Inga Åberg

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Inga Åberg
Born Inga Åberg
1773
Sweden
Died 1837 (aged c.64 )

Inga Elisabeth Åberg (1773–1837) was a Swedish actor and singer, one of the most popular and well known actors of her time in Sweden, active at both the Royal Dramatic Theater and the Royal Swedish Opera between 1787 and 1810.

[edit] Biography

Daughter of a footman at the royal court, she and her younger brother Gustav was enrolled as students at the theatre of Bollhuset in 1781 as children; just like many other Swedish actors of her generation, such as Maria Franck and Lars Hjortsberg, she trained as an actor in the troupe of the French Theatre in Bollhuset under Monvel, and performed as a student in the French troupe until 1787.

She debuted at the Opera at the age of fourteen, and after her performance in the play "Gustav Adolf and Ebba Brahe" the following year, she was admired by the theatrically interested king as having great promise. Her father Jonas Åberg is thought to have been the son of Beata Sabina Straas, the first professional native actress in Sweden to perform on a public stage in 1737; Straas, at the time of her marriage to Anders Åberg, had been a chambermaid at the royal court before she joined the stage, and after a short career returned to the court with her husband, where they were both to remain employed on the royal staff to their death.

She performed a variety of parts and was famed for her grace, her voice and her "seductive pleasantness"; many critics also mentions her "livelyness and finess". Her beauty attracted a lot of attention, but was also considered to have a negative effect on her career; it was estimated that, although she did have great talent, she neglected to develop it because she had been told that her beauty was enough, and that it was not necessary to develop her talent, and her talent therefore remained undeveloped and "raw"; a contemporary judgement of her talent was that she "would have been a great singer and an excellent actor, if her unusual beauty had not been an obstacle for her education as an artist and she had been led to see this as a source for income, richer but in the long term not more secure than Art". She was used much as an ornament on stage, and was later made out to be a bad example for aspiring female actors. She was widely regarded as a courtesan, which is said to have been the reason why her younger brother, the popular actor Gustav Åbergsson, who were himself used mostly in lover-parts because of his good looks, changed his last name from Åberg to Åbergsson to avoid being connected to "his notorious sister's name".

Nevertheless, she had a successful career, was recommended for "fully taking on the character of the person she plays", and was one of the few actors of her generation that was not considered to be too old by the harsh critic Livijin at the end of the first decade of the 19th century. In the capacity of a singer, she was later given the recognition of being the only native singer in her generation of any note betwen Elisabeth Olin and Jeanette Wässelius. She and Fredrique Löwen were among the first named Swedish actresses to play breeches roles when they had the two leading male parts in The Two Valets in 1794. She made a success in Tanddoktorn (The Dentist) with Lars Hjortsberg in 1800, and played the leading part in Kalifen i Bagdad (The Caliph in Bagdad) with her brother Gustav Åbergsson and Jeanette Wässelius in 1806. In 1796, she played opposite famous actors such as Christoffer Christian Karsten, Caroline Halle-Müller, Louis Deland and Carl Stenborg in the play Karavanen, which was held to celebrate that the young king had been declared of legal majority, and in 1810, she launched the show Markis Tulipano in her recettperformance at the Opera. Among her other parts were "a spirit" in Armide and Yngve in Frigga (season 1786-1787), Carl in Folke Birgersson till Ringstad (1792-1793), Carl Sjöcrona in Det farliga förtroendet (1793-1794), Gustafva in De gamla friarna (1795-17969, Agarenne in Panurge på lanterneön (1799-1800), Madame de Brillon in Herr des Chalumeaux (1807-1808) and Lisetta in Griselda (1809-1810).

A well-known incident in her life was when the millionaire Hall from Gothenburg, one of the richest men in Sweden, placed his young teenage son Johan under her care; he found his son out of control and, for some reason, he thought Inga Åberg capable of disciplining him and making him understand the ways of the world and virtuous customs. Inga Åberg accepted the offer; she gave him large bills to pay during the time when his son was in her care, which Hall, far from opposing, instead considered as proof of the high quality care she gave his son. Exactly what Inga taught this teenager is not so much spoken of, only that "he did not learn delicacy".

She resigned from the Royal Dramatic Theater and the Royal Swedish Opera in 1810, and then toured both Sweden and Finland in travelling theatre companies; she was a part of J.A. Lindqvists troup in 1816–1817, a troup that counted also her daughter Vendla and Henriette Widerberg as members, and where she performed male roles in Lilla Matrosen (Little Sailor) and Susanna in Figaro, acted as a tragedienne and always showed "a fresh and cheerful temper". In 1825, she played the part of Elizabeth Tudor in Mary Stuart in the company of K.G. Bonuvier's theater in Åbo in Finland against Finland's then prima donna Maria Silfvan.

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