Los Angeles Times

Max von Sydow left huge legacy

Actor left imposing mark in parts big and small on stage, film and TV

- By Nardine Saad

The Swedish actor, known for Ingmar Bergman’s films and “The Exorcist,” dies at 90.

Swedish actor Max von Sydow, the stately import whose theater roots laid the groundwork for a vast onscreen career in nearly a dozen Ingmar Bergman production­s as well as defining roles in “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” “The Exorcist” and “Game of Thrones,” has died.

The two-time Oscar nominee died Sunday, his agency confirmed Monday morning. He was 90.

The veteran actor’s rich repertory included Jesus Christ, clergymen, pontiffs, knights, conquerors, attorneys, sinister doctors, stateside villains and the devil incarnate — and that was just on film. Von Sydow continued to work in theater and smaller Swedish projects in his later years.

In a career that stretches from 1949 onward, there was rarely a year when he didn’t have a project in movie houses.

Many of his films — and there are more than 100 of them — are considered classics, beginning with his early work with Swedish icon and former mentor Bergman. Von Sydow hit the global stage playing chess with the devil in Bergman’s “The Seventh Seal” in 1957. It was the first of 11 memorable films with Bergman as part of the filmmaker’s repertory company of actors.

He starred in several of his landmark movies, including 1958’s “The Magician,” 1960’s “The Virgin Spring,” 1961’s “Through a Glass Darkly” and 1963’s “Winter Light.” He played the lead in only six of the 11 features he and Bergman made together between 1957 and 1971. He last worked with the filmmaker on the TV movie “Private Confession­s” (1998), written by Bergman, playing his mother’s Uncle Jacob. The film was directed by Liv Ullman, a frequent costar of Von Sydow’s. He also played Bergman’s grandfathe­r in 1992’s “The Best Intentions.”

“Whatever good I have done on screen I owe to” Bergman, Von Sydow said in a 2013 Times interview. “I have learned discipline. I have learned concentrat­ion and the joy of acting.”

After making his U.S. debut as Jesus Christ in George Stevens’ final film, 1965’s “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” Von Sydow built up an impressive­ly varied body of work that included William Friedkin’s 1973 horror blockbuste­r “The Exorcist,” Sydney Pollack’s 1975 thriller “Three Days of the Condor” and Martin Scorsese’s 2010 psychologi­cal thriller “Shutter Island.”

Von Sydow was only 43 when he played Father Merrin, “The Exorcist’s” titular Jesuit priest, though his devout alter ego was well into his 80s. Makeup artist Dick Miller added years to his visage and the actor earned his second Golden Globe nomination for the role (his first was for 1966’s “Hawaii” with Julie Andrews and Richard Harris). The horror classic was among his biggest boxoffice successes.

His portrayal of an impoverish­ed farm worker in 1988’s “Pelle the Conqueror” by Danish filmmaker Bille August, is often considered one of his greatest roles and it brought him worldwide acclaim as well as his first lead actor Oscar nomination, despite its being a foreign language film. The film was Denmark’s Oscar entry and won in the foreign language category. That role went against the grain of Von Sydow’s usual authority figures, casting him as the weathered Swedish widower Lasse whose remarkably tender father-son relationsh­ip is at the heart of the film.

At 6 feet 4, Von Sydow was a commanding presence wherever he appeared, and he paid meticulous attention to tiny details in his work, explaining why many film experts consider the veteran Swedish actor to be one of the giants of internatio­nal cinema. His peers often remarked on his mastery and how decent, generous and courteous he seemed. Director Jan Troell said that he witnessed Von Sydow losing his temper only once and then “for only 27 seconds,” after a day of shooting in a snowstorm for his 1971 historical drama “The Emigrants.”

“He has such tremendous technique, but it’s all invisible,” noted director Scott Hicks, who worked with Von Sydow on “Snow Falling on Cedars” in the 1990s.

Retirement was usually a fleeting idea that Von Sydow quickly dismissed: “As long as you are in command of your physical and mental abilities, why not continue? My wife has promised to tell me when to stop.”

Born in 1929 as Carl Adolf von Sydow in Lund, Skåne, Sweden, Von Sydow grew up in an aristocrat­ic middleclas­s family as the son of Baroness Maria Margareta, a teacher, and Carl Wilhelm von Sydow, an ethnologis­t and folklore professor at the University of Lund.

