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1-50 of 166
- The smartest cultural minds tackle big and small issues from the past week. Enlightening and fun talk, radiant debate, intellectual deep dives and complete nonsense.
- Prejudice and Pride is a rainbow colored roller coaster ride through a stunning collection of films. From Mauritz Stiller's filming of the world's first gay romance in 1916 to Sweden's exciting new wave of Scandinavian transgender films.
- The film is structured as Franz Kafka's own memory walk through his life, while he lies dying of tuberculosis in a sanatorium outside Vienna.
- The main character in the opera is K., who has many features in common with the writer Franz Kafka, but the authors' aim was not to depict his real life. K. could at the same time be anyone fighting K.'s existential battle. The gallery of people is made up of people that Kafka actually met or that he could have met during his lifetime. Despite the title, the opera "K. Description of a struggle" is not based on Kafka's youth work "Description of a Struggle", but consists of a mosaic of quotations from his entire literary production as well as his diaries, letters and writings in the service.
- No one compares to Ulf Lundell when it comes to productivity and versatility. For almost half a century, he has been relevant both as an artist, songwriter and as a writer.
- For many years was Sven Markelius one of Swedens most radical architecture. But the only interview that exist are done by Anders Wahlgren. So this documentary are so e from this tapes where Wallgren describes his his life's work
- "Seven Boys and Seven Girls" - presents 14 writers/authors, 7 male and 7 female.
- A behind-the-scenes film about the filming of "Pretty Baby" (1978) directed by Louis Malle. At the Columns Hotel - 3811 St Charles Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, with some of the participants of the project.
- In the footsteps of the author Eyvind Johnson seeking out the images and environments in which his stories were born. The journey goes on dizzying roads between medieval Central Europe and the timeless landscape of antiquity.
- A portrait of Benny Fredriksson who for 16 years was CEO of Kulturhuset / Stadsteatern. He also had a background as an actor and director. In connection with a media hunt he resigned and later took his own life.
- CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) for cultural phobics. Developmental talks from SVT Kultur with relevant guests about the most important events of the week and in the present.
- A rock-music-opera-thriller about a journey through Sweden away from boredom, unemployment and no future.
- Inga Landgré, one of Swedens greatest film actors, is now 93 years old. Inga has a dream, she wants to see Greece again, the place where she felt most alive during her life. Inga's friend Fanny accompanies her on the journey. It will not only be an adventure and a loving reunion of Greece, the trip also provides space for a conversation between two women from two generations. A conversation where the past and the life Inga lived are reminded over and over again.
- "The Fatherland" - a quick comic review of what and who was talked about in the kingdom of Sweden.
- Music of different kinds, from different levels and made by very different people.
- The cultural magazine that reflects all of Sweden's cultural life, range and practitioners.
- "The Film Chronicle" presents new feature film from around the world, directors and actors, as well as various themes.
- We visit the homes of six Swedish interior architects and look into their own inspiring and unique homes. It's about colors, materials and furniture, about beauty and coziness when the interior designers share their best tips and tricks.
- The recording of the five-part YV-series "Dramaten - the House of Dreams" began in the summer of 2002, when Staffan Valdemar Holm has just take over as CEO/Artist Leader at the Swedish national theatre. Mikael Sahlin and Åsa Hamelius did spend a whole year at Dramaten to give viewers a hint about how it is to create theatre. They follow the work of a play from the translator's first glance at the original script to the edgy moment when the curtain rises on the premiere.
- For over thirty years, parts of Sweden lived in fear of a man who came to be known as the Dawn Pyroman. The police suspect him of having started over a hundred fires.
- It's about big feelings and groundbreaking ideas when approaching the Swedish author, pedagogue and feminist ideologue Ellen Key (1849 - 1926). She was one of the great cultural personalities of the last century. The whole world read her book Children's Century, whose radical ideas are only now beginning to be realized. She fought for female suffrage, for free love and for beauty in homes. She was a charismatic speaker and moved among writers and philosophers in Europe around the turn of the century. Today she is strangely forgotten. Ann Victorin went to Ellen Key's home Strand by the lake Vättern, to get to know her modern thoughts about her time.
- Meet one of Sweden's most secret singer/songwriters. Admired by artists like Per Gessle, Ulf Lundell and Marie Fredriksson. In the 1970s John Holm released - Sordin, Lagt kort ligger and Veckans affärer - three critically acclaimed albums.
- There was a time when clothes were made in Sweden. The industry had its heart in the Sjuhärad region, and was largely made up of women. Today, the Swedish textile industry is virtually wiped out.
- Everything is designed. Trash as Luxury. The new shape magazine "Reform" turns gadgets and architecture upside down.
- Réspondez s'il vous plaît - an interview program series with current Swedish and international personalities.
- Many Swedes have driven past the hotel next to the motorway north of Norrköping and wondered what was inside. Does anyone live there? Well; Hotel director Maria grew up at Stenkullen and today runs it all by herself.
