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Harriet Bosse

Harriet Sofie Bosse (19 February 1878 – 2 November 1961) was a Swedish–Norwegian actress. A celebrity in her day, Bosse is now most commonly remembered as the third wife of the playwright August Strindberg. Bosse began her career in a minor company run by her forceful older sister Alma Fahlstrøm in Kristiania (now Oslo, the capital of Norway). Having secured an engagement at the Royal Dramatic Theatre ("Dramaten"), the main drama venue of Sweden's capital Stockholm, Bosse caught the attention of Strindberg with her intelligent acting and exotic "oriental" appearance.

Harriet Bosse
Bosse as Indra's daughter at the 1907 première of A Dream Play (1902) by August Strindberg
Born
Harriet Sofie Bosse

(1878-02-19)19 February 1878
Died2 November 1961(1961-11-02) (aged 83)
Oslo, Norway
OccupationActress
Spouses
  • (m. 1901; div. 1904)
  • Gunnar Wingård [sv]
    (m. 1908; div. 1911)
  • (m. 1927; div. 1932)
Children2
Relatives

After a whirlwind courtship, which unfolds in detail in Strindberg's letters and diary, Strindberg and Bosse were married in 1901, when he was 52 and she 23. Strindberg wrote a number of major roles for Bosse during their short and stormy relationship, especially in 1900–01, a period of great creativity and productivity for him. Like his previous two marriages, the relationship failed as a result of Strindberg's jealousy, which some biographers have characterized as paranoid. The spectrum of Strindberg's feelings about Bosse, ranging from worship to rage, is reflected in the roles he wrote for her to play, or as portraits of her. Despite her real-life role as muse to Strindberg, she remained an independent artist.

Bosse married Swedish actor Anders Gunnar Wingård [sv] in 1908, and Swedish screen actor, director, and matinee idol Edvin Adolphson in 1927. All three of her marriages ended in divorce after a few years, leaving her with a daughter by Strindberg and a son by Wingård. On retiring after a high-profile acting career based in Stockholm, she returned to her roots in Oslo.

Early career edit

Bosse was born in Norway's capital Kristiania, today called Oslo, as the thirteenth of fourteen children of Anne-Marie and Johann Heinrich Bosse. Her German father was a publisher and bookseller, and his business led to the family's alternating residence in Kristiania and Stockholm, the capital of Sweden. Bosse was to experience some confusion of national identity throughout her life, and to take the 512 kilometres (318 mi) rail trip between the cities many times. A bold, independent child, she first made the journey alone when she was only six years old.[1]

Two of Bosse's older sisters, Alma (1863–1947) and Dagmar (1866–1954), were already successful performers when Harriet was a small child. Inspired by these role models, Harriet began her acting career in a Norwegian touring company run by her sister Alma and Alma's husband Johan Fahlstrøm (1867–1938). Invited to play Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, the eighteen-year-old Harriet reported in a letter to her sister Inez that she had been paralysed by stage-fright before the premiere, but had then taken delight in the performance, the curtain-calls, and the way people stared at her in the street the next day.[2] Alma was Harriet's first and only—rather authoritarian—acting teacher.[3][4] Their harmonious and sisterly teacher–pupil relationship became strained when Alma discovered that her husband Johan and Harriet were having an affair.[5] Both Bosse parents were now dead, and Harriet, ordered by Alma to leave, used a modest legacy from her father to finance studies in Stockholm, Copenhagen, and Paris.

The Paris stage—at that time in dynamic conflict between traditional and experimental production styles—was inspirational for Bosse and convinced her that the low-key realistic acting style in which she was training herself was the right choice.[6] Returning to Scandinavia, she was hesitant as to whether she should carve out a career in Stockholm, with its greater opportunities, or in Kristiania, to which she had closer emotional ties. In spite of the disadvantage of speaking Swedish with a Norwegian accent, Bosse let herself be persuaded by her opera-singer sister Dagmar to try her luck in Stockholm. She applied for a place at the Royal Dramatic Theatre ("Dramaten"), the main drama venue of Stockholm, governed by the conservative tastes of King Oscar II and his personal advisors.[7] After working hard at elocution lessons to improve her Swedish, which was Dramaten's condition for employing her, Bosse was eventually to become famous on the Swedish stage for her beautiful speaking voice and precise articulation.[8] Having trained her Swedish to a high level, she was engaged by Dramaten in 1899, where the sensation of the day was the innovative play Gustaf Vasa by August Strindberg.[9][10]

Marriage to August Strindberg edit

August Strindberg edit

Although Bosse was a successful professional, she is chiefly remembered as the third wife of Swedish dramatist August Strindberg (1849–1912).[11] Strindberg, an important influence on the development of modern drama, had become nationally known in the 1870s as an angry young socialist muckraker and had risen to fame with his satire on the Swedish establishment, The Red Room (1879).[12] In the 1890s, he had suffered a long and miserable psychotic interlude, known as the "Inferno Crisis", and, emerging from this ordeal, he remained marked by it.[13] He turned from naturalism to symbolism in his prolific literary output, and his convictions and interests at the turn of the twentieth century focused less on politics and more on theosophy, mysticism, and the occult. When Bosse met him in 1899–1900, he was, at age 51, at the height of his creative powers, his name "red-hot" on the stage.[14]

Strindberg had the reputation of a misogynist, something which all of his wives stoutly denied.[15] Bosse wrote in an unpublished statement which she left to her daughter with Strindberg, Anne-Marie: "During the years I knew and was married to Strindberg I saw only a completely natural, kind, honorable, faithful man—a 'gentleman'".[16] However, all of Strindberg's marriages were blighted by his jealousy and a sensitivity which has sometimes been considered paranoid and delusional.[17]

