Edith Carlmar
Edith Carlmar | |
---|---|
Born |
Edith Mary Johanne Mathiesen 15 November 1911 Christiania, Norway |
Died |
17 May 2003 91) Oslo, Norway | (aged
Nationality | Norwegian |
Occupation | Actress and film director |
Edith Carlmar (Edith Mary Johanne Mathiesen) (15 November 1911 – 17 May 2003) was an actress and Norway's first female film director. She is known for films such as Fjols til fjells (1957), Aldri annet enn bråk (1954), and Ung flukt (1959). Her 1949 film, Døden er et kjærtegn (Death is a Caress), is considered to be Norway's first film noir. The last film she directed, Ung Flukt, introduced Liv Ullmann, Norway's most famous actor internationally, to the silver screen.[1]
Carlmar came from a poor family in the working class districts of East Oslo. However, she did manage to take dancing classes and made her debut on stage at the age of 15. In the theater she met Otto Carlmar whom she married three years later. From 1936 she worked as an actress in various theatres. Here she met the film director Tancred Ibsen who introduced her to the world of cinema.
In 1949 she and her husband started Carlmar Film A/S, and began writing scripts, directing and producing films. They made ten feature films over a ten-year period. After a decade of film-making Carlmar retired as a director. In the last part of her life she accepted only minor acting roles in plays and movies.
Filmography
Actor
- Den hemmelighetsfulle leiligheten (1948)
- Lina's Wedding (1973)
Director
- Ung flukt (1959)
- Lån meg din kone (1958)
- Fjols til fjells (1957)
- Slalåm under himmelen (1957)
- På solsiden (1956)
- Bedre enn sitt rykte (1955)
- Aldri annet enn bråk (1954)
- Ung frue forsvunnet (1953)
- Skadeskutt (1951)
- Døden er et kjærtegn (1949)
Director shorts
- Bak kulissene
- Kirker i Oslo
- Langåra - et sommerparadis on YouTube, published by the City Archive of Oslo * Oslo bymuseum
- Vann og kloakk on YouTube, published by the City Archive of Oslo
References
- ↑ "Edith Carlmar is dead 91 years.". Obituary. Oslo: Norsk filminstitutt. 2003-05-19. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2011.