Pia Lindström

Friedel Pia Lindström (born 20 September 1938, Stockholm, Sweden) is a television journalist, and the first child of actress Ingrid Bergman.

Pia Lindström
Born
Friedel Pia Lindström

(1938-09-20) 20 September 1938
Stockholm, Sweden
Other namesJennie Ann Lindstrom
Spouse(s)
Fuller Earle Callaway III
(
m. 1960; div. 1961)

Joseph Daly
(
m. 1971; div. 1990)

John Carley
(
m. after 2001)
Children2
Parent(s)Ingrid Bergman
Petter Lindström
RelativesIsabella Rossellini (maternal half-sister)

Life and career

Lindström is the only child born to Ingrid Bergman and her first husband, Swedish neurosurgeon Petter Lindström.[1] She was greatly affected by her mother's abandonment when her mother left her father for Italian director Roberto Rossellini. Petter Lindström sued for desertion and waged a custody battle with Bergman for their daughter, and Pia did not reunite with her mother until 1957. Her half-brother, Roberto Ingmar Rossellini, was born on 7 February 1950, and her mother married Roberto Rossellini on 24 May 1950. On 18 June 1952, Lindström's twin half-sisters Isabella Rossellini and Isotta Rossellini were born.

Lindström began her broadcasting career as a reporter at KGO-TV in San Francisco in 1966[2][3] and in 1971 went to WCBS-TV in New York City.

From 1973 to 1997, she was a news anchorwoman and also a theater and arts critic for WNBC-TV in New York City, and made television appearances and did some acting (in mostly Italian films) before she became a news correspondent. She received two Emmy Awards for news coverage and on-screen performance, as well as the Associated Press Broadcaster's Award. She is now retired.

Personal life

Married three times, Lindström has two sons, Justin and Nicholas Daly, from her second marriage, to Joseph Daly. They married on December 28, 1971.[4] She is currently married to attorney Jack H. Carley.[5]

gollark: RUST!
gollark: C++ is just basically awful.
gollark: ~~no, it's awful for most uses~~
gollark: They have decent FFIs.
gollark: We should write all our programs in a mix of Lua, Rust, Haskell and Python.

References

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