Gösta Stevens
Gösta Stevens (1 February 1897 – 24 September 1964) was a Swedish screenwriter and film director.
Gösta Stevens | |
---|---|
Born | Bergen, Norway | 1 February 1897
Died | 24 September 1964 67) Stockholm, Swedish | (aged
Other names | Gösta Nilsson |
Occupation | film director, screenwriter |
Years active | 1932–1959 |
Selected filmography
Screenwriter
- Love and Deficit (1932)
- Under False Flag (1935)
- Intermezzo (1936)
- Emilie Högquist (1939)
- Variety Is the Spice of Life (1939)
- Only One Night (1939)
- One, But a Lion! (1940)
- Bright Prospects (1941)
- The Fight Continues (1941)
- Sonja (1943)
- I Love You Karlsson (1947)
- Sven Tusan (1949)
- Fiancée for Hire (1950)
- Jazzgossen (1958)
- Honeysuckle Rose (1980, original story)
Director
- Bastard (1940)
- Sven Tusan (1949)
- Number 17 (1949)
Bibliography
- Chandler, Charlotte. Ingrid: Ingrid Bergman, a Personal Biography. Simon and Schuster, 2007.
- Kwiatkowski, Aleksander. Swedish Film Classics: A Pictorial Survey of 25 Films from 1913 to 1957. Courier Dover Publications, 1983.
- Soila, Tytti. The Cinema Of Scandinavia. Wallflower Press, 2005.
- Wright, Rochelle. The Visible Wall: Jews and Other Ethnic Outsiders in Swedish Film. SIU Press, 1998.
gollark: Giving governments the power to stop people who want to from doing things to themselves *at all* is somewhat abusable and problematic.
gollark: > @a rustian spy why yes?In order to not restrict freedom and in order to not have some government department decide what things are Clearly Bad™.
gollark: I mean, we have mental hospitals and mandatory thingying into them.
gollark: If people WANT to torture themselves, why not?
gollark: I mean, I feel like trying to ban people from *emotionally* harming others is problematic, inasmuch as that is very broad and subjective.
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