Courtship edit

 
Bosse as Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream. After the marriage was over, Strindberg kept a life-size copy of this photo mounted on a wall behind a drapery.[18]

Bosse later published Strindberg's letters from their courtship and marriage. Incidents narrated in those letters and in Bosse's own interspersed comments have been analysed at length by biographers and psychiatrists, and have become part of the "Strindberg legend".[19] Even before their first meeting, Bosse had been inspired by the newness and freshness of Strindberg's pioneering plays; an iconoclast and radical with two turbulent marriages already behind him presented an intriguing and irresistible mix to her.[20][21]

Strindberg was susceptible to strong, independent career women, as well as to dainty, delicate-looking young girls; like his first and second wives—Siri von Essen and Frida Uhl—Bosse combined these qualities.[22] He was entranced when he saw the dark, exotic-looking, petite twenty-two-year-old Bosse (who was often cast in sprite roles or what were conceptualized as "Oriental" roles[23]) play her first major part, an impish Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream.[24] He immediately picked her out as a suitable actress for the part of The Lady in his coming play To Damascus, and invited her to his bachelor establishment to discuss the role. At this famous first meeting, Strindberg, according to Bosse's narrative of the event, met her at the door all smiles and charm.[25] Offering her wine, flowers, and beautifully arranged fruit, he shared with her his fascination with alchemy, showing her a golden brown mixture he told her was gold he had made.[26] When she got up to leave, Bosse claims Strindberg asked for the feather in her hat to use for writing his plays. Bosse gave it to him, and he used this feather, with a steel nib insert, to write all his dramas during their marriage. It is now in the Strindberg Museum in Stockholm.[27]

Strindberg wooed Bosse by sending her books about theosophy and the occult, by attempting to mould her mind, and by furthering her career. Throwing himself into writing plays with central parts he considered suitable for her, he tried to persuade her to act them, and the Dramaten management to cast her in them. Bosse asserts in her edition of the Letters that she tended to hang back, as did the management, being in agreement that she lacked the experience for major and complex roles. Strindberg, a power in the theatre, nevertheless often prevailed. The role of Eleonora in Easter (1901), which intimidated Bosse by its sensitivity and delicacy,[28] but which she finally undertook to play, turned out to be Bosse's most successful and beloved role, and a turning-point in Bosse's and Strindberg's relationship. They became engaged in March 1901, during the rehearsals of Easter, in what in Bosse's narrative may be the best-known incident of the Strindberg legend.[29] Bosse relates how she went to see Strindberg to ask him to give the part to a more experienced actress, but he assured her she would be perfect for it. "Then he placed his hands on my shoulders, looked at me long and ardently, and asked: 'Would you like to have a little child with me, Miss Bosse?' I made a curtsey and answered, as though hypnotized: 'Yes, thank you!'—and we were engaged."[30]

Marriage and divorce edit

Bosse and Strindberg were married on 6 May 1901. Strindberg insisted that Bosse bring none of her possessions to the home he had furnished for her, creating a "setting in which to nurture and dominate her".[31] In this setting, his taste in interior decoration was revealed to be Oscarian and old-fashioned, with pedestals, aspidistras, and dining-room furniture in hideous imitation of German renaissance, to Bosse's modern judgment.[32]

 
Portrait painting of Strindberg by Richard Bergh, 1905

Striving towards the life beyond, Strindberg explained, he could permit nothing in the apartment that would lead the thoughts towards the earthly and material. In her comments in the Letters, Bosse described with loyalty and affection Strindberg's protectiveness and his efforts to bring his young wife with him along his own spiritual paths; nevertheless, she chafed under these efforts, pointing out that she herself, at 22, was not even remotely finished with this world.[33] Increasingly agoraphobic, Strindberg attempted to overcome his anxieties and allow his young wife the summer excursions she longed for. He planned sunny drives in hired victorias, but often the mystical "Powers" which governed him intervened. A crisis came as early as June 1901, when Strindberg arranged, and then at the last moment called off, a honeymoon trip to Germany and Switzerland. Bosse wrote in the Letters that she had nothing to do but stay at home and choke down the tears while Strindberg attempted consolation by giving her a Baedeker "to read a trip in".[34]

 
Bosse with Anne-Marie, aged six months

The cancelled journey was the beginning of the end. A crying, defiant Bosse went off by herself to the seaside resort Hornbæk in Denmark, a much shorter trip, but to her senses, a delightfully refreshing one. There, she was soon followed by Strindberg's letters, full of agonized remorse at having given her pain, and then by Strindberg himself, steeling himself to bear the social life Bosse relished. However, the relationship quickly foundered on jealousy and suspicion, as when Strindberg struck a photographer over the head with his stick, unable to endure any attention to Bosse.[35] In August, when Bosse discovered that she was pregnant, even Strindberg's delight (he was a fond parent of the four children of his previous marriages) could not save a marriage full of distrust and accusation. This was illustrated in Strindberg's increasingly frantic letters to Bosse[36] When their daughter Anne-Marie was born on 25 March 1902, they were already living apart. "For the sake of us both it is best that I do not return", wrote Bosse in a letter to Strindberg. "A continuation of life together with suspicion of every word, every act of mine, would be the end of me."[37] At her insistence, Strindberg began divorce proceedings.

