Victor Seastrom


Director
Victor Seastrom

About

Also Known As
Viktor David Sjostrom, Victor Sjöström
Birth Place
Sweden
Born
September 20, 1879
Died
January 03, 1960

Biography

One of the most influential forces in the development of the Swedish cinema, Sjostrom began his career as a professional actor in 1896, as a member of Ernst Ahlbom's travelling theater company. He worked as both an actor and director for a number of Swedish companies during the next 16 years. In 1911 he formed his own company along with Einar Froberg, and, in 1913, was offered a film con...

Family & Companions

Sascha Stjagoff
Wife
Actor. First wife.
Lili Beck
Wife
Actor. Second wife.

Biography

One of the most influential forces in the development of the Swedish cinema, Sjostrom began his career as a professional actor in 1896, as a member of Ernst Ahlbom's travelling theater company. He worked as both an actor and director for a number of Swedish companies during the next 16 years. In 1911 he formed his own company along with Einar Froberg, and, in 1913, was offered a film contract by Svenksa Bio.

Throughout his career, reviewers of Sjostrom's performances seldom failed to mention his distinctive, monumental face, as rich and alive as any landscape. Likewise, Sjostrom's films as a director, which he often wrote and starred in, gained their greatest acclaim for his expressive use of landscape and natural scenery. Sjostrom's first great success came during the years 1917-1921, which saw his four film adaptations of novels by Swedish Nobel laureate Selma Lagerlof (three of which he also starred in), including two films that many consider as among his directorial masterpieces, "The Outlaw and His Wife" (1918) and "Thy Soul Shall Bear Witness/The Phantom Chariot" (1920).

Although Sjostrom's Swedish films were generally considered too downbeat for American audiences (a trade magazine warned theater owners that they would have a better time attending their own funerals than a screening of "Thy Soul Shall Bear Witness"), the enthusiastic reviews they received for artistic excellence and sheer pictorial power made Sjostrom, along with the likes of Ernst Lubitsch, Erich von Stroheim, and Sjostrom's colleague Mauritz Stiller, a prime candidate for American import.

In 1923, Svensk Filmindustri sent Sjostrom on a study trip to America, retaining the Scandinavian distribution rights to the films he would direct for Samuel Goldwyn. During his seven-year residence in Hollywood (1923-1930), Seastrom, as he was billed in the USA, directed top stars of the day such as Lillian Gish ("The Scarlet Letter" 1926, "The Wind" 1927), Greta Garbo ("The Divine Woman" 1927), Lon Chaney and Edward G. Robinson. In a 1924 interview, Charlie Chaplin called him "the greatest director in the world."

Sjostrom made his reputation as a master of silent films by virtue of his expressive imagery and minimal use of titles. With the advent of talkies, however, his style of filmmaking was quickly outdated. He returned to Sweden in 1930 and resumed his career on the stage, although he continued to appear frequently in the films of other directors, concluding with his most memorable role, at the age of 78, as Professor Isak Berg in Ingmar Bergman's "Wild Strawberries" (1957).

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Under the Red Robe (1937)
Director
A Lady to Love (1930)
Director
Die Sehnsucht Jeder Frau (1930)
Regie [Dir]
The Masks of the Devil (1928)
Director
The Wind (1928)
Director
The Divine Woman (1928)
Director
The Scarlet Letter (1927)
Director
The Tower of Lies (1925)
Director
Confessions of a Queen (1925)
Director
Name the Man (1924)
Director
He Who Gets Slapped (1924)
Director
The Phantom Carriage (1921)
Director
Klostret i Sendomir (1920)
Director
Masterman (1920)
Director
Karin Ingmarsdotter (1919)
Director
You and I (1918)
Director
THE OUTLAW AND HIS WIFE (1917)
Director
A Man There Was (1917)
Director
Girl from Stormy Croft (1917)
Director
Dodskyssen (1916)
Director
The Sea Vultures (1916)
Director
Judaspengar (1915)
Director
Bra flicka reder sig sjalv (1914)
Director
Hjartan som motas (1914)
Director
Domen icke (1914)
Director
Blodets rost (1913)
Director
Aktenskapsbyr?n (1913)
Director
Half Breed (1913)
Director
Miraklet (1913)
Director
Livets konflikter (1913)
Director
Ingeborg Holm (1913)
Director
A Ruined Life (1912)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Wild Strawberries (1957)
To Joy (1950)
Sonderby--Orchestra Conductor
The Phantom Carriage (1921)
Karin Ingmarsdotter (1919)
Old Ingmar
A Man There Was (1917)
Thomas Graals Basta Film (1917)
Thomas Graal
THE OUTLAW AND HIS WIFE (1917)

Writer (Feature Film)

He Who Gets Slapped (1924)
Adaptation
The Phantom Carriage (1921)
Writer
Karin Ingmarsdotter (1919)
Screenwriter
THE OUTLAW AND HIS WIFE (1917)
Screenwriter

Producer (Feature Film)

Torment (1944)
Producer
A Lady to Love (1930)
Producer
Die Sehnsucht Jeder Frau (1930)
Producer

