a waiter or a gardener. "You're absolutely right that God doesn't feature," he replied. "But I'm far from a non-believer. I'm a believer in the truest sense. I believe in the sanctity of man."

As cited above, Bergman himself did not feel any close affinity with Johan and Marianne, even though he did admit they shared some characteristics in common: "such as our middle class background, with its double-edged impact on character development (that sounded good, didn't it?). Both of them are academics, something which shouldn't be a burden to them, and they're well-off to the extent that they live in a house and each have their own cars and jobs. They're also used to putting their thoughts into words, which doesn't mean that they say the right things or that they are more honest or sagacious than other people in general."

 

AB Svensk Filmindustri

In the first episode Johan and Marianne have invited their friends Peter (Jan Malmsjö) and Katarina (Bibi Andersson) round for dinner. In Images: My Life in Film Bergman says of this couple: "Peter och Katarina cannot live with each other or apart. They commit cruel acts of sabotage against each other, actions that only two individuals this close could invent. Their time together is a sophisticated and destructive dance of death." The words "Dance of Death" are particularly apt, since the shadow of August Strindberg can definitely be discerned in this picture of marriage as hell on earth. The couple have also been compared to George and Martha in Edward Albee's classic Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which Bergman had staged at the Royal Dramatic Theatre Dramaten in 1963.

Bergman has said that Scenes from a Marriage took "took a whole adult life to live". At least one part of that life has a direct parallel in the series. In his autobiography The Magic Lantern Bergman recounts how he ran away from his wife to Paris with Gun Hagberg. He told his wife "everything", he says, adding that: "Anyone interested can follow the events in the third part of Scenes from a Marriage. The only difference is the depiction of Paula, the lover. Gun was more like her opposite."

 

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