Strindberg's roles for Bosse edit

The relationship of Strindberg and Bosse was highly dramatic. Strindberg would lurch back and forth from adoration of Bosse as the regenerator of his creativity ("lovely, amiable, and kind")[38] to a wild jealousy (calling her "a small, nasty woman", "evil", "stupid", "black", "arrogant", "venomous", and "whore").[39] His letters show that Bosse inspired several important characters in his plays, especially during the course of 1901, and that he manipulated her by promising to pull strings so that she could play them.[40] During the brief, intense, creative 1901 period, the roles Strindberg wrote as artistic vehicles for Bosse, or that were based on their relationship, reflect this combination of adoration and "suspicion of every word, every act". Carla Waal counts eight minor and six major roles written for Bosse to act, or as portraits of her, several of them classics of Western theatre history. The major roles enumerated by Waal are The Lady in To Damascus (1900; mainly already written when Bosse and Strindberg met, but used between them to enhance their intimacy); Eleonora in Easter (1901; modelled on Strindberg's sister Elisabeth, but intended for Bosse to star in); Henriette in Crimes and Crimes (1901); Swan White in Swan White (1901); Christina in Queen Christina (1901); and Indra's daughter in A Dream Play (1902).[41] The years refer to dates of publication; Bosse never played in Swan White, even though Strindberg kept proposing it, and though she was many years later to describe this play as Strindberg's wedding present to her.[42]

 
Bosse as the Lady in the première of To Damascus at the Royal Theatre in 1900.

Strindberg claimed that Queen Christina was an "explanation" of Bosse's character as being that of an actress in real life, flirtatious and deceitful.[43] In his influential Strindberg biography, Lagercrantz describes this play as a synopsis of the entire course of the Bosse–Strindberg marriage. He sees the courtiers as representing various stages of Strindberg's own emotions: Tott, in the first glow of love; de la Gardie, betrayed but loyal; Oxenstierna, who has rejected her. Each of the three men has words to speak which Strindberg himself had spoken to Bosse.[44]

A Dream Play is positioned at the median of Strindberg's series of portrayals of his own marriage, the Bosse role imbued with both light and darkness. With its associative dream structure, this play is a milestone of modernist drama, described by Strindberg as a lawless reflection of The Dreamer's (Strindberg's) consciousness, limited only by his imagination which "spins and weaves new patterns… on an insignificant basis of reality".[45] Agnes, played by and representing Bosse, is the daughter of the Vedic god Indra, descending to earth to observe human life and bring its disappointments to the attention of her divine father. The "Oriental" aspect of the play is based on Bosse's dark, exotic looks.[46] Yet she is also drawn into mere humanity and into a claustrophobic marriage to The Lawyer, one of the versions of The Dreamer and, thereby, of Strindberg. Shut up indoors by a possessive husband, Agnes can not breathe; she despondently watches the servant working to exclude light and air from the house by pasting insulating strips of paper along the windows' edges. Recognizably, the "insignificant basis of reality" of Agnes' marriage to The Lawyer is the frustration of the newly married Bosse, yearning for fresh air, sunshine, and travel but fobbed off with a Baedeker.[47]

Independence edit

 
Bosse as Steinunn in Jóhann Sigurjónsson's The Wish, 1917

Both before and after the divorce from Strindberg, Bosse was a Stockholm celebrity in her own right.[48] Her independence and self-supporting status gained her a reputation for being strong-willed and opinionated, insisting on, and receiving, high pay and significant roles. She left Dramaten with its conventional repertoire and began working at Albert Ranft's Swedish Theatre, where she and the skilful but more modest actor (Anders) Gunnar Wingård [sv] (1878–1912) formed a popular co-star team.[49] She travelled frequently, particularly for guest performances in Helsinki, leaving little Anne-Marie with Strindberg, a competent and affectionate father. In 1907, Bosse made theatrical history as Indra's daughter in Strindberg's epoch-making Dream Play. She and Strindberg met weekly for dinner at his house, and remained lovers until she severed connections in preparation for her marriage with Gunnar Wingård in 1908.[50] In 1909 the Wingårds had a son, Bo. This marriage was also brief, ending in divorce in 1912. According to rumour, the cause of the divorce was Wingård's infidelity. However, Strindberg also heard gossip that Wingård's large debts threatened Bosse's finances.[51]

In 1911, a divorced woman with two children to care for and support, Bosse returned to Dramaten. Strindberg was at that time fatally ill with cancer; he died on 14 May 1912. 1912 was altogether a year of death and disaster for the Bosse and Strindberg families: Alma Fahlstrøm's son Arne went down with the Titanic on 15 April; Strindberg's first wife Siri von Essen died later the same month; von Essen's and Strindberg's daughter Greta, a promising young actress, was killed in a train crash in June; and Bosse's divorced husband Gunnar Wingård shot himself on 7 October. Strindberg's funeral was a national event. Gunnar Wingård, a popular and charming actor, was also the subject of public grief. Throughout these shattering events, which left both her children fatherless, Bosse kept up her busy schedule, apart from a few days off, distraught and grief-stricken, after Wingård's suicide. For months after it, she received anonymous letters and threatening phone-calls, blaming her for Wingård's depression and death.[52]

Bosse's third marriage, 1927–32, was to Edvin Adolphson (1893–1979), fifteen years her junior. Adolphson had abandoned his stage career in order to become instead a film director and one of the best-known Swedish film actors, a ruggedly handsome matinée idol whose screen persona Nils Beyer referred to as a combination of "apache, gangster and gigolo".[53]

