New York Daily News

A LEGEND DIES

Von Sydow known for Bergman, ‘Exorcist’

- BY JAN M. OLSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COPENHAGEN — Max von Sydow, 90, the self-described “shy boy”-turned-actor known to art house audiences through his work with Swedish director Ingmar Bergman and later to moviegoers everywhere when he played the priest in the horror classic “The Exorcist,” has died.

His agent Jean Diamond said Monday that the actor, who was born in Sweden but became a French citizen in 2002, died the previous day in France.

From his 1949 screen debut in the Swedish film “Only a Mother,” von Sydow starred in close to 200 film and TV production­s, remaining active well into his 80s. He received two Academy Award nomination­s — for best actor in 1988 for his gripping portrayal of an impoverish­ed farmer in “Pelle the Conqueror” and best supporting actor in 2012 for his role as a mute in “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close.” More recently, he received an Emmy nomination for his work as the Three-Eyed Raven in HBO’s “Game of Thrones.”

The Swede was a mainstay of nearly a dozen classic, angst-ridden films by Bergman, including “Wild Strawberri­es,” “Shame” and the 1957 release “The Seventh Seal,” in which he featured in one of Bergman’s most memorable scenes, as the medieval knight who plays a game of chess against Death.

Actress Inga Landgre, 92, who appeared with him in “The Seventh Seal,” told Sweden’s news agency TT that “there was a sense of security in his radiance,” adding, “His presence was his strength.”

Von Sydow made his Hollywood debut as Jesus in the 1965 film “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” but gained widespread internatio­nal fame as the devil-evicting priest in William Friedkin’s controvers­ial 1973 film “The Exorcist.”

In 1980, von Sydow starred as the evil emperor Ming the Merciless in “Flash Gordon.” He turned down the role as the sinister Dr. No in the first James Bond film with the same name, but later appeared as the cat-stroking villain Ernst Blofeld in the 1983 “Never Say Never Again,” starring Sean Connery as Bond.

He also played a tormented painter in Woody Allen’s “Hannah and Her Sisters” and portrayed the devil in “Needful Things,” a 1991 horror film based on a novel by Stephen King. In 2015 he appeared briefly in the blockbuste­r “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.”

While his characters were often sinister, tormented or evil, the soft-spoken von Sydow said he became an actor to overcome his own shyness.

“I was a very shy boy when

I was a kid,” he said. “When I started acting in an amateur group in high school, although I wasn’t aware of it at the time, I suddenly got a tool in my hand that was wonderful. I was allowed to express all kinds of strange things that I never dared to express before. Now I could do it with the character as a shield, as a defense and as an excuse.”

Although his family was not interested in theater, he said his father was a master of telling adventure stories that fueled his imaginatio­n as a child. He decided he wanted to be an actor and formed a theater society with his friends after seeing his first play, William Shakespear­e’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” at age 14.

He studied at the Royal Dramatic Theater in Stockholm and acted in small municipali­ty theaters in Sweden for eight years.

It was during this period he first met Bergman. In addition to “The Seventh Seal,” he would star in 10 other Bergman films, including “The Magician,” “The Virgin Spring” and “Wild Strawberri­es,” and develop a close relationsh­ip with Sweden’s most famous moviemaker.

“We did most of that work when we were much younger,” von Sydow said. “We were free — he hadn’t yet become world famous and I was just a regular stage actor with a few film roles to my credit. We worked hard and had a lot of fun.”

 ??  ?? Max von Sydow (l., in 2012), who died at 90, did most of his acting for great Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman, but also played the Priest in “The Exorcist” (top, with Linda Blair). The actor (in 1974, r.) also was Emperor Ming the Merciless in 1980’s “Flash Gordon” (bottom).
Max von Sydow (l., in 2012), who died at 90, did most of his acting for great Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman, but also played the Priest in “The Exorcist” (top, with Linda Blair). The actor (in 1974, r.) also was Emperor Ming the Merciless in 1980’s “Flash Gordon” (bottom).
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