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- "...all that my longing has dreamed". Drama documentary about the Norwegian poet Johan Sebastian Welhaven (1807-1873), based on contemporary memoirs, letters, diaries and poetry, by Tone Bengtsson. Welhaven is a poor and fatherless rural student in Kristiania in the 1830s. He dreams of introducing a new refined and intellectually superior European education in his backward and uncivilized country. He is a broken and complicated person, who can show great arrogance and aggression, but he also writes naked and poignant poems about his depression and longing for love.
- "...a cry, my life's long suppressed" Drama documentary about the Norwegian writer Camilla Collett, née Wergeland (1813-1895), based on contemporary memoirs, letters, diaries and literary texts, by Tone Bengtsson. Camilla Collett was the youngest sister of the poet Henrik Wergeland. In social life in 1830's Kristiania, she makes great fortune with her charm and beauty. She falls passionately in love with the young, beautiful poet Johan Sebastian Welhaven, her brother's bitterest enemy. She never gets over the fact that Welhaven finally breaks up with her and she saves all his letters and her own reflections in a black box, where the basis for her entire socially critical writing is found, she says herself.
- 2003–2005TV EpisodeSports and travel magazine for everyone who likes boards, skis and adventure. Niklas Hyland goes to London to describe, together with architecture professor Iain Boarden, "the significance of the skateboard for architecture in public space". Emma Gray from SVT's Filmkrönikan reviews the world's most lavish ski film: the American Yearbook. And then we get to see the latest from the World Snowboarding Championships in Whistler, Canada, as well as skier portraits, viewer film and industry news.
- Drama documentary about the Norwegian poet Henrik Wergeland (1808-1845), based on contemporary memoirs, letters, diaries and poetry, by Tone Bengtsson. At full gallop on his little brown horse and with a freshly picked flower in his buttonhole storms the young Henrik Wergeland into Norwegian poetry in the 1830s Today, Henrik Wergeland is a beloved national poet, an almost mythical figure in the Norwegian public consciousness.
- Robbish's career flies. Since the break-up with manager Lilla Al-Fadji, he has been successful and succeeded in winning the prize for artist of the year at the hyped Brother-in-law gala. Fadji, on the other hand, has not succeeded in achieving the same level of success as Robin. He feels let down and forgotten by Robin and decides to seek revenge. Not everything goes as planned and both end up in a bracket with justice.
- Snoddas played bandy and the marine spy Hilding Andersson was revealed. Gustaf "Stålfarfar" Håkansson cycled, Pär Lagerkvist received the Nobel Prize and Tage Erlander and Karl Gerhard filled the arenas. Outside the world there was a cold war and in Sweden there was a great West Gothic maneuver. There was a plastic fashion and new hairstyles for a new era. These are just some of the events when the year was 1951.
- Gösta "Snoddas" Nordgren sings "Flottarkärlek" on the radio and makes instant success. King Gustaf VI Adolf turns 70. A Swedish DC-3 disappears and a Catalina plane is shot down by Soviet fighter aircraft. A Swedish spy deal is rolled up. Fritjof Enbom has provided information to the Soviet Union. It is also the Olympic year. Winter Olympiad in Oslo and Summer Olympiad in Helsinki. These are some of the events when the year was 1952.
- Frank Sinatra comes to Sweden with his wife Ava Gardner. The press is not gracious even if the audience flows. Another American, a bottle, enters Sweden - Coca Cola. Josef Stalin dies, the world holds his breath. Harriet Andersson is successful in "Summer with Monika". The Swedish Air Force is one of the largest in the world and over 700 planes are in the air to celebrate Stockholm 700 years.
- In Sweden, a black hurricane pulled forward, took the forest with it and the cargo boat Nedjan went down with seventeen men. The sooty glasses arrived when the sun was totally ejected. And there was a Audrey Hepburn look-a-like contest. Radiotjänst was doing tests with television, author Stig Dagerman died, and Swedish ice hockey was taking on the Soviets.
- 1955 was the year with the summer to remember. Motboken disappeared and Sweden said no, no, no to right-hand traffic. Rip hunters were buried in an avalanche for eight days, Ingrid Bergman received unlucky reviews for Jeanne d'Arc and James Dean died in a frontal crash in 185 km/h. Annalisa Ericson, Povel Ramel, Kari Sylwan, Charlie Norman and many more tell about the year 1955.
