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Anna Bergman
View on WikipediaAnna Bergman (born 5 May 1948) is a Swedish retired actress. She is the daughter of film and theatre director Ingmar Bergman and choreographer-director Ellen Lundström, sister to Eva, Jan, and Mats Bergman (twin); and half-sister to Daniel Bergman and Linn Ullmann.
Key Information
Bergman mostly appeared as a performer in several British sex comedies during the late 1970s including the title role in Penelope Pulls It Off (1975), Adventures of a Taxi Driver (1976), Intimate Games (1976), Come Play with Me (1977) and What's Up Superdoc! (1978). She also starred as Penny in the 1977 sex spy comedy Agent 69 in the Sign of Scorpio (aka Emmanuele in Denmark) and the 1978 sequel Agent 69 in the Sign of Sagittarius (aka More Danish Blue).
Later she appeared in small roles in more mainstream films including The Wild Geese (1978), Licensed to Love and Kill (1979), Nutcracker (1982), and her father's 1982 film Fanny and Alexander. She also appeared as Swedish au pair Ingrid Svenson in series 2 and 4 of the British situation comedy Mind Your Language.
References
[edit]- ^ News item in The Ledger, 19 August 1981.
Additional sources
[edit]- Simon Sheridan. Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema (3rd Edition). Reynolds & Hearn Books, 2007.
- Simon Sheridan. X-Rated - Adventures of an Exploitation Filmmaker. Reynolds & Hearn Books, 2008.
- Anna Bergman with Gun Årestad. Inte Pappas Flicka (autobiography). Höganäs: Bra Bok, 1988. ISBN 91-7752-201-X.
- Anna Bergman. Crooks (novel). AuthorHouse, 2009. ISBN 978-1-4490-2155-9.
External links
[edit]Anna Bergman
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background
Anna Bergman was born on 5 May 1948 in Stockholm, Sweden.[7] She is the daughter of Ingmar Bergman, the acclaimed Swedish film and theatre director (1918–2007), and Ellen Lundström, a choreographer and director (1919–2007).[8] Ingmar and Ellen married on July 22, 1945, and divorced in 1950.[9] Bergman has three full siblings from her parents' marriage: an older sister, Eva Bergman (born 1945), a film director; an older brother, Jan Bergman (September 7, 1946–March 8, 2000), also a film director; and a twin brother, Mats Bergman (born 1948), an actor and director.[10][11] As part of the prominent Bergman artistic dynasty, Anna shares her heritage with half-siblings from her father's other relationships, including Daniel Bergman (a director, born 1962 to Ingmar and Käbi Laretei) and Linn Ullmann (an author, born 1966 to Ingmar and Liv Ullmann), though her immediate family unit centered on her mother Ellen's children. Ingmar Bergman's towering influence in cinema and theatre extended to guiding the creative pursuits of his offspring.[12]Childhood and education
Anna Bergman was born on 5 May 1948 in Stockholm, Sweden, the daughter of film and theatre director Ingmar Bergman and choreographer Ellen Lundström.[7] She was the youngest of four children from this union, following siblings Eva (born 1945) and Jan (born 1946), and shared her birth with her twin brother, Mats Bergman.[7][13] Raised in Stockholm, Anna and her twin experienced an upbringing steeped in the Bergman family's artistic milieu, surrounded by the influences of their parents' professions in theatre, dance, and film.[14] Ellen Lundström, a former dancer and choreographer, and Ingmar Bergman, whose directing career was already prominent by the late 1940s, fostered a creative household environment that exposed the children to professional artistic endeavors from an early age.[7][14] The family dynamics included interactions with half-siblings from Ingmar Bergman's other relationships, contributing to a complex but culturally rich home life.[13] Later, the Bergmans spent significant time on the remote island of Fårö, where Ingmar established his primary residence and filmmaking studio in the 1960s, offering further immersion in creative processes through family gatherings and on-set observations.[15] Limited details are available regarding Anna Bergman's formal education, though her early years in this environment highlighted the centrality of performing arts within the family.[15]Career
Early acting roles