Bosse made two films, ambitiously shot and directed and based on novels by well-known writers. The artistic achievement of Sons of Ingmar (1919) has been highly praised. Directed by and co-starring Victor Sjöström, it was based on a novel by Swedish Nobel Prize winner Selma Lagerlöf; many years later, Ingmar Bergman referred to Sons of Ingmar as a "magnificent, remarkable film" and acknowledged his own debt to Sjöström. Bosse, who played the female lead Brita, called Sons of Ingmar "the only worthwhile Swedish film I was involved in." However, the film failed to give her career the kind of fresh start that the Swedish film industry had given Edvin Adolphson, and it was seventeen years before she made another film. This was Bombi Bitt and I (1936), her only talkie, based on Fritiof Nilsson Piraten's popular first novel with the same title and directed by Gösta Rodin. Bombi Bitt was a successful, though more lightweight, production with a smaller Bosse role ("Franskan").[54]

Retirement edit

After many years of ambitious and successful free-lance acting, Bosse found her options narrowing in the 1930s. The Great Depression brought her economic hardship, and, even though she looked younger than her age, most important women's roles were out of her age range. Her technique was still often praised, but also sometimes perceived as old-fashioned and mannered, in comparison with the more ensemble-oriented style of the times.[55] Finding herself unneeded by any Swedish repertory theatre, she only managed to return as a member of Dramaten by means of skilful persuasion and pointed reminders of her long history there. A humble employee at a humble salary, she played only fifteen roles, all minor, during her last ten years at Dramaten, 1933–43.[56]

Retiring from the stage during World War II, Bosse considered moving back to Norway's capital Oslo, the home of her childhood and youth. Both her children had settled there. The move was delayed for ten years, during which she travelled whenever possible, and when it took place in 1955, she perceived it to be a mistake. Her brother Ewald's death in 1956 left her the only survivor of the fourteen children of Anne-Marie and Johann Heinrich Bosse. "How I long desperately for Stockholm", she wrote to a friend in 1958. "My whole life is there."[57] She became chronically melancholy, enduring failing health and bitter memories of the final phase of her career at Dramaten.[58] She died on 2 November 1961 in Oslo.[59]

Bosse always guarded her privacy, so much so that the memoir she wrote of her life with Strindberg was deemed to be too uninterestingly discreet to be publishable.[60]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Waal, 2.
  2. ^ Waal, 4–5.
  3. ^ Olof Molander, iconic director at Dramaten, in Waal, 8.
  4. ^ Bosse quoted in Waal, 8: "I had great respect for Alma. Although she was always right when she commented on something, it wasn't easy... to hear her shouting at me... as I stood grieving, bent over my dear Axel's grave in Adam Oehlenschläger's Axel and Valborg, 'Harriet, don't stand there looking like a boiled shrimp'."
  5. ^ Waal, 10.
  6. ^ Waal, 12–5.
  7. ^ Waal, 18.
  8. ^ Waal, 22–3.
  9. ^ Bosse, Letters of Strindberg, p. 13.
  10. ^ Lagercrantz, 295.
  11. ^ Waal, 234–235.
  12. ^ Strindberg on Drama and Theatre, 11.
  13. ^ Brandell, Strindbergs infernokris.
  14. ^ Lagercrantz, 295.
  15. ^ Martinus, 11.
  16. ^ Translated by Carla Waal. Waal, 246.
  17. ^ Lagercrantz, 207, 221.
  18. ^ Waal, 30, 65.
  19. ^ Waal, 28–31.
  20. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 14.
  21. ^ Waal, 25–30.
  22. ^ Martinus, 195; Waal, 204.
  23. ^ Waal, 22.
  24. ^ Letters, 13–18.
  25. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 16.
  26. ^ Comment by Bosse in Letters, 16.
  27. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 17.
  28. ^ Strindberg (25 February 1901), "Letter to Bosse", Letters, p. 23.
  29. ^ Lagercrantz, 303: "…the question quoted even in brief accounts of his life: 'Miss Bosse, will you have a little child with me?'"
  30. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 26.
  31. ^ Waal, 30, on the basis of Strindberg's letters.
  32. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 40.
  33. ^ Bosse, Letters, pp. 41–2.
  34. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 42.
  35. ^ Letters, 45–6.
  36. ^ "28–9 August 1901", Letters, pp. 49–55.
  37. ^ Letters, 55.
  38. ^ Lagercrantz, 302.
  39. ^ Lagercrantz, 348.
  40. ^ Waal, 195.
  41. ^ Waal, 221–34.
  42. ^ Waal, 160.
  43. ^ Waal, 233.
  44. ^ Lagercrantz, 310–11.
  45. ^ Strindberg, "Note", Strindberg on Drama and Theatre, p. 95.
  46. ^ Bosse, Letters, p. 41, That he made the part the daughter of an Eastern God came about through his indulging in fantasies about my Eastern origin. 'You are from Java,' he often used to say to me.
  47. ^ Waal, 229.
  48. ^ Waal, 45–84.
  49. ^ Waal, 54–68.
  50. ^ Strindberg on Drama and Theatre, 92.
  51. ^ Waal, 66.
  52. ^ Waal, 70–72.
  53. ^ Skådespelare, 23, in Waal, 149.
  54. ^ Waal, 126–32.
  55. ^ Waal, 84.
  56. ^ Waal, 174.
  57. ^ Waal, 189.
  58. ^ Waal, 187–89.
  59. ^ Haag, John (2002). "Bosse, Harriet (1878–1961)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Gale Research.
  60. ^ Waal, 191–92.

