Beata Bergström | |
---|---|
Born |
Uddevalla |
August 13, 1921
Died | 12 October 2016 |
Nationality | Swedish |
Occupation | Photographer |
Years active | 1953–2016 |
Known for | Theatre photography and portraiture |
Hedvig Beata Marianne Bergström (née Björkman) was a Swedish photographer. She was born on 13 August 1921 in Uddevalla, Sweden and died on 12 October 2016. She is known for her portraits and dance and theatre images taken at the Royal Dramatic Theatre, Royal Swedish Opera, Vasa Theatre and other Stockholm theatres.
Bergström studied at the Otte Sköld painting school in the late 1940s and then worked as a photography apprentice. She started her career as a theatre photographer in 1953 when she took photographs of the Cramer Ballet at the Chat Noir in Oslo.
At the same time, she photographed a rehearsal at the Royal Dramatic Theatre of Olof Molander's Oresteia for the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter. This led to her working there for 30 years and a collaboration with Ingmar Bergman for about 10 years starting with Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. She continued to work freelance at a number of theatres and dance companies including the Royal Swedish Opera, Gamla Stan Theatre, the , Vasateatern, Uppsala's Little Theatre, and Folkteatern. She also worked with the Swedish magazines Industria and Vi. She has photographed numerous people in the Swedish theatrical scene including Ingmar Bergman,Anders Ek,Ernst-Hugo Järegård, Sif Ruud, Ulf Palme, Elsa-Marianne von Rosen, and Mimi Pollak.
Up until Bergström, theatrical photography was staged, whereby actors and sets were arranged in tableaux. Bergström changed this by having a more documentary approach, where she photographed actual rehearsals and performances.