Anna Bergman, born into a prominent artistic family as the daughter of acclaimed director Ingmar Bergman and choreographer Ellen Lundström, drew early inspiration from the creative environment surrounding her father's renowned theatre and film productions in Sweden.[2] Her professional acting career began in the mid-1970s when she relocated to the United Kingdom, debuting on screen in the title role of the British sex comedy Penelope Pulls It Off (1975), a low-budget film centered on comedic misunderstandings involving a young woman named Penelope. Following this debut, Bergman appeared in several similar British productions, often portraying supporting characters in the sex comedy genre that was popular at the time. Notable among these were her role as Suzy in Intimate Games (1976), and as Helga in Adventures of a Taxi Driver (1976), where she contributed to the film's lighthearted, risqué narrative.[16] She also took on a minor part as a crew girl in the satirical Queen Kong (1976), a gender-reversed parody of the classic King Kong, further establishing her presence in the British film scene during this period. These initial roles highlighted Bergman's transition from familial artistic exposure to independent professional work, primarily in film rather than theatre, with no documented stage appearances in Sweden during her early career.[17]Notable performances
Anna Bergman's breakthrough came with her role as Ingrid Svenson, the bubbly Swedish au pair, in the British sitcom Mind Your Language (1977–1979, 1986), which aired on ITV and became hugely popular with UK audiences for its multicultural humor.[18][19] The series' success elevated her profile in British television, marking her transition from minor roles to a recurring character in a widely viewed program.[18] In film, she appeared as Sonny's girlfriend in the action-adventure The Wild Geese (1978), directed by Andrew V. McLaglen, alongside stars Richard Burton and Roger Moore; though a supporting part, it represented one of her early mainstream Hollywood-style productions.[20] A significant family collaboration occurred in her father Ingmar Bergman's semi-autobiographical epic Fanny and Alexander (1982), where she portrayed Hanna Schwartz, a member of the Ekdahl family theater troupe; the film won Academy Awards for cinematography, art direction, and costume design, and featured her brother Mats Bergman as Ismael Retz.[21] Working under her father's direction alongside siblings highlighted a rare personal-professional intersection in her career.[21] Bergman also featured in the 1970s British sex comedy Agent 69 in the Sign of Scorpio (1977) as Penny, a role that capitalized on her Scandinavian allure during the genre's peak popularity.[22]Directing and other contributions
Bergman received a directing credit on the Italian erotic adventure film Paradiso Blu (1980), also known as Blue Paradise. The project, an imitation of The Blue Lagoon starring Bergman alongside Dan Monahan, was primarily directed by Joe D'Amato, who used her name as a pseudonym for the credit.[23] Beyond her limited directing work, Bergman contributed to theater as a costume designer, collaborating with her father Ingmar Bergman during his later years at Stockholm's Royal Dramatic Theatre. Notable productions include The Ghost Sonata (2000) and Ghosts (2002).[4][5] Following her retirement from on-screen roles in the 1990s, Bergman diversified into literary pursuits, publishing the novel Crooks in 2009. Issued by AuthorHouse, the work is a contemporary literary novel characterized by its dark texture, centering on the intertwined lives of young protagonists Elsa, Jamie, and Patricia, who leave their homes early and grapple with the intricacies of human relationships amid external pressures.[24] This publication marked her exploration of writing as a creative extension beyond performance.[25]Personal life
Marriage and family
Anna Bergman married Peter Brown, a British policeman, forming an international union that coincided with her relocation to the United Kingdom for professional opportunities in modeling and acting.[9][7] The couple had one son, Michael Mats Brown.[26] Following the birth of their son, Bergman founded a nursery school in collaboration with friends, enabling her to manage childcare responsibilities while advancing her career during her active years in the industry.[27] The marriage ended in divorce.[9] After the divorce, Bergman remained based in England, with no further public marriages or significant relationships documented.[7]Later years and retirement