References edit

  • Beyer, Nils (1945). Skådespelare. Stockholm: Kooperative Förbundets bokförlag. (in Swedish)
  • Brandell, Gunnar (1950). Strindbergs infernokris. Stockholm: Bonniers. (in Swedish)
  • Lagercrantz, Olof (1979; translated from Swedish by Anselm Hollo, 1984). August Strindberg. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Martinus, Eivor (2001). Strindberg and Love. Oxford: Amber Lane Press.
  • Paulson, Arvid (ed. and translated, 1959). Letters of Strindberg to Harriet Bosse. New York: Thomas Nelson and Sons.
  • Strindberg on Drama and Theatre: A Source Book. (Selected, translated and edited by Egil Törnqvist and Birgitta Steene, 2007). Amsterdam University Press.
  • Waal, Carla (1990). Harriet Bosse: Strindberg's Muse and Interpreter. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois Univ. Press.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Harriet Bosse at IMDb
  • The Strindberg Museum in Stockholm

harriet, bosse, harriet, sofie, bosse, february, 1878, november, 1961, swedish, norwegian, actress, celebrity, bosse, most, commonly, remembered, third, wife, playwright, august, strindberg, bosse, began, career, minor, company, forceful, older, sister, alma, . Harriet Sofie Bosse 19 February 1878 2 November 1961 was a Swedish Norwegian actress A celebrity in her day Bosse is now most commonly remembered as the third wife of the playwright August Strindberg Bosse began her career in a minor company run by her forceful older sister Alma Fahlstrom in Kristiania now Oslo the capital of Norway Having secured an engagement at the Royal Dramatic Theatre Dramaten the main drama venue of Sweden s capital Stockholm Bosse caught the attention of Strindberg with her intelligent acting and exotic oriental appearance Harriet BosseBosse as Indra s daughter at the 1907 premiere of A Dream Play 1902 by August StrindbergBornHarriet Sofie Bosse 1878 02 19 19 February 1878Kristiania United Kingdoms of Sweden and NorwayDied2 November 1961 1961 11 02 aged 83 Oslo NorwayOccupationActressSpousesAugust Strindberg m 1901 div 1904 wbr Gunnar Wingard sv m 1908 div 1911 wbr Edvin Adolphson m 1927 div 1932 wbr Children2RelativesAlma Fahlstrom sister Dagmar Moller sister Ewald Bosse brother After a whirlwind courtship which unfolds in detail in Strindberg s letters and diary Strindberg and Bosse were married in 1901 when he was 52 and she 23 Strindberg wrote a number of major roles for Bosse during their short and stormy relationship especially in 1900 01 a period of great creativity and productivity for him Like his previous two marriages the relationship failed as a result of Strindberg s jealousy which some biographers have characterized as paranoid The spectrum of Strindberg s feelings about Bosse ranging from worship to rage is reflected in the roles he wrote for her to play or as portraits of her Despite her real life role as muse to Strindberg she remained an independent artist Bosse married Swedish actor Anders Gunnar Wingard sv in 1908 and Swedish screen actor director and matinee idol Edvin Adolphson in 1927 All three of her marriages ended in divorce after a few years leaving her with a daughter by Strindberg and a son by Wingard On retiring after a high profile acting career based in Stockholm she returned to her roots in Oslo Contents 1 Early career 2 Marriage to August Strindberg 2 1 August Strindberg 2 2 Courtship 2 3 Marriage and divorce 2 4 Strindberg s roles for Bosse 3 Independence 4 Retirement 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly career editBosse was born in Norway s capital Kristiania today called Oslo as the thirteenth of fourteen children of Anne Marie and Johann Heinrich Bosse Her German father was a publisher and bookseller and his business led to the family s alternating residence in Kristiania and Stockholm the capital of Sweden Bosse was to experience some confusion of national identity throughout her life and to take the 512 kilometres 318 mi rail trip between the cities many times A bold independent child she first made the journey alone when she was only six years old 1 Two of Bosse s older sisters Alma 1863 1947 and Dagmar 1866 1954 were already successful performers when Harriet was a small child Inspired by these role models Harriet began her acting career in a Norwegian touring company run by her sister Alma and Alma s husband Johan Fahlstrom 1867 1938 Invited to play Juliet in Romeo and Juliet the eighteen year old Harriet reported in a letter to her sister Inez that she had been paralysed by stage fright before the premiere but had then taken delight in the performance the curtain calls and the way people stared at her in the street the next day 2 Alma was Harriet s first and only rather authoritarian acting teacher 3 4 Their harmonious and sisterly teacher pupil relationship became strained when Alma discovered that her husband Johan and Harriet were having an affair 5 Both Bosse parents were now dead and Harriet ordered by Alma to leave used a modest legacy from her father to finance studies in Stockholm Copenhagen and Paris The Paris stage at that time in dynamic conflict between traditional and experimental production styles was inspirational for Bosse and convinced her that the low key realistic acting style in which she was training herself was the right choice 6 Returning to Scandinavia she was hesitant as to whether she should carve out a career in Stockholm with its greater opportunities or in Kristiania to which she had closer emotional ties In spite of the disadvantage of speaking Swedish with a Norwegian accent Bosse let herself be persuaded by her opera singer sister Dagmar to try her luck in Stockholm She applied for a place at the Royal Dramatic Theatre Dramaten the main drama venue of Stockholm governed by the conservative tastes of King Oscar II and his personal advisors 7 After working hard at elocution lessons to improve her Swedish which was Dramaten s condition for employing her Bosse was eventually to become famous on the Swedish stage for her beautiful speaking voice and precise articulation 8 Having trained her Swedish to a high level she was engaged by Dramaten in 1899 where the sensation of the day was the innovative play Gustaf Vasa by August Strindberg 9 10 Marriage to August Strindberg