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Lars Hjortsberg

Lars Hjortsberg
Lars Hjortsberg-1849.jpg
Lithography by Johan Cardon
Born Lars Hjortsberg
(1772-11-22)22 November 1772
Died 8 July 1843(1843-07-08) (aged 70)
Nyköping, Sweden
Spouse(s) Sofia Katarina di Dosmo

Lars Hjortsberg (22 November 1772 – 8 July 1843) was a Swedish actor. He is often called the greatest male actor in his country in the 19th century; he and Emilie Högquist are the best known Swedish actors from the first half of that century.

Lars Hjortsberg's father Laurentius (Lars) was employed at the court and his mother Maria Lovisa Schützer as a singer at the Opera; of their six children, two sons and two daughters where employed at the theatre or the Opera, and two of them was to become famous; Hedda Hjortsberg as a dancer, and Lars Hjortsberg as an actor.

Lars Hjortsberg was born in , and first appeared as a child actor at the Royal Swedish Opera in 1778, at the age of six, when he played an angel with a couple of lines at the celebration of the birth of the Crown Prince in Athalie. He was noticed by the theatrically interested king, Gustav III of Sweden, who saw a great dramatic talent in him, and also hired him at the royal court as a so-called garçon bleu, a common (non noble) page boy, reader and librarian. He was employed at the Opera in 1780, and appeared in a mute part as the brother of Cora in Cora och Alonzo by Naumann at the premier of the new Opera in 1782; in 1783–1785, he was a student of Caroline Frederikke Müller, and from 1785, he was a student in the French Theatre of Bollhuset under Monvel, like other Swedish actors such as Fredrique Löwen, Maria Franck and Inga Åberg, and in 1787, he was a student in Dramatens elevskola and a member of its troupe, which performed for the king the same year.

When the Royal Dramatic Theatre was founded in 1788, he was employed there, became a member of the board of directors and continued to be counted as one of the greatest talents there, a position he kept until his death. He continued to be employed at court until the death of the king; he accompanied king Gustav to Finland during the war in 1790, on his trip to Belgium in 1791, and read to him to amuse him at his death bed after the assassination. When the actors board of directors was replaced in 1803, the fame of Hjortsberg forced the directors, who were in general very strict with the actors, forced to tolerate him to criticize them. He quit his position at the theatre after the second strike of Ulrik Torsslow and Sara Torsslow in 1834, but he soon returned and gave his last performance in 1842. He died in Nyköping.


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