Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress

<p>Transnational issues in cinema cover a wide spectrum, ranging from the regional to the global. Besides a host of multicultural concerns, e.g. so-called “accented” cinemas there are the ever more diversified production-, distribution- and consumption-cultures to consider. Current examples ab...

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Main Author: Maaret Koskinen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2016-07-01
Series:Journal of Transnational American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/09h5b6m1
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spelling doaj-f94fa901a66e40759219b39997f30eba2020-12-15T08:16:47ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaJournal of Transnational American Studies1940-07642016-07-0171ark:13030/qt09h5b6m1Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian ActressMaaret Koskinen0Stockholm University<p>Transnational issues in cinema cover a wide spectrum, ranging from the regional to the global. Besides a host of multicultural concerns, e.g. so-called “accented” cinemas there are the ever more diversified production-, distribution- and consumption-cultures to consider. Current examples abound­—for example, when David Fincher took the unusual decision to shoot, at an inordinate cost, <em>The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo</em> in Stockholm, and with international James Bond star Daniel Craig in the lead as Stieg Larsson’s literary hero Mikael Blomkvist.</p> <p>But transnationality in cinema is old news. For instance, ever since directors of Swedish silent cinema and actors like Greta Garbo and Ingrid Bergman, Nordic and/or Swedish stars have made cross-Atlantic journeys. One of the most prominent, yet least noticed in a transnational context, is Liv Ullmann (b 1939). Already well established on stage and film in Norway, it was her acting in films by Ingmar Bergman that launched her international career. She enjoyed a phenomenal popularity, particularly in the US where she won New York Film Critics’ Award for Best Actress twice, for <em>Scenes from a Marriage</em> in 1974 and <em>Face to Face</em> in 1976, while also starring on Broadway, in <em>Anna Christie</em> in 1977. In a transnational context, it is also of interest that her activities range well beyond film into other fields, as internationally bestselling author (e.g. <em>Changing</em>, 1977), UN-ambassador, and film and stage director with an international outreach.</p> <p>But what makes Ullmann a particularly intriguing case is that she can be regarded as an auteur-star, whose function in many ways parallels the function of stars in American mainstream film. For if the underlying commercial reasons for why current American film is more than ever filled with international actors is that Hollywood is adjusting itself to an increasingly globalized film industry, in which most of the revenues do not come from the US any more, Ullmann in her time very much served a similar function for the auteur-fueled European film culture of the day. There are simply good reasons to assume that art house auteurs such as Bergman were no less commercial than their commercial counterparts, e.g. in being supported by the international film trade. My aim, then, is to show how a “high-brow” star may serve as an index to the contemporary transnational media scape, and the degree to which she in this case also conflated notions abroad of the “Swedish” with the “Nordic”—what may called an early version of Nordic noir, albeit with an existential rather than crime novel twist.</p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/09h5b6m1transnationalamerican studiesswedenliv ullmann
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maaret Koskinen
spellingShingle Maaret Koskinen
Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
Journal of Transnational American Studies
transnational
american studies
sweden
liv ullmann
author_facet Maaret Koskinen
author_sort Maaret Koskinen
title Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
title_short Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
title_full Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
title_fullStr Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
title_full_unstemmed Reception, Circulation, Desire: Liv Ullmann and the Transnational Journeys of a Scandinavian Actress
title_sort reception, circulation, desire: liv ullmann and the transnational journeys of a scandinavian actress
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series Journal of Transnational American Studies
issn 1940-0764
publishDate 2016-07-01
description <p>Transnational issues in cinema cover a wide spectrum, ranging from the regional to the global. Besides a host of multicultural concerns, e.g. so-called “accented” cinemas there are the ever more diversified production-, distribution- and consumption-cultures to consider. Current examples abound­—for example, when David Fincher took the unusual decision to shoot, at an inordinate cost, <em>The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo</em> in Stockholm, and with international James Bond star Daniel Craig in the lead as Stieg Larsson’s literary hero Mikael Blomkvist.</p> <p>But transnationality in cinema is old news. For instance, ever since directors of Swedish silent cinema and actors like Greta Garbo and Ingrid Bergman, Nordic and/or Swedish stars have made cross-Atlantic journeys. One of the most prominent, yet least noticed in a transnational context, is Liv Ullmann (b 1939). Already well established on stage and film in Norway, it was her acting in films by Ingmar Bergman that launched her international career. She enjoyed a phenomenal popularity, particularly in the US where she won New York Film Critics’ Award for Best Actress twice, for <em>Scenes from a Marriage</em> in 1974 and <em>Face to Face</em> in 1976, while also starring on Broadway, in <em>Anna Christie</em> in 1977. In a transnational context, it is also of interest that her activities range well beyond film into other fields, as internationally bestselling author (e.g. <em>Changing</em>, 1977), UN-ambassador, and film and stage director with an international outreach.</p> <p>But what makes Ullmann a particularly intriguing case is that she can be regarded as an auteur-star, whose function in many ways parallels the function of stars in American mainstream film. For if the underlying commercial reasons for why current American film is more than ever filled with international actors is that Hollywood is adjusting itself to an increasingly globalized film industry, in which most of the revenues do not come from the US any more, Ullmann in her time very much served a similar function for the auteur-fueled European film culture of the day. There are simply good reasons to assume that art house auteurs such as Bergman were no less commercial than their commercial counterparts, e.g. in being supported by the international film trade. My aim, then, is to show how a “high-brow” star may serve as an index to the contemporary transnational media scape, and the degree to which she in this case also conflated notions abroad of the “Swedish” with the “Nordic”—what may called an early version of Nordic noir, albeit with an existential rather than crime novel twist.</p>
topic transnational
american studies
sweden
liv ullmann
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/09h5b6m1
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