editAugust Strindberg edit Main article August Strindberg Although Bosse was a successful professional she is chiefly remembered as the third wife of Swedish dramatist August Strindberg 1849 1912 11 Strindberg an important influence on the development of modern drama had become nationally known in the 1870s as an angry young socialist muckraker and had risen to fame with his satire on the Swedish establishment The Red Room 1879 12 In the 1890s he had suffered a long and miserable psychotic interlude known as the Inferno Crisis and emerging from this ordeal he remained marked by it 13 He turned from naturalism to symbolism in his prolific literary output and his convictions and interests at the turn of the twentieth century focused less on politics and more on theosophy mysticism and the occult When Bosse met him in 1899 1900 he was at age 51 at the height of his creative powers his name red hot on the stage 14 Strindberg had the reputation of a misogynist something which all of his wives stoutly denied 15 Bosse wrote in an unpublished statement which she left to her daughter with Strindberg Anne Marie During the years I knew and was married to Strindberg I saw only a completely natural kind honorable faithful man a gentleman 16 However all of Strindberg s marriages were blighted by his jealousy and a sensitivity which has sometimes been considered paranoid and delusional 17 Courtship edit nbsp Bosse as Puck in A Midsummer Night s Dream After the marriage was over Strindberg kept a life size copy of this photo mounted on a wall behind a drapery 18 Bosse later published Strindberg s letters from their courtship and marriage Incidents narrated in those letters and in Bosse s own interspersed comments have been analysed at length by biographers and psychiatrists and have become part of the Strindberg legend 19 Even before their first meeting Bosse had been inspired by the newness and freshness of Strindberg s pioneering plays an iconoclast and radical with two turbulent marriages already behind him presented an intriguing and irresistible mix to her 20 21 Strindberg was susceptible to strong independent career women as well as to dainty delicate looking young girls like his first and second wives Siri von Essen and Frida Uhl Bosse combined these qualities 22 He was entranced when he saw the dark exotic looking petite twenty two year old Bosse who was often cast in sprite roles or what were conceptualized as Oriental roles 23 play her first major part an impish Puck in A Midsummer Night s Dream 24 He immediately picked her out as a suitable actress for the part of The Lady in his coming play To Damascus and invited her to his bachelor establishment to discuss the role At this famous first meeting Strindberg according to Bosse s narrative of the event met her at the door all smiles and charm 25 Offering her wine flowers and beautifully arranged fruit he shared with her his fascination with alchemy showing her a golden brown mixture he told her was gold he had made 26 When she got up to leave Bosse claims Strindberg asked for the feather in her hat to use for writing his plays Bosse gave it to him and he used this feather with a steel nib insert to write all his dramas during their marriage It is now in the Strindberg Museum in Stockholm 27 Strindberg wooed Bosse by sending her books about theosophy and the occult by attempting to mould her mind and by furthering her career Throwing himself into writing plays with central parts he considered suitable for her he tried to persuade her to act them and the Dramaten management to cast her in them Bosse asserts in her edition of the Letters that she tended to hang back as did the management being in agreement that she lacked the experience for major and complex roles Strindberg a power in the theatre nevertheless often prevailed The role of Eleonora in Easter 1901 which intimidated Bosse by its sensitivity and delicacy 28 but which she finally undertook to play turned out to be Bosse s most successful and beloved role and a turning point in Bosse s and Strindberg s relationship They became engaged in March 1901 during the rehearsals of Easter in what in Bosse s narrative may be the best known incident of the Strindberg legend 29 Bosse relates how she went to see Strindberg to ask him to give the part to a more experienced actress but he assured her she would be perfect for it Then he placed his hands on my shoulders looked at me long and ardently and asked Would you like to have a little child with me Miss Bosse I made a curtsey and answered as though hypnotized Yes thank you and we were engaged 30 Marriage and divorce edit Bosse and Strindberg were married on 6 May 1901 Strindberg insisted that Bosse bring none of her possessions to the home he had furnished for her creating a setting in which to nurture and dominate her 31 In this setting his taste in interior decoration was revealed to be Oscarian and old fashioned with pedestals aspidistras and dining room furniture in hideous imitation of German renaissance to Bosse s modern judgment 32 nbsp Portrait painting of Strindberg by Richard Bergh 1905Striving towards the life beyond Strindberg explained he could permit nothing in the apartment that would lead the thoughts towards the earthly and material In her comments in the Letters Bosse described with loyalty and affection Strindberg s protectiveness and his efforts to bring his young wife with him along his own spiritual paths nevertheless she chafed under these efforts pointing out that she herself at 22 was not even remotely finished with this world 33 Increasingly agoraphobic Strindberg attempted to overcome his anxieties and allow his young wife the summer excursions she longed for He planned sunny drives in hired victorias but often the mystical Powers which governed him intervened A crisis came as early as June 1901 when Strindberg arranged and then at the last moment called off a honeymoon trip to Germany and Switzerland Bosse wrote in the Letters that she had nothing to do but stay at home and choke down the tears while Strindberg attempted consolation by giving her a Baedeker to read a trip in 34 nbsp Bosse with Anne Marie aged six monthsThe cancelled journey was the beginning of the end A crying defiant Bosse went off by