- 1956 was the year when Elvis Presley made his breakthrough and Grace Kelly celebrated a fairytale wedding in Monaco. In Ställdalen a rail bus was crushed with schoolchildren and outside New York, M/S Stockholm collided with Andrea Doria. Frances Bulwark ran his last race and Swedish UN soldiers flew to Suez. But most of all, it was the years of the Hungarian refugees.
- The space age began and in the cinemas, Ingmar Bergman's "The seventh Seal" and "Wild Strawberries" were screened. Stockholm got its first female parking guards, the Asian flue ravaged and Tommy Steele came to visit. The program participates in newly filmed interviews Ingmar Bergman, Brita Borg, Tora Carson and others who have reason to remember and can tell about the year 1957.
- In 1958 Sweden took a sensational silver medal in the World Cup. Little Gerhard and the Swedish rock broke through. Wild fires on Öland and the first pacemaker was operated on a human being. Lena Granhagen made her first film role and Sweden got female police officers. Bosse Parnevik ran 110 meters hurdles and Robert Broberg played skiffle music.
- It is the hot wasp summer, when half Sweden sits up at three o'clock at night and listens to the World Champion match in heavy weight between Ingo and Floyd. Rock-Olga and Rockande Samen are hot too and "My Fair Lady" draws a big audience to the Oscars theatre. Olle Möller is charged with the murder of Ruth Lind from Fjugesta and ATP is pushed through in Parliament after Ture Königson cast his vote.
- Battle of female priests where Bishop Bo Giertz represents the site against this. Eartha Kitt is a success at Berns, Caryl Chessman writes a book, Lena Larsson writes the article "kip, slit och släng", the Shah of Iran visits Stockholm, and in Sharpeville the police are shooting sharply on demonstrating South Africans.
- Swedish UN soldiers are in the crisis and Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld dies in a flight crash. Swedish film's biggest success, "Änglar finns com?" have a premiere with Christina Schollin and Jarl Kulle. Jurij Gagarin becomes the first man in space and Volvo P 1800 shows up on the roads. Ewy Rosqvist is the rally princess and in April the regal ship Vasa is raised after 333 years at the bottom of Stockholm's stream. In August, the Berlin Wall will be built and outside the Stockholm archipelago, Radio Nord broadcasts music and news.
- Soviet and the United States are about to clash in the Cuba crisis. For a few weeks, it looks like WWIII is about to break out. On another continent, Algeria becomes independent, after 130 years of French rule, and the Liberation Movement leader Ben Bella can return. Sweden beats Canada in the World Cup final of ice-hockey. Anita Lindblom has an enormous hit with "Sånt är livet", Leif-Erik Nygårds take one of the last photos of Marilyn Monroe, Siri Derkert's art shapes a new subway station in Stockholm, and "Little Joe" Michael Landon in "Ponderosa/Bröderna Cartwright" visits Sweden.
- The Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova becomes the first woman in space. Sweden suffers from an smallpox epidemic - hundreds of thousands are vaccinated, and several thousand are isolated. Colonel Stig Wennerström is arrested for spying for the Soviets. John F Kennedy is murdered in Dallas, while Martin Luther King have a dream about the future, "Villervalle i Söderhavet" is on the Swedish TV.
- Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev is visiting Sweden and Harpsund with Swedish Prime Minister Tage Erlander. When Khrushchev returns home, he has only a few months left in power. Vilgot Sjöman's film "491" with Lena Nyman in one of the roles finally premieres after both being completely banned and being up and turned to the government that has liked what clips need to be made. Jan-Erik Lundqvist plays Davis Cup tennis in Båstad and everyone benches on the TV sofas. Pentecostal Pastor Lewi Pethrus joins and starts a new party in Sweden Kristen Demokratisk sailing (KDS) with Birger Ekstedt as party leader. There are more than one and a half million cars on the roads and the car testing starts, voluntarily at first. Cyper war is worried about Cyprus threatening and Sweden sends UN soldiers and two Swedish officers smuggle weapons to the Turkish Cypriot side. Near Jokkmokk, Jan Troell records his first feature film "Uppehåll i Myrlandet". "Vi på Saltkråkan" can be seen in the TV box for the first time recorded in color but broadcast in black and white for color TV is still a few years ahead and Per Myrberg sings "34:an".
