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- 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.
- Culture monitoring of Sweden.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Stig Larsson is a Swedish writer of novels, dramas, poetry, political essays and short stories, screen writer, director and actor. His first success was in 1979 with "Autisterna/The Autistics", since, he has established himself as an influential and offbeat author. Larsson has published over 20 books including novels, short stories, and poetry collections, along with a couple of plays, TV-productions and feature films. In the late 1970, his namesake and friend, Stieg Larsson, born Stig, the well-known author of the Millennium series, slightly changed the spelling of his first name to avoid confusion with Stig, by then a well-known writer.
- Little known in the celebrity circuit, but the directors' favorite. Melinda Kinnaman is 31 years old, but she was only 13 when she became a star in "My Life as a Dog". For the first time, she talks about herself, about the Royal Dramatic Theatre (RDT) in Stockholm, about the Bergman family at Fårö, about her brain hemorrhage, about courage and fear and about Broadway. Ann Victorin and photographer Sven-Åke Visén came along to the theater festival in Vienna to find out more about the adventurous Melinda who throws herself into the trapeze in the RDT production of Romeo and Juliet.
- 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.
- "The Film Chronicle" presents new feature film from around the world, directors and actors, as well as various themes.
- The host Anne Lundberg visits chefs in exciting environments.
- An adventurous journey in the wake of the green poison. From Strindberg's Paris to contemporary Absinthe worshipers in San Fransisco. It's popularity grew steadily through the 1840s, when it was given to French troops as a malaria preventive, and the troops brought home their taste for it. Absinthe became so popular in bars, bistros, cafés, and cabarets by the 1860s that the hour of 5 pm was called l'heure verte ("the green hour"). By 1910 the French were drinking 36 million litres per year. The Netherlands banned it in 1909, Switzerland in 1910, the United States in 1912, and France in 1914. It began to reappear during a revival in the 1990s in countries where it was never banned.
- 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
- 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.
- "The Fatherland" - a quick comic review of what and who was talked about in the kingdom of Sweden.
- "Seven Boys and Seven Girls" - presents 14 writers/authors, 7 male and 7 female.
- For a long time, Ingela Lind (1943-2021) was one of the most powerful critics in the country, to whom other critics always had to relate. She has for decades done radio, television and been the main critic of DN.
- About Otte Sköld (1894-1958) versatile artist and professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, was a leading figure in Swedish art life during the first half of our century. As an artist, he is forgotten.
- About the Swedish author Göran Tunström (1937-2000). His style was personal and intimate, and had a clear autobiographical tone. Tunström is best known for "The Christmas Oratorio", adapted as a film in 1996.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- A writer named Jeppe is found drunk on a hill by Erik and Josh, employees of media mogul Harry Schoenberg. Schoenberg had rejected Jeppe's manuscript some twenty years earlier, and now Schoenberg plans to place him in his own reality TV show in which Jeppe believes that he is in Heaven in the 1920s, in which he intends to abuse the writer by having him wake up in Schoenberg's bed next to his wife, Beatrice.
- Prince Eugene took a stand politically, and went his own way. He chose a different life than the Royal family wanted. Eugene became the painter prince who built his own palace on Waldemarsudde.
- Everything is designed. Trash as Luxury. The new shape magazine "Reform" turns gadgets and architecture upside down.
- The Nobel Prize in Literature - this year's laureate is being presented.
- Réspondez s'il vous plaît - an interview program series with current Swedish and international personalities.
- An hommage to George Frideric Handel, the German-born Baroque composer becoming well known for his operas, oratorios, anthems, concerti grossi and organ concertos.
- At the end of the centuries, the flâneurs had their best time. One hundred years ago, it was Hjalmar Söderberg and Bo Bergman who reflected on life from their cafe tables with a view.
- A different close conversation between different people, women and men.
- Reportage, commentary and conversations about different art directions and current trends in culture.
- Summer in Sweden is festival time. Musicians and audiences leave concert halls, club rooms and theaters and go out on green pastures. Sweden's Television Music Bus will submit a sounding report every week from the music holiday. We get to meet the people and experience the environment and above all hear the music from summer Sweden.
- An intellectual journey regarding art, creativity, and homosexuality.
- In Sweden, time was not properly measured until the industrialization began. Time is, and always has been, a relative concept, and in tonight's film, the playwright Lars Norén, the composer Sven-David Sandström and the philosopher Marcia Sà Cavalcante, among others, talk about their view of time.
- Trio CMB (Carl Michael Bellman) perform epistles, and songs by the Swedish songwriter, composer, musician, poet and entertainer.
- 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.
- Two unrepentant rogues arrive in an Italian city where Crispín, through his eloquence and charm, manages to make people believe that Leandro is a wealthy, generous and cultured man.
- Comedian Nