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Kay Pollak
Kay Pollak
from Wikipedia

Kay Gunnar Leopold Pollak (born 21 May 1938) is a Swedish film director.

Key Information

Career

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After a long break from film-making, he returned in 2004 with As It Is in Heaven (Så som i himmelen), a major box office success in Sweden. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It was also nominated for no less than eight Swedish Guldbagge Awards, including Best Direction and Best Film, but received none.

TV and filmography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Kay Pollak is a Swedish film director known for his heartfelt dramas that explore themes of music, redemption, and personal transformation, most prominently the Academy Award-nominated As It Is in Heaven (2004). Born on May 21, 1938, in Gothenburg, Sweden, Pollak initially built a career in academia, earning a licentiate degree in mathematical statistics and working as a university teacher before shifting to filmmaking. He began directing in television during the early 1970s and made his feature debut with Elvis! Elvis! (1976). His early notable works include Children's Island (1980), which earned him the Guldbagge Award for Best Director and a Golden Bear nomination at the Berlin International Film Festival, and Love Me (1986), which also received a Berlin nomination. After Love Me, Pollak stepped away from feature filmmaking for 18 years to concentrate on writing books and lecturing on personal development. He returned triumphantly in 2004 with As It Is in Heaven, a box office hit in Sweden that was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards and received nominations at the European Film Awards. He later directed Heaven on Earth (2015), continuing his focus on stories of human connection and emotional renewal.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Kay Gunnar Leopold Pollak was born on 21 May 1938 in Gamlestaden, Gothenburg, Västra Götalands län, Sweden. Gamlestaden is a district in the city of Gothenburg, where Pollak spent his early years.

Academic career in mathematics

Kay Pollak earned a licentiate degree (fil. lic.) in mathematical statistics from Umeå University. This qualification marked the culmination of his formal academic training in the field. He subsequently worked as a university lecturer in mathematical statistics. His academic role focused on the subject prior to his shift toward media and television production in the 1970s, which eventually led to his filmmaking career.

Filmmaking career

Early work in television and first features (1971–1986)

Kay Pollak began his filmmaking career in television during the early 1970s. He directed and wrote the TV movie Flagga för trygghet in 1971. He followed this with the TV series Den hemliga verkligheten (1972–1973), for which he directed seven episodes and also contributed as writer. Pollak made his feature film debut with Elvis! Elvis! in 1976, a film he both directed and wrote, adapted from a book by Maria Gripe. It was selected for competition at the 10th Moscow International Film Festival. He achieved significant recognition with his next feature, Children's Island (Barnens ö, 1980), adapted from the novel by P. C. Jersild. Pollak directed and wrote the film, which won three Guldbagge Awards: Best Film, Best Director, and Best Actor. It was also entered into the 31st Berlin International Film Festival. Pollak continued as writer on most of his early projects, often handling both directing and scripting duties. His final film of this period was Love Me! (Älska mig, 1986), which he directed and wrote, and which was invited to the 36th Berlin International Film Festival. Following Love Me!, Pollak entered an extended hiatus from filmmaking.

Extended hiatus (1986–2004)

Following the release of Älska mej (Love Me!) in 1986, Kay Pollak embarked on an extended hiatus from directing feature films that lasted 18 years. This period marked a complete absence from filmmaking as a director, with no new feature projects released during that time. The hiatus concluded in 2004 when Pollak returned to directing with As It Is in Heaven (Så som i himmelen). Sources consistently describe this nearly two-decade gap as a significant break or absence from the film industry.

Return to directing and later films (2004–present)

Pollak returned to directing after an 18-year hiatus with the 2004 film As It Is in Heaven (Så som i himmelen), which he wrote and directed. The drama became a major commercial success in Sweden, topping the box-office charts for seven consecutive weeks and grossing over 29 million SEK (approximately $4 million USD) domestically. It represented Sweden at the 77th Academy Awards in 2005, earning a nomination for Best Foreign Language Film. The film also received eight nominations at the 2005 Guldbagge Awards, including Best Film and Best Director, though it ultimately won none. In 2015, Pollak directed Heaven on Earth (Så ock på jorden), a standalone sequel to As It Is in Heaven that reunited several key cast members from the original. Pollak's most recent credited work is as a basis for the 2025 TV mini-series Tordyveln flyger i skymningen, where characters are derived from the 1976 radio play he co-wrote with Maria Gripe.

Awards and nominations

Personal life

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