- It is in a way the years of the youth - in 1965. It is the most visible on streets and squares and protest against the US war in Vietnam, and it is young people who struggle with the police during Hötorgskravaller at the end of August. And of course it's the young people's music: The Rolling Stones comes to Sweden - a little rougher and tougher than the Beatles who were here a year earlier. And that fashion of fashion spreads across Sweden - to the horror of many. On October 1, the middle beer will be sold in Sweden - in regular grocery stores. And at the end of the year, "Taking a bridge" premiere - Hasse and Tages has the first feature film with Gösta Ekman in one of the lead roles. Twelve Swedish youth die in an avalanche accident during a skiing holiday in Austria. In Söder in Stockholm, a tunnel collapses and two men are trapped 43 meters below the ground and Sweden holds their breath. It takes several days before anyone knows if they survived. American astronaut Ed White makes a space walk in June - the other man who has been outside his capsule, because the Soviet still leads the space race: Aleksej Leonov beats him for a few weeks and becomes the first.
- 1967 is the year when Sweden moves to the right, at least in traffic. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi - The Beatles' favorite guru visits Skåne and talks about transcendental meditation. The Fåglum brothers receive a fine medal for their tireless and successful cycling. And the race for space between the USA and the USSR continues. The Jimi Hendrix Experience performs very loud in Sweden. And in December it's time for the Christmas calendar - Teskedsgumman featuring Birgitta Andersson. Lalla Hansson looks pretty in the Fabulous Four fashion. The Russell tribunal holds the United States responsible for the Vietnam War.
- 1968 - the year with rebellion, trouble and protests. And demonstrations: Against Vietnam War, against the teenage fair, against the Davis Cup and even towards Christmas. It is also the year for the invasion of Prague and the murder of Martin Luther King. And then it's time for the very last student degree. The feminist collective Grupp 8 is founded. Johnny Cash performs at San Quentin, Alexander Dubcek is pushed away from power by the Soviets in Czechoslavakia, and Olof Palme demonstrates with the ambassador of North Vietnam. The film "Dom kallar oss Mods" by Stefan Jarl and Jan Lindqvist in cinemas in Sweden.
- Pippi Långstrump rides into the TV sets while the Swedish authors demonstrates for more compensation. But still -there is a space race. Both the Soviet and the United States send rockets, where the United States reaches all the way to the moon. The miners of LKAB go on strike. Pugh Rogefeldt makes his first LP "Ja, dä ä dä!". "Partaj" is the most fun shown on TV. Towards the end of the year, Sweden gets its second TV channel, TV 2.
- A whole new decade comes rushing starting in 1970. This is the year when it is a music party at Gärdet in Stockholm, and Lee Hazlewood and Nina Lizell wonder who can sail before wind. The Vietnam War continues and the United States is bombing Cambodia. In Stockholm, police officers write in protest against poor conditions and the rockers take the chance to take over in town. During the "cannon race" on the Gellerås track, a fatal accident occurs. Two cars get stuck in each other and are thrown out into the audience, five people die and more than 30 are injured. Director Roy Andersson's first feature film "En kärlekshistoria" is a must see.
- The 70s turn one year and the Swedes take the opportunity to visit Mallorca like never before. Filmmaker Lars Molin debuts as TV dramatic and "Badjävlar" becomes a concept. In Stora Blåsjön in northern Jämtland, a hunger strike begins to get the job back in the village. Sweden is shaken by the murder of the Yugoslav ambassador. Tjejsnack has a premiere and the song "We have to raise our voices to be heard" will be heard for a long time. In Söderhamn, four people are murdered inside the town hall. And in Stockholm, the battle for the Alm trees in Kungsträdgården is underway. Björn Gillberg protests against additives in the food and takes the opportunity to wash the shirt in milk replacement powder.