herself to the seaside resort Hornbaek in Denmark a much shorter trip but to her senses a delightfully refreshing one There she was soon followed by Strindberg s letters full of agonized remorse at having given her pain and then by Strindberg himself steeling himself to bear the social life Bosse relished However the relationship quickly foundered on jealousy and suspicion as when Strindberg struck a photographer over the head with his stick unable to endure any attention to Bosse 35 In August when Bosse discovered that she was pregnant even Strindberg s delight he was a fond parent of the four children of his previous marriages could not save a marriage full of distrust and accusation This was illustrated in Strindberg s increasingly frantic letters to Bosse 36 When their daughter Anne Marie was born on 25 March 1902 they were already living apart For the sake of us both it is best that I do not return wrote Bosse in a letter to Strindberg A continuation of life together with suspicion of every word every act of mine would be the end of me 37 At her insistence Strindberg began divorce proceedings Strindberg s roles for Bosse edit The relationship of Strindberg and Bosse was highly dramatic Strindberg would lurch back and forth from adoration of Bosse as the regenerator of his creativity lovely amiable and kind 38 to a wild jealousy calling her a small nasty woman evil stupid black arrogant venomous and whore 39 His letters show that Bosse inspired several important characters in his plays especially during the course of 1901 and that he manipulated her by promising to pull strings so that she could play them 40 During the brief intense creative 1901 period the roles Strindberg wrote as artistic vehicles for Bosse or that were based on their relationship reflect this combination of adoration and suspicion of every word every act Carla Waal counts eight minor and six major roles written for Bosse to act or as portraits of her several of them classics of Western theatre history The major roles enumerated by Waal are The Lady in To Damascus 1900 mainly already written when Bosse and Strindberg met but used between them to enhance their intimacy Eleonora in Easter 1901 modelled on Strindberg s sister Elisabeth but intended for Bosse to star in Henriette in Crimes and Crimes 1901 Swan White in Swan White 1901 Christina in Queen Christina 1901 and Indra s daughter in A Dream Play 1902 41 The years refer to dates of publication Bosse never played in Swan White even though Strindberg kept proposing it and though she was many years later to describe this play as Strindberg s wedding present to her 42 nbsp Bosse as the Lady in the premiere of To Damascus at the Royal Theatre in 1900 Strindberg claimed that Queen Christina was an explanation of Bosse s character as being that of an actress in real life flirtatious and deceitful 43 In his influential Strindberg biography Lagercrantz describes this play as a synopsis of the entire course of the Bosse Strindberg marriage He sees the courtiers as representing various stages of Strindberg s own emotions Tott in the first glow of love de la Gardie betrayed but loyal Oxenstierna who has rejected her Each of the three men has words to speak which Strindberg himself had spoken to Bosse 44 A Dream Play is positioned at the median of Strindberg s series of portrayals of his own marriage the Bosse role imbued with both light and darkness With its associative dream structure this play is a milestone of modernist drama described by Strindberg as a lawless reflection of The Dreamer s Strindberg s consciousness limited only by his imagination which spins and weaves new patterns on an insignificant basis of reality 45 Agnes played by and representing Bosse is the daughter of the Vedic god Indra descending to earth to observe human life and bring its disappointments to the attention of her divine father The Oriental aspect of the play is based on Bosse s dark exotic looks 46 Yet she is also drawn into mere humanity and into a claustrophobic marriage to The Lawyer one of the versions of The Dreamer and thereby of Strindberg Shut up indoors by a possessive husband Agnes can not breathe she despondently watches the servant working to exclude light and air from the house by pasting insulating strips of paper along the windows edges Recognizably the insignificant basis of reality of Agnes marriage to The Lawyer is the frustration of the newly married Bosse yearning for fresh air sunshine and travel but fobbed off with a Baedeker 47 Independence edit nbsp Bosse as Steinunn in Johann Sigurjonsson s The Wish 1917Both before and after the divorce from Strindberg Bosse was a Stockholm celebrity in her own right 48 Her independence and self supporting status gained her a reputation for being strong willed and opinionated insisting on and receiving high pay and significant roles She left Dramaten with its conventional repertoire and began working at Albert Ranft s Swedish Theatre where she and the skilful but more modest actor Anders Gunnar Wingard sv 1878 1912 formed a popular co star team 49 She travelled frequently particularly for guest performances in Helsinki leaving little Anne Marie with Strindberg a competent and affectionate father In 1907 Bosse made theatrical history as Indra s daughter in Strindberg s epoch making Dream Play She and Strindberg met weekly for dinner at his house and remained lovers until she severed connections in preparation for her marriage with Gunnar Wingard in 1908 50 In 1909 the Wingards had a son Bo This marriage was also brief ending in divorce in 1912 According to rumour the cause of the divorce was Wingard s infidelity However Strindberg also heard gossip that Wingard s large debts threatened Bosse s finances 51 In 1911 a divorced woman with two children to care for and support Bosse returned to Dramaten Strindberg was at that time fatally ill with cancer he died on 14 May 1912 1912 was altogether a year of death and disaster for the Bosse and Strindberg families Alma Fahlstrom s son Arne went down with the Titanic on 15 April Strindberg s first wife Siri von Essen died later the same month von Essen s and Strindberg s daughter Greta a promising young actress was killed in a train crash in June and Bosse s divorced husband Gunnar