Sture Lagerwall (13 December 1908 – 1 November 1964) was a Swedish actor and film director. He appeared in more than 70 films between 1931 and 1963. He was born in Stockholm, and died in Limhamn, Sweden, in 1964.
Sture Lagerwall | |
---|---|
Born | Stockholm, Sweden | 13 December 1908
Died | 1 November 1964 Limhamn, Sweden | (aged 55)
Occupation(s) | Actor, film director |
Years active | 1931–1963 |
Spouses | Gunvor Maria Elisabet Linderoth
(1932–1939)Anne-Marie Werner (m. 1957) |
Selected filmography
edit- Say It with Music (1929)
- The False Millionaire (1931)
- The Red Day (1931)
- Mother-in-Law's Coming (1932)
- Pojkarna på Storholmen (1932)
- Marriageable Daughters (1933)
- Fired (1934)
- The Women Around Larsson (1934)
- The People of Småland (1935)
- Walpurgis Night (1935)
- Adventure (1936)
- Witches' Night (1937)
- Comrades in Uniform (1938)
- Career (1938)
- Life Begins Today (1939)
- Emilie Högquist (1939)
- The Two of Us (1939)[1]
- Blossom Time (1940)
- Her Melody (1940)
- The Three of Us (1940)
- Lasse-Maja (1941)
- Adventurer (1942)
- Kungsgatan (1943)
- Sonja (1943)
- En dag skall gry (1944)
- The Emperor of Portugallia (1944)
- The Journey Away (1945)
- His Majesty Must Wait (1945)
- Johansson and Vestman (1946)
- Onsdagsväninnan (1946) - acted and directed)
- Love Goes Up and Down (1946)
- How to Love (1947)
- I Love You Karlsson (1947)
- The Night Watchman's Wife (1947)
- Banketten (1948)
- Loffe as a Millionaire (1948)
- Sin (1948)
- The Saucepan Journey (1950)
- The White Cat (1951)
- The Nuthouse (1951)
- Kvinnan bakom allt (1951)
- Hidden in the Fog (1953)
- The Unicorn (1955)
- The Halo Is Slipping (1957)
- The Venetian (1958)
- Summer and Sinners (1960)
- The Devil's Eye (1960)
References
edit- ^ "At the 48th Street Theatre". The New York Times. 2 December 1939. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
From the moment she appears as the gay and youthful wife of a rising young architect (Sture Lagerwall) in Vi två (We Two), a Terrafilm production directed by S. Bauman, until the final touchingly sentimental scene in the maternity hospital, Fröken Hasso is the cynosure of the spectators' sympathetic attention.
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Sture Lagerwall.