A. W. Sandberg

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Anders Wilhelm Sandberg
Born(1887-05-22)22 May 1887
Viborg, Denmark
Died27 March 1938(1938-03-27) (aged 50)
Bad Nauheim, Germany
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter
Years active1914 - 1937

Anders Wilhelm Sandberg (1887 –1938) was a Danish film director and screenwriter.[1]

Early life[]

Sandberg was born 22 May 1887 in Viborg, Denmark, the son of Otto Carl Sandberg, a merchant, and his wife Anna Mathilde Wilian. He was educated as a book handler and then worked as a journalist and photographer for the weekly magazine Verdensspejlet (English: World's Mirror).

Career[]

The Clown

Sandberg began in 1914 as a cinematographer and director for Nordisk Film. After directing a series of low-budget comedies, he directed his most acclaimed work: 1917's Klovnen (The Clown) starring Valdemar Psilander. The film's premiere two months after Psilander's sudden death created a media sensation that launched Sandberg's career. Between 1918 and 1927, Sandberg was the film company's leading director and succeeded August Blom as Nordisk's artistic director. During that period, his reputation was cemented by adaptations of Charles Dickens novels: Our Mutual Friend (1921), Great Expectations (1922), David Copperfield (1922) and Little Dorrit (1924). He produced 58 films of which he wrote 19. In 1926, Sandberg directed a remake of Kloven starring Gösta Ekman and Karina Bell. Following the switch to sound films in the 1930s, Sandberg restricted his film work to documentaries.[2]

Personal life[]

Sandberg was married to the actress Karen Kragh Møller from 1911 to 1916. In 1916, he married the actress . He was married a third time in 1935 to the German actress . Sandberg died 27 March 1938 while on vacation in Bad Nauheim, Germany.

He was the father of Danish film producer Henrik Sandberg.

Selected filmography[]

Further reading[]

  • Overs, Knud (1944). A.W. Sandberg, 1887-1938 (in Danish). Copenhagen: C. Andersen.
  • Engberg, Harald (1944). A.W. Sandberg og hans film; en periode i dansk films historie (in Danish). Copenhagen: Aschehoug.

References[]

  1. ^ "Anders Wilhelm Sandberg". danskefilm.dk. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  2. ^ Marguerite Engberg: AW Sandberg in Danish Biographical Lexicon, 3rd ed., Gyldendal 1979-84. Retrieved 5 July 2017 from http://denstoredanske.dk/index.php?sideId=296867

External links[]

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