There was no theater in his hometown. Von Sydow remembers being taken to the pictures by his father only twice, according to a 1988 Times story. Seeing a production of “Midsummer Night’s Dream” in the next town was life-changing and prompted him to start a drama group at his high school. After completing compulsory military service he applied to the Royal Academy in Stockholm and was accepted.

He made his debut in a small part as the Prince of Orange in Goethe’s “Egmont,” and it was “almost a disaster,” he told The Times. “I had to come on stage and give a terrible tongue-lashing to an older actor. Unfortunat­ely, he was one of my idols, a man I worshiped. And I had a hellish time making myself do it.” But he did, and although the whole production indeed proved to be a disaster, Von Sydow got good reviews as a promising newcomer.

Years in provincial theater followed. The work trained him early on to appreciate the variety of roles: “Big parts, small parts, classical, modern, comedy, tragedy, anything. Always something new, which was a wonderful school for a young actor. I was, in a way, very spoiled.”

At the last of three repertory companies, the director was Bergman and Von Sydow made two films before Bergman cast him in “The Seventh Seal,” giving a mesmerizin­g performanc­e as a 14th century knight who challenges Death to a game of chess, which catapulted the actor onto the internatio­nal scene.

Of Bergman, who died in 2007, Von Sydow said the filmmaker was “courageous in choosing people to do things that they themselves might not expect to play. Life was exciting.”

Von Sydow first traveled to Hollywood to meet with “The Greatest Story Ever Told” director Stevens to play Jesus Christ in the biblical epic.

“I didn’t want to do it for various reasons, but he was after me, and my agent tried to convince me I should. George Stevens said, ‘Why don’t you come over and see what we are doing and we will show you that we are doing something important,’” he told The Times in 2013. “I was seduced, of course, by Hollywood and Mr. Stevens. He was a remarkable man. I admired him very much, but he was not easy. He probably postponed decisions as long as he could. Watching the film now, I must say I am disappoint­ed he didn’t get closer to the characters. There are very few close-ups. It’s aesthetica­lly a very beautiful film, but I think it’s a little cold. But he was a remarkable filmmaker.”

It was Von Sydow’s first English-language production. Decades later, he would play the devil in the 1993 film “Needful Things.” He took on a number of rolesin a variety of genres, always lending a levity to the work — whether playing Ming the Terrible in “Flash Gordon” or or in “The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim” video game.

“I don’t have a philosophy for choosing roles,” he told The Times. “Sometimes, it’s just, ‘This might be interestin­g, that might be fun to do.’ There might be interestin­g actors or directors in the project, even if the part is not important. And then sometimes, you need the money.”

In 1951, he married actress Christina Inga Britta Olin and together they had two sons, Clas and Henrik, who appeared with him in “Hawaii.” He and Olin divorced in 1979. Von Sydow later moved to Paris with his second wife, documentar­ian Catherine Brelet, whom he wed in 1997. He surrendere­d his Swedish citizenshi­p to become a French national in 2002 and adopted her two children from a previous marriage.

He told The Times that he would like to be remembered “as a competent actor.”

“What will probably stick are the films, unfortunat­ely; people who have been to the [live] theater have memories of things that are not visible, and only in the memories of the audience,” he said. “I just hope they remember something I’ve done — whatever it is — that something I’ve done has meant something.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? RANGE OF ROLES Two-time Oscar nominee Max von Sydow portrayed everything from Jesus Christ and knights to villains and the devil himself in a long career that often paired him with Swedish directing icon Ingmar Bergman.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times RANGE OF ROLES Two-time Oscar nominee Max von Sydow portrayed everything from Jesus Christ and knights to villains and the devil himself in a long career that often paired him with Swedish directing icon Ingmar Bergman.
 ?? AMPAS ?? BOX-OFFICE GOLD Von Sydow, center, with Linda Blair and Jason Miller in 1973’s horror blockbuste­r “The Exorcist.” The Swedish actor played the elder Father Merrin.
AMPAS BOX-OFFICE GOLD Von Sydow, center, with Linda Blair and Jason Miller in 1973’s horror blockbuste­r “The Exorcist.” The Swedish actor played the elder Father Merrin.

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