- His books on Kurt Wallander have made him one of our most widely read authors. But Henning Mankell has also written award-winning books about children and has worked as a director at a theater in Africa for almost 15 years.
- A cinematic portrait of the Swedish author Sven Delblanc (1931-1992), designed as a poetic-literary journey through Delblanc's world and begins in the author's childhood regions in Canada.
- "Hamlet - a theatre performance is emerging. From collation to premiere. Director/Actor Lars Göran Carlsson is staging a new version of "Hamlet" at Dramaten, Stockholm. This interpretation or reading is a Marxist analysis where the main character becomes a modern day revolutionary. Jan Malmsjö plays Hamlet in this extensive production involving some 50 actors. The rehearsals are filmed by Swedish Television during the winter/spring 1974. Opening night was on April 11, 1974.
- A bygone era, a countryside after its prosperity. What is left? Filmmaker Jösta Hagelbäck makes a poetic journey through his childhood Västmanland, Sweden.
- The pregnant ballerinas at the Royal Ballet, in Stockholm, Marie Lindqvist and Anna Valev, dance at the end of their pregnancies "252 days ...", a choreography by Örjan Andersson.
- "Songs from a room with a view" - Swedish singer/songwriter/artist Mikael Samuelson at home in Bohuslän, creating music and singing Bellman and Taube. On stage in Stockholm, the band Artrock Beyond creates new rock for poetry.
- The Swedish writer, poet and actor Kent Andersson turned 70 in December 2003. Alongside the successful revues at Teater Aftonstjärnan in Gothenburg, he is above all known for the deeply socially critical plays Flotten, Hemmet and Sandlådan, which were first performed at Gothenburg's Stadsteater in the late 60s under the direction of by Lennart Hjulström.
- Peter Mattei sings Ingvar Lidholm's "Stund, när ditt inre" with lyrics by Erik Johan Stagnelius. The Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra plays under the direction of Niklas Willén.
- After his wife filed for divorce, Jerry Ryan gave up his legal career in Nebraska. He travels to New York to try to rebuild his life and career, where he meets the eccentric woman Gittel Mosca.
- Short films and reports about phenomena in culture, such as art, fashion and whatever.
- To decorate a vision? The United Nations and art. The UN headquarters in Manhattan, New York is home to one of the world's finest art collections from its member states. Here you can find works by artists such as Pablo Picasso, Barbara Hepworth, Henri Matisse and Carl Fredrik Reuterswärd. During his last fall as UN Deputy Secretary General, Jan Eliasson opens the headquarters for SVT's Ann Victorin and also shows the parts that are not open to the public. Nordic countries have made a big impression here. Ten of the world's most famous architects designed the houses, and the Swede Sven Markelius was one of them. Dag Hammarskjöld refined the art collection and chose works of art that would fit the UN's vision of a world at peace.
- Sweden's leading cultural creators talk about their professional lives, and give tips on creativity and inspiration
- Swedish film critic Nils Petter Sundgren meet Jerry Lewis for a talk about the restart of his movie career. Also about Jerry Lewis unfinished project "The Day the Clown Cried" recorded partly in Sweden.
- A musical journey with The Animals, Bob Dylan, Eric Burdon, Leadbelly and four pop radio legends to search for the roots of the world hit "The House of the Rising Sun" or "Rising Sun Blues".
- Fritiof Nilsson Piraten (1895-1972) was both a distinguished writer and a brilliant oral storyteller. He himself claimed that "speaking and writing are two different things" - but was he telling the truth? The fondness for traditional oral storytelling has left clear traces in the large amount of folklore found in his texts. It is also striking how Piratens main oral arena and the circle of listeners he addressed there, the tavern and the brothers of the table, are repeatedly written into the authorship.
- About one of the 20th century's foremost artists, Siri Derkert (1888-1973). A true modernist who was far ahead of her time. And a strong advocate for peace, feminism and environmental issues.
- Alf Robertson (1941-2008) was a Swedish country singer and composer who produced 50 albums and about 150 songs during his lifetime. He moved to Nashville in 1971 to learn the trade for real.
- The Nobel Prize in Literature - a hundred years of interpretation agony over a will. Documentary about Alfred Nobel's literature prize with Nobel laureates, academy members and readers.
- Bengt Lindström (1925-2008) is one of Sweden's most internationally known artists. For four years, the filmmakers Dag Jonzon and Hans Östbom have followed him in his work in the studios in Paris and in Essvik outside Sundsvall.
- Culture monitoring of Sweden.
- A program about art, culture and current events in modern Sweden.
- The Nobel Prize in Literature - this year's laureate is being presented.
- A "road movie" about the French composer Hector Berlioz (1803-1869) who walks from Naples to Rome in 1831. In the company of two Swedish officers, he experiences beautiful views, gets fleas, drinks sour wine and dances the night away. The program is based on Berlioz's symphony "Harold in Italy", his memoirs and Carl Stephan Bennett's travel diary. The Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra is conducted by Manfred Honeck.
- Anna Lindman tries to get to know man's greatest fear and seeks answers to questions about death that we ask.