- 1972 is one of the years when the green wave sweeps over Sweden; Back to nature to a life far away from the city. And in the city, in Skärholmen, the "Skärholmsfruarna" complains at increased food prices so that even Olof Palme must get involved. In August, fifteen prisoners escape from the Kumla prison and a few weeks later Sweden's first flight is hijacked at Bulltofta airport. It is an Olympic year, with Swedish medals in Munich, but also an attack where 11 Israeli athletes are killed. Swedes emigrate to Australia while Sweden receives refugees from Idi Amins Uganda. Ralf Edström is making a success in the Swedish football team and Kjell Isaksson takes the opportunity to beat the world record in pole jumping. Tomas Ledin releases his first album and Hoola Bandoola Band asks "Who can you trust?"
- At the end of August 1973, Jan Olsson take hostages at the Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg. A few weeks later, on September 15, King Gustaf VI Adolf dies at Helsingborg's laser and Sweden gets a new king: Carl XVI Gustaf. In Chile, the military takes power and the elected president Salvador Allende is overthrown. The IB deal shakes Sweden. Öxabäck becomes the first Swedish champion in football for ladies. Stellan Bengtsson and Kjell Johansson become world champions in double in table tennis. And on television both "Tårtan" and "Fyra myror..."
- The year begins with energy crisis and gasoline rationing. And there is a parental insurance so that even fathers can be home with their children. Citizens around Sweden strike for better conditions. It is Melodifestival with both ABBA and the winner from the year before, Göran Fristorp. Anders Michanek becomes world champion in Speedway. Singer Monica Törnell shows that she belongs to the artist elite in Sweden. And it becomes uneasy for Swedish tourists in the holiday paradise Cyprus when Turkey lands troops.
- "Barbarella Live" tonight is featuring the drag show group 3 Tons of Fun, the band In the Colonnades and Percy Nilegård (Johan Rheborg) present the latest infotainment program. There will also be an interview with Fritjof Haglund about the men's role and conversation in the "Feminist corner" with Jenny Morelli and Mian Lodalen.
- 40 years of humor and comedy on Swedish National Television - a public service company. Here are the classics such as "Uncle Frej" with Anders Eriksson, "My own compartment" with Martin Ljung, "Ormet keeper" with Roffe Bengtsson, "The Shipping Game (Who the hell is 'Nisse Hult?)" with Margaretha Krook and Lars Ekborg ,"Oh, I did not think about that. " with Peter Dalle and Claes Månsson.
- Two Brothers arguing about the money left by their parents
- 2009TV EpisodeThe first show features Markus Krunegård, who will offer a brand new song. A Camp with Nina Persson, Niclas Frisk and Nathan Larson play songs from their upcoming album. The band is joined on stage by Nicolai Dunger. In addition, Nottee plays, a new pop genius in whom the editors of Popcirkus believe a lot.
- In a dreamscape outside the physical world, body and mind float between different mental states in search of total release. Based on the dance styles Hip Hop, House and modern, the choreography explores concepts such as identity, vulnerability, exhaustion, dreams, struggle, the collective and balance.
- An investigation into what AFA, Antifascist Aktion, is doing and who they are. Is it violence begetting violence that applies. Does AFA like to interfere in, or attack, demonstrations so that they become violent riots? And what is their basic view on society and politics? A few activists and politicians who have become targets for AFA's violent hatred and methods appear.
- A disused submarine factory became the venue for the world premiere of the performance Adam's Passion, a stage version of music by 2023 Polar Prize winner Arvo Pärt. The performance was recorded in connection with Pärt's 80th birthday in 2015 and was directed by none other than the legendary director and artist Robert Wilson. Musically, Adam's Passion consists of four of Pärt's works; Adam's Lament, Tabula Rasa, Miserere and Sequentia. The conductor is Pärt's world-famous compatriot Tõnu Kaljuste, and over a hundred artists are on stage.
- Alexandra was Stockholm's first genuine nightclub. In business from 1968 to 1988. On four different locations. Was the absolute place to be for famous people during the 70's. The TV-show "Alexandra and friends" was late in the game. Not much of the old glory was still present. But Alexandra managed to attract some special artists to the recording of the show.
- A rough planing from Sweden's sharpest political debaters. Today with Alice Teodorescu, fearless and provocative liberal who understands why she is invited to discussions as a "right-wing ghost". She believes that we let the politicians have far too much influence in our lives.