Production Companies (Feature Film)

Die Sehnsucht Jeder Frau (1930)
Company

Cast (Short)

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 1925 Studio Tour (1925)
Himself

Life Events

1911

Made unsuccessful attempt at combining movies with live shows

1912

Film acting debut in "The Black Masks"

1913

Debut as feature film director with "Ingeborg Holm"

1923

Moved to Hollywood

1930

Directed last Hollywood feature and first sound film, "A Lady to Love"

1937

Directed last feature film in Britain, "Under the Red Robe"

1957

Last film acting appearance in "Wild Strawberries"

Videos

Movie Clip

Phantom Carriage, The (1922) -- (Movie Clip) I Can't Believe It's You In a Stockholm cemetery, near midnight on New Year’s Eve, David (director and screenwriter Victor Sjostrom) is accidentally killed by fellow drunks trying to get him to attend to family business, invoking the legend, and deceased Georges (Tore Svennberg) appears, in The Phantom Carriage, 1922.
Phantom Carriage, The (1922) -- (Movie Clip) A Harsher Punishment Awaits Deep in flashbacks depicting his own downfall, jailed Swedish family man David (director and screenwriter Victor Sjostrom) learns that his younger brother (Einar Axelsson) is also a victim of his misdeeds, in the horror-fantasy based on the novel by Selma Lagerlof, The Phantom Carriage, 1922.
Phantom Carriage, The (1922) -- (Movie Clip) Whoever Dies On This Eve Director and screenwriter Victor Sjostrom plays ne’er-do-well David, in a flashback recalling his dissolute mentor Georges (Tore Svennberg), who introduces the story of the deathly vehicle, ending the first segment of social commentary-horror hybrid, The Phantom Carriage, 1922.
Wild Strawberries (1957) -- (Movie Clip) My Name Is Isak Borg First jarring then absorbing in its candor, director Ingmar Bergman’s opening from his original screenplay, narrated by Victor Sjostrom as Professor Borg, leading to the credits, from the internationally celebrated Wild Strawberries, 1957.
Wild Strawberries (1957) -- (Movie Clip) A Very Unpleasant Dream Immediately after the credits, Victor Sjostrom as aging Professor Borg having introduced himself by narration in the opening, then the first part of the first dream sequence, from writer-director Ingmar Bergman’s Wild Strawberries, 1957.
Wild Strawberries (1957) -- (Movie Clip) Even Clearer Images Of Memory Having spontaneously stopped at the his family’s old country vacation home, dismissing his daughter-in-law (Ingrid Thulin), Professor Isak Borg recalls his youth, his cousin Sara (Bibi Andersson) and eldest brother (Per Sjostrand), in Ingmar Bergman’s Wild Strawberries, 1957.
Wild Strawberries (1957) -- (Movie Clip) A Promise Is A Promise On vacant Swedish highways, having decided to drive rather than fly to a faraway ceremony honoring him, Victor Sjostrom as Professor Borg converses with his outwardly civil daughter-in-law (Ingrid Thulin), tensions revealed, in Ingmar Bergman’s Wild Strawberries, 1957.
Wind, The (1928) -- (Movie Clip) Lillian Gish Introduction Lillian Gish turned 90 in 1983, the year she made this introduction to Victor Seastrom's celebrated 1928 film The Wind, her version of her own agency never in dispute.
Wind, The (1928) -- (Movie Clip) Ghost Horse Southern Letty (Lillian Gish) on her trip west to visit cousin Cora (Dorothy Cumming), getting a lift from cowboy Lige (Lars Hanson), with fantasy, then getting on too well with Cora's husband Bev (Edward Earle), early in Victor Seastrom's The Wind, 1928.
Wind, The (1928) -- (Movie Clip) Awful Forsaken Place Out of town Letty (Lillian Gish) dressed up for the dance, cowboys Sourdough (William Orlamond) and Lige (Lars Hanson) both making unlikely bids for her hand, the more viable Roddy (Montagu Love) getting closer, when a storm blows up, in Victor Seastrom's The Wind, 1928.
Wind, The (1928) -- (Movie Clip) Puny But Irresistible Director Victor Sjostrom’s opening, from the novel by Dorothy Scarborough, Frances Marion’s script and, in between, a story outline by star Lillian Gish, in which she, as “Letty,” begins a journey west, predatory Montagu Love as “Roddy” imposing himself, in MGM’s The Wind, 1928.
Wind, The (1928) -- (Movie Clip) You've Been My Wife A Whole Hour Desperate Southerner Letty (MGM star Lillian Gish, who wrote the story outline herself), having alienated the Western relatives she was visiting, has just married rough-hewn cowboy Lige (Lars Hanson) and appears unready for the ramifications, in The Wind, 1928, directed by Victor Sjostrom.

Family

Olef Sjostrom
Father
Lumber manufacturer, farmer.
Elisabeth Hartman
Mother
Actor.

Companions

Sascha Stjagoff
Wife
Actor. First wife.
Lili Beck
Wife
Actor. Second wife.

Bibliography