After her final acting role in the 1990 film Avalon, where she portrayed Alice as a young woman, Anna Bergman withdrew from the entertainment industry, marking the end of her on-screen career that had spanned the 1970s and 1980s.[28] Her last significant television appearance was in the 1986 revival of the British sitcom Mind Your Language, reprising her role as Ingrid Svenson. This transition occurred amid personal challenges, including a strained confrontation with her father, Ingmar Bergman, in 1988, which led her to distance herself from family dynamics and public-facing roles, prioritizing emotional independence and privacy.[29] In the decades following her retirement, Bergman adopted a low-profile lifestyle in London, where she had resided since her time as an au pair in the 1960s.[26] She shifted her creative energies toward writing and visual arts, authoring semi-autobiographical books such as Inte pappas flicka (2015), which sold approximately 40,000 copies and explored her complex family relationships, and Jag och min skugga (2022), a reflective account of her life emphasizing themes of hope, loyalty, and personal truth.[29] Additionally, she pursued painting, holding an exhibition of her work in 2017 and continuing to create as of 2022, while maintaining connections with Swedish friends and siblings through occasional visits.[27][30] This period reflected a deliberate choice to focus on introspective pursuits over the demands of acting, influenced by earlier experiences of industry shifts and family priorities.[30] As of November 2025, at age 77, Bergman continues to live privately in London, embracing solitude as a source of fulfillment and describing her independent routine as "wonderful."[30] She has no documented major health incidents in recent years and remains engaged in her artistic endeavors, underscoring her ongoing commitment to creative expression away from the spotlight.[30]Filmography
Film roles
Anna Bergman's film roles spanned British sex comedies, spy spoofs, and occasional dramatic features, often casting her in supporting or lead parts that highlighted her Scandinavian background during the 1970s and early 1980s.[1]| Year | Film Title | Role | Director |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | Penelope Pulls It Off | Penelope Charterley | Peter Curran[31] |
| 1976 | Adventures of a Taxi Driver | Helga | Stanley A. Long[32] |
| 1976 | Intimate Games | Suzy | Tudor Gates[33] |
| 1977 | Agent 69 in the Sign of Scorpio | Penny | Werner Hedman[34] |
| 1977 | Come Play with Me | Nanette | George Harrison Marks[35] |
| 1978 | What's Up Superdoc! | First Maid | Derek Ford[36] |
| 1978 | The Wild Geese | Sonny's Girlfriend | Andrew V. McLaglen[37] |
| 1979 | Licensed to Love and Kill | Hotel Receptionist | Lindsay Shonteff[38] |
| 1980 | Paradiso Blu | Karen | Giuseppe Zaccaria[39] |
| 1982 | Fanny and Alexander (directed by her father, Ingmar Bergman) | Hanna Schwartz | Ingmar Bergman[40] |
| 1982 | Nutcracker | Tashi | Anwar Kawadri[41] |
Television roles
Anna Bergman's television career primarily unfolded in the United Kingdom during the late 1970s and 1980s, where she gained prominence through comedic roles that highlighted her Swedish heritage and charm. Her breakthrough came with the ITV sitcom Mind Your Language, which provided her international exposure as part of an ensemble cast portraying language students in a London classroom.[42] She portrayed Ingrid Svenson, a bubbly Swedish au pair, across multiple seasons of the series, contributing to its popularity for cultural humor and lighthearted misunderstandings. Bergman appeared in 21 episodes from 1978 to 1986, including all eight episodes of series 2 (1978), all eight of series 3 (1979), and all five of the 1986 revival series. The role marked her most substantial television commitment and helped establish her in British audiences.[42] Beyond this flagship series, Bergman took on smaller guest roles in other British productions, often playing Scandinavian characters that played on stereotypes for comedic effect. These appearances were sporadic and typically limited to single episodes or specials, reflecting her selective engagement in television amid a broader acting career. No major Swedish television roles are documented in her credits from this period.[1]| Year | Series | Role | Episodes | Network |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1978–1979, 1986 | Mind Your Language | Ingrid Svenson | 21 | ITV |
| 1983 | Keep It in the Family (Series 5, Episode 1: "Too Many Cooks") | Ingrid | 1 | ITV |
| 1985 | Dutch Girls (TV movie) | 1st Prostitute | 1 | Channel 4 |
| 1987 | The Little and Large Show (Series 7, Episode 5) | Guest performer | 1 | BBC One |