- 2005–TV EpisodeAliette Opheim played Kristi Brud in the "Knutby" drama and now a Missing people volunteer in the new detective series "Mörkt hjärta". What is it like to play the role of a real person? After the pandemic, the drag show group Cabaret Moulin dons the wigs again, and the author Maria Maunsbach examines what it's like to grow up in a small town.
- 2018–2021TV EpisodeAmanda Gorman's poem and new Anders Zorn exhibition. "Kulturveckan" discusses translations as to Amanda Gorman's mentioned poem "The Hills We Climb". SvD's literary critic Josefin de Gregorio and translator Jennifer Hayashida talk about Jason Diakité's Swedish version and develops the debate that engaged the world. Does it matter who translates a work? In addition, about Anders Zorn - the World Traveler and the artist who many associate with a Swedish Dalaidyll. Carl-Johan Olsson, Curator at the National Museum talks about the new exhibition and what makes Zorn up to date in our time.
- A music story that has never before been told in Sweden - a story about the gospel. It is about how the genre arose and how it came to Sweden in the 1960s by pure coincidence. Along with the Father of Gospel music Thomas A. Dorsey we get to meet with Loe Della Evans Reid, and the Queens of Swedish Gospel, Cyndee Peters.
- 2022– 19mTV EpisodeAt lunchtime on April 24, 1975, a group of German terrorists take hostages at the West German embassy in Stockholm. Police arrive, reporters flock to the area and embassy personnel run for their lives to get away from the occupied workplace. What actually happens from the time the alarm goes off until the first TV images are recorded?
- 2022– 20mTV EpisodeWhat was the background to the embassy drama? In the planning, Swedes within the National Association for the Humanization of Correctional Services (KRUM) were used to spy. Immediately afterwards, members of the Baader-Meinhof network also appeared at a KRUM-arranged meeting and trumpeted the terrorist group's message. We hear a unique recording from this meeting.
- Prison warden, art historian and enjoyer of life. A nationally known woman with opinions about everything and a little even a motley background to say the least. Annbritt's friends give us pictures from her hectic youth as a student in the city of learning Uppsala.
- On Jan. 6, 1982, Ann-Catherine, aged 23, died. Her husband found her dead, hung in the headboard in the bedroom. The police immediately decided it was a suicide. But there was a lot of circumstances that wasn't right. Today, 20 years later, an outside forensic expert claims that Anne-Catherine is unlikely to have taken her own life.
- About youth pastor Ann-Sofi from Arken, a charismatic revival congregation in Kungsängen outside Stockholm. Ann-Sofi shows Anna how to speak in tongues and tells about how it feels in the body when this happens. She tells us that the devil is everywhere but that with the right attitude it is possible to ward him off.
- We meet Leonore Grenoble, who researches Arctic languages, and the musician Hayati Kafé, who is fluent in the Ladino language. What is his view on Ladino and does he think that the language that has lived for thousands of years will survive? In New York there is an organization that documents endangered languages. It has been shown that unexpectedly many languages survive in the metropolitan jungle.
- The year is 1995. There is a knock on the door of Snål-Arne Nyman's dilapidated house, it is Death who has come to get him. They set off on a final journey through the sparsely populated northern countryside to say goodbye to Snål-Arne's friends.
- Birka and Marcus live with their little son in a small apartment in Biskopsgården on Hisingen, Gothenburg. The bedroom has been converted into a temple room where Birka and Magnus invoke gods such as Thor and Freya. Anna gets to take part in various rituals, including a disablot held in the middle of the forest.
- Asgard: Pyrus has a headache after drinking too much mead with Harald Hårfager. However, he perks up when Guttenborg serves real rice porridge. Bertramsen is hungry, and luckily Miss Brahe has pastry with her at work. Later, she is just about to lift Pyrus out of a dustbin and into the office, but luckily Pyrus escapes. The goblins think that Freya might be a goddess. To investigate it further, they go on a trip to Midgard, where they meet the giant Heimdal and the real goddess Freja. She captures the goblins, but Pyrus and the girl Freya appease the goddess with a love song. At the office, Bertramsen, with a hungry stomach, offers his pastry to appease the gods.
- In a personal meeting with the author and the person Astrid Lindgren, filmmaker Jan Eriksson-Tillberg seeks the answers to the questions about her fate, about childhood and parents, about love, dreams, death and life's journey, which can sometimes be like a long fairy tale.