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Un violoniste tombe sous le charme de la professeure de piano de sa fille.Un violoniste tombe sous le charme de la professeure de piano de sa fille.Un violoniste tombe sous le charme de la professeure de piano de sa fille.
Erik 'Bullen' Berglund
- Impresario Charles Möller
- (as Bullen Berglund)
Hasse Ekman
- Åke Brandt
- (as Hans Ekman)
Millan Bolander
- Emma, the Maid
- (non crédité)
George Fant
- Young Man
- (non crédité)
Emil Fjellström
- Truck driver
- (non crédité)
Folke Helleberg
- Young Man
- (non crédité)
Linnéa Hillberg
- Shocked woman
- (non crédité)
Emma Meissner
- Greta
- (non crédité)
Margarete Orth
- Marie
- (non crédité)
Carl Ström
- The Captain
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAfter a single viewing of the film, producer David O. Selznick brought Ingrid Bergman to Hollywood to sign a contract with Selznick International. Bergman and Selznick then remade the film as Envol vers le bonheur (1939), with Leslie Howard.
- Citations
Thomas Stenborg: Miss Hoffman, I expect great things from our work together. What I couldn't accomplish, you will. Remember, for an artist only three things matter. Work...
Anita Hoffman: Work and work.
Thomas Stenborg: Yes, and we'll work. Isn't that so?
- ConnexionsFeatured in Envol vers le bonheur (1939)
- Bandes originalesIntermezzo
(1936)
Music by Heinz Provost
Played during the opening credits
Played on a record
Played on violin by Gösta Ekman
(dubbed by Charles Barkel)
Reprised by Gösta Ekman with Britt Hagman on piano
Reprised again by Gösta Ekman with Ingrid Bergman on piano
Played also on radio and on a zither and as background music
Commentaire à la une
Before becoming one of the most popular stars in Hollywood, young Ingrid Bergman gained acting experience in Swedish movies. Appearing in eleven films in her native Sweden, Bergman was spotted by film producer David O. Selznick in November 1936 "Intermezzo." The independent studio owner was so impressed by Bergman's acting in her first motion picture as a lead, he immediately made her an offer for her to come to Hollywood. She accepted. Her relocation to America to play in English-speaking roles made Bergman the fourth most legendary movie actress in cinematic history, according to the American Film Institute ranking.
Bergman's biographer Charlotte Chandler called her "arguably the most international star in the history of entertainment." Life magazine described her as having "greater versatility than any actress on the American screen. Her roles have demanded an adaptability and sensitiveness of characterization to which few actresses could rise."
Selznick was swayed with her acting in "Intermezzo" by her "natural sweetness." It was quite a complement for the young Swedish actress since her Anita Hoffman, the piano teacher for the daughter of a master violinist, was basically a home wrecker who falls for family man musician Holger Brandt (Gosta Ekman). Bergman was 22 when she played Anita, yet her on-screen talent was years ahead of other actresses her age. Named after Princess Ingrid of Sweden, Bergman had an attentive father who dreamed of his only surviving daughter to be an opera star (his wife died when Ingrid was two). She embraced acting at an early age, whom her father documented freely with his camera. "I was perhaps the most photographed child in Scandinavia," Bergman recalls. She was an orphan at 14 when her father died, but her acting ambitions never wavered. "I knew from the beginning I wanted to be an actress," Ingrid claimed.
Bergman earned a scholarship at the Royal Dramatic Theatre School, the same school Greta Garbo attended. With just one year under her belt in a three-year program, she was hired by a Swedish film studio in 1932 at 17, launching her long acting career. Six credited movies later, Bergman received her first major role as the reluctant mistress to the habitually touring violinist who was happily married to his wife. "Intermezzo" was her third movie under director Gustaf Molander, who was a former scriptwriter for Victor Sjostrom and Mauritz Stiller, Sweden's top silent movie directors. The actress credits Molander for his instructive insights, but the director who co-wrote "Intermezzo," noted "I created Intermezzo for her, but I was not responsible for its success. Ingrid herself made it successful."
Bergman excelled in the Swedish (and one German) films she appeared before accepting Selznick's invitation to America. The only hesitation by the producer was, according to his son Danny, "She didn't speak English, she was too tall, her name sounded too German, and her eyebrows were too thick." To make her feel comfortable, Selznick invited Bergman to stay with him and his wife. Also, he wanted her to be comfortable before the American camera and film crew by placing her in the same role as Anita she played in her Swedish film in the 1939 remake of "Intermezzo" opposite Leslie Howard .
Bergman's biographer Charlotte Chandler called her "arguably the most international star in the history of entertainment." Life magazine described her as having "greater versatility than any actress on the American screen. Her roles have demanded an adaptability and sensitiveness of characterization to which few actresses could rise."
Selznick was swayed with her acting in "Intermezzo" by her "natural sweetness." It was quite a complement for the young Swedish actress since her Anita Hoffman, the piano teacher for the daughter of a master violinist, was basically a home wrecker who falls for family man musician Holger Brandt (Gosta Ekman). Bergman was 22 when she played Anita, yet her on-screen talent was years ahead of other actresses her age. Named after Princess Ingrid of Sweden, Bergman had an attentive father who dreamed of his only surviving daughter to be an opera star (his wife died when Ingrid was two). She embraced acting at an early age, whom her father documented freely with his camera. "I was perhaps the most photographed child in Scandinavia," Bergman recalls. She was an orphan at 14 when her father died, but her acting ambitions never wavered. "I knew from the beginning I wanted to be an actress," Ingrid claimed.
Bergman earned a scholarship at the Royal Dramatic Theatre School, the same school Greta Garbo attended. With just one year under her belt in a three-year program, she was hired by a Swedish film studio in 1932 at 17, launching her long acting career. Six credited movies later, Bergman received her first major role as the reluctant mistress to the habitually touring violinist who was happily married to his wife. "Intermezzo" was her third movie under director Gustaf Molander, who was a former scriptwriter for Victor Sjostrom and Mauritz Stiller, Sweden's top silent movie directors. The actress credits Molander for his instructive insights, but the director who co-wrote "Intermezzo," noted "I created Intermezzo for her, but I was not responsible for its success. Ingrid herself made it successful."
Bergman excelled in the Swedish (and one German) films she appeared before accepting Selznick's invitation to America. The only hesitation by the producer was, according to his son Danny, "She didn't speak English, she was too tall, her name sounded too German, and her eyebrows were too thick." To make her feel comfortable, Selznick invited Bergman to stay with him and his wife. Also, he wanted her to be comfortable before the American camera and film crew by placing her in the same role as Anita she played in her Swedish film in the 1939 remake of "Intermezzo" opposite Leslie Howard .
- springfieldrental
- 1 sept. 2023
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- How long is Intermezzo?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 33 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Intermezzo (1936) officially released in India in English?
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