Wingard shot himself on 7 October Strindberg s funeral was a national event Gunnar Wingard a popular and charming actor was also the subject of public grief Throughout these shattering events which left both her children fatherless Bosse kept up her busy schedule apart from a few days off distraught and grief stricken after Wingard s suicide For months after it she received anonymous letters and threatening phone calls blaming her for Wingard s depression and death 52 Bosse s third marriage 1927 32 was to Edvin Adolphson 1893 1979 fifteen years her junior Adolphson had abandoned his stage career in order to become instead a film director and one of the best known Swedish film actors a ruggedly handsome matinee idol whose screen persona Nils Beyer referred to as a combination of apache gangster and gigolo 53 Bosse made two films ambitiously shot and directed and based on novels by well known writers The artistic achievement of Sons of Ingmar 1919 has been highly praised Directed by and co starring Victor Sjostrom it was based on a novel by Swedish Nobel Prize winner Selma Lagerlof many years later Ingmar Bergman referred to Sons of Ingmar as a magnificent remarkable film and acknowledged his own debt to Sjostrom Bosse who played the female lead Brita called Sons of Ingmar the only worthwhile Swedish film I was involved in However the film failed to give her career the kind of fresh start that the Swedish film industry had given Edvin Adolphson and it was seventeen years before she made another film This was Bombi Bitt and I 1936 her only talkie based on Fritiof Nilsson Piraten s popular first novel with the same title and directed by Gosta Rodin Bombi Bitt was a successful though more lightweight production with a smaller Bosse role Franskan 54 Retirement editAfter many years of ambitious and successful free lance acting Bosse found her options narrowing in the 1930s The Great Depression brought her economic hardship and even though she looked younger than her age most important women s roles were out of her age range Her technique was still often praised but also sometimes perceived as old fashioned and mannered in comparison with the more ensemble oriented style of the times 55 Finding herself unneeded by any Swedish repertory theatre she only managed to return as a member of Dramaten by means of skilful persuasion and pointed reminders of her long history there A humble employee at a humble salary she played only fifteen roles all minor during her last ten years at Dramaten 1933 43 56 Retiring from the stage during World War II Bosse considered moving back to Norway s capital Oslo the home of her childhood and youth Both her children had settled there The move was delayed for ten years during which she travelled whenever possible and when it took place in 1955 she perceived it to be a mistake Her brother Ewald s death in 1956 left her the only survivor of the fourteen children of Anne Marie and Johann Heinrich Bosse How I long desperately for Stockholm she wrote to a friend in 1958 My whole life is there 57 She became chronically melancholy enduring failing health and bitter memories of the final phase of her career at Dramaten 58 She died on 2 November 1961 in Oslo 59 Bosse always guarded her privacy so much so that the memoir she wrote of her life with Strindberg was deemed to be too uninterestingly discreet to be publishable 60 Notes edit Waal 2 Waal 4 5 Olof Molander iconic director at Dramaten in Waal 8 Bosse quoted in Waal 8 I had great respect for Alma Although she was always right when she commented on something it wasn t easy to hear her shouting at me as I stood grieving bent over my dear Axel s grave in Adam Oehlenschlager s Axel and Valborg Harriet don t stand there looking like a boiled shrimp Waal 10 Waal 12 5 Waal 18 Waal 22 3 Bosse Letters of Strindberg p 13 Lagercrantz 295 Waal 234 235 Strindberg on Drama and Theatre 11 Brandell Strindbergs infernokris Lagercrantz 295 Martinus 11 Translated by Carla Waal Waal 246 Lagercrantz 207 221 Waal 30 65 Waal 28 31 Bosse Letters p 14 Waal 25 30 Martinus 195 Waal 204 Waal 22 Letters 13 18 Bosse Letters p 16 Comment by Bosse in Letters 16 Bosse Letters p 17 Strindberg 25 February 1901 Letter to Bosse Letters p 23 Lagercrantz 303 the question quoted even in brief accounts of his life Miss Bosse will you have a little child with me Bosse Letters p 26 Waal 30 on the basis of Strindberg s letters Bosse Letters p 40 Bosse Letters pp 41 2 Bosse Letters p 42 Letters 45 6 28 9 August 1901 Letters pp 49 55 Letters 55 Lagercrantz 302 Lagercrantz 348 Waal 195 Waal 221 34 Waal 160 Waal 233 Lagercrantz 310 11 Strindberg Note Strindberg on Drama and Theatre p 95 Bosse Letters p 41 That he made the part the daughter of an Eastern God came about through his indulging in fantasies about my Eastern origin You are from Java he often used to say to me Waal 229 Waal 45 84 Waal 54 68 Strindberg on Drama and Theatre 92 Waal 66 Waal 70 72 Skadespelare 23 in Waal 149 Waal 126 32 Waal 84 Waal 174 Waal 189 Waal 187 89 Haag John 2002 Bosse Harriet 1878 1961 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Gale Research Waal 191 92 References editBeyer Nils 1945 Skadespelare Stockholm Kooperative Forbundets bokforlag in Swedish Brandell Gunnar 1950 Strindbergs infernokris Stockholm Bonniers in Swedish Lagercrantz Olof 1979 translated from Swedish by Anselm Hollo 1984 August Strindberg London Faber and Faber Martinus Eivor 2001 Strindberg and Love Oxford Amber Lane Press Paulson Arvid ed and translated 1959 Letters of Strindberg to Harriet Bosse New York Thomas Nelson and Sons Strindberg on Drama and Theatre A Source Book Selected translated and edited by Egil Tornqvist and Birgitta Steene 2007 Amsterdam University Press Waal Carla 1990 Harriet Bosse Strindberg s Muse and Interpreter Carbondale and Edwardsville Southern Illinois Univ Press Further reading editHarriet Bosse at Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikonExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harriet Bosse Harriet Bosse at IMDb The Strindberg Museum in Stockholm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harriet Bosse amp oldid 1119780096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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