Naima Wifstrand(1890-1968)
- Actress
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Raised by a single mother, she grew up in a poor home at Fleminggatan
in Stockholm. She was working extra in a small shop for sewing
materials and the owner encouraged her acting dreams. In 1905 she was
accepted to accompany the Anna Lundberg travelling theatre company
around Sweden. This led to small roles at theatres both in Helsinki and
Stockholm. In 1910 she became a student for the famous song teacher
Raymond von zur Mühlen in London. During the years before and under WWI
her fame grew and she got major roles in operettas by Emmerich Kálmán and
Franz Lehár. Until the mid 1920s she was the queen of the operettas,
performing in Stockholm, Copenhagen and Oslo. But finally she had had
enough and was vying for more dramatic parts. Finding work was not so
easy though and she spent a lot of time in England, performing for
smaller audiences with singing and guitar playing. Her dramatic
breakthrough did not come until 1937 when she met director Per Lindberg who
gives her the chance to tour around Sweden with Bertolt Brecht's The
Three-penny-opera. When Bertolt Brecht escaped from The Third Reich and moved
to Sweden, he wrote Mother Courage for her. In 1948 she starred in 'Me
and My Gal' with Nils Poppe at Södra Teatern in Stockholm. During the
1950s she was employed by Malmö Stadsteater together with Ingmar Bergman.
Bergman also gave her some minor but good roles in his movies, most
notably as the old Mrs. Armfelt in Smiles of a Summer Night (1955) and as Granny Vogler in The Magician (1958).