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Tore Svennberg

Tore Svennberg

Born: 1858-02-28 • Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden

Olof Teodor "Tore" Svennberg (28 February 1858 – 8 May 1941) was a Swedish actor and theatre director whose career spanned more than five decades.

Born in Stockholm, Tore Svennberg made his stage debut at the Folkan Theatre in his hometown in 1877. From 1878 to 1891 he was engaged with various national touring theatre companies with actress Julia Håkansson and was from time to time cast by Swedish stage director Albert Ranft. At the Swedish Theatre, he played in several August Strindberg dramas: Gustav Vasa, starred in Erik XIV in 1899, A Dream Play in 1907 and The Dance of Death in 1919. He also appeared in many roles by Henrik Ibsen: as Helmer in A Doll's House in 1889, as Hjalmar Ekdahl in The Wild Duck in 1891 and as Borkman in John Gabriel Borkman in 1897.

In 1920, Svennberg was engaged at the Swedish Royal Dramatic Theatre, where he later became director from 1922 to 1928. He managed to attract audiences by focusing on classics and foreign plays.

Svennberg also appeared in a number of films, beginning in the Victor Sjöström-directed 1919 drama Sons of Ingmar, based on the novel Jerusalem by Selma Lagerlöf, and performed in his last film role at the age of 82 in Per Lindberg's 1940 drama Stål. He is possibly best recalled internationally for his role as Magnus Barring in the 1938 film A Woman's Face opposite actress Ingrid Bergman.

Filmography
Steel poster
Steel
1940 • Anker
A Woman's Face poster
A Woman's Face
1938 • Barring
Ocean Breakers poster
Ocean Breakers
1935 • Anders Nordeman
Vad veta väl männen? poster
Vad veta väl männen?
1933
Frida's Songs poster
Frida's Songs
1930 • P.A. Brickman
The Dream Waltz poster
The Dream Waltz
1929
Love's Crucible poster
Love's Crucible
1922 • Mayor
A Wild Bird poster
A Wild Bird
1921 • Richard Brenner
The Phantom Carriage poster
The Phantom Carriage
1921 • Georges
The Monastery of Sendomir poster
The Monastery of Sendomir
1920 • Count Starschensky
Sons of Ingmar poster
Sons of Ingmar
1919 • Stor Ingmar Ingmarsson