Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Bodil Ipsen

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Actor, Director

Years active
  
1909–1960


Name
  
Bodil Ipsen

Role
  
Actress

Bodil Ipsen Bodil Ipsen Gyldendal Den Store Danske

Full Name
  
Bodil Louise Jensen Ipsen

Born
  
30 August 1889 (
1889-08-30
)

Died
  
November 26, 1964, Copenhagen, Denmark

Spouse
  
Ejnar Black (m. 1932–1949)

Awards
  
Palme d'Or, Bodil Award for Best Danish Film, Bodil Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role

Movies
  
The Red Meadows, Melody of Murder, Cafe Paradis, Afsporet, The Viking Watch of the Danis

Similar People
  
Lau Lauritzen - Jr, Bodil Kjer, Lisbeth Movin, Poul Reichhardt, Johannes Meyer

Bodil ipsen der var engang


Bodil Ipsen (30 August 1889 – 26 November 1964) was a Danish actress and film director, and is considered one of the great stars of Danish cinematic history. Her acting career, which began in theater and silent films, was marked by leading roles in large folk comedies and melodramas. However, it was as a director that she was most influential: directing the first Danish film noir and making several dark psychological thrillers during the 1940s and 1950s. Ipsen's name along with that of Bodil Kjer is given to Denmark's most celebrated film prize, the Bodil Award.

Contents

Bodil Ipsen Den tekniske mester Hertz39 dramatik Gyldendal Den

Marmorduen 1+2. Bodil Ipsen. Juleplade på 78'Omdr. Copenhagen 1935


Career

Bodil Ipsen Afsporet Derailed 1942 Bodil Ipsen Lau Lauritzen

Bodil Louise Jensen Ipsen was born on 30 August 1889 in Copenhagen, Denmark. In 1908, after obtaining her high school diploma, Ipsen began studying at Det Kongelige Teater (Royal Danish Theatre) and made her stage debut there one year later. Her work on stage quickly received attention. Especially noted were her performances with Danish actor Poul Reumert. Throughout her career, Ipsen performed at the Royal Danish Theatre as well as the Dagmar Theater, The Folketeatret, and The Betty Nansen Theater. She also performed on stage in Sweden and Norway. Ipsen played almost 200 roles in the theater, the majority as lead actress, as well as 150 radio theater roles and four television parts.

In 1920, Ipsen made her film debut as a leading actress in Lavinen, directed by her third husband, Emanuel Gregers. She made films with Gregers in 1922 and 1923. Off and on, she acted in 12 films during her career. Her most noteworthy early performances were in big blustering comedies, such as the shrewish spinster Bollette in Bollettes Brudefærd or the Countess Danner in Gregers' Sørensen og Rasmussen.

Bodil Ipsen FileBodil Ipsenpng Wikimedia Commons

Ipsen became a director in 1942 and directed 10 films in 10 years. Although Ipsen's acting talent was showcased in big romantic comedies, her seat in the director's chair marked the development of classic Danish dark dramas and mysteries. Her debut film, which she co-directed with Lau Lauritzen Jr. was the 1942 dark psychological thriller Afsporet (Derailed), the first true Danish film noir. Two years later, Ipsen directed another two even more extreme noirs, Mordets Melodi (Melody of Murder), about a singer accused of serial murders, and Besættelse (Possession), a taut thriller about a man's erotic obsession with a young woman.

After Afsporet Ipsen collaborated with Lau Lauritzen Jr. on four more films. Their second film, De røde enge (The Red Meadows), about the Nazi occupation of Denmark during World War II, received the 1946 Grand Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. In 1950, Ipsen and Lauritzen again won acclaim for their film Café Paradis (Paradise Cafe). The harsh story about alcoholism is considered a masterpiece of Danish cinema, and for which Ipsen won her namesake award, the Bodil, named after her and fellow actress, Bodil Kjer. Two years later, Ipsen and Lauritzen again won the Bodil Award for Best Danish Film for Det Sande Ansigt (The True Face).

In 1960, at age 71, Ipsen was awarded the Bodil again, this time as Leading Actress of the Year for the film Tro, håb og trolddom. Ipsen retired afterwards. She died on 26 November 1964 in Copenhagen. The movie Bodil Ipsen og Filmen (Bodil Ipsen and the Film), released in 2006, is a portrait of her life and career.

Personal life

Ipsen's steady career on stage was offset by a volatile personal life. She was married four times. Ipsen was married the first time in 1910 with the actor Jacob Texière, but the marriage was dissolved within the same year. Then, in 1914, she married civil engineer H.H.O. Moltke, and they divorced after three years. Her marriage in 1919 with film director Emanuel Gregers lasted four years. Ipsen was married for a fourth time in 1932 to the journalist Ejnar Black. They remained together for 17 years until Black's death in 1949. After Black's death, Ipsen isolated herself outside of work, preferring the company of her assistant and housekeeper, Stella Jensen.

Filmography

Actress
1961
Fru Carrars geværer (TV Movie) as
Madame Perez
1960
Tro, håb og trolddom as
Bedstemor Gunhild
1958
Når mørket sænker sig (TV Movie) as
Mrs. Bramson
1957
Ingen tid til kærtegn as
Kvinde i rullestol
1956
De 23 dage (TV Movie) as
Leonora Christina
1954
De rider mod havet (TV Movie) as
Maurya (en gammel kvinde)
1942
The Trout as
Clara Møller
1941
Gaa med mig hjem as
Landsretssagfører fru Helene Hannøe
1940
Sorensen and Rasmussen as
Grevinde Danner
1938
Bolette's Bridal Shower as
Bolette Jensen
1935
Det gyldne smil as
Elsa Bruun
1932
Paustian's Watch as
Store Marie
1923
Love in Exile as
Emperess Katharina II
1922
Art and the Woman as
Naomi
1920
Lavinen as
Maria
1913
Et Syndens Barn (Short)
1913
Children of the Stage; or, When Love Speaks as
Leonie, skuespillerinde
Director
1951
The Face of Truth
1950
Café Paradis
1948
The Viking Watch of the Danish Seaman
1947
Bröllopsnatten
1945
Red Meadows
1944
Possession
1944
Mordets melodi
1943
Drama at the Castle
1942
En herre i kjole og hvidt
1942
Derailed
Archive Footage
2006
Bodil Ipsen og filmen (Documentary short) as
Self
1972
Bodil Ipsen - portræt af en genial skuespillerinde (TV Movie) as
Various

References

Bodil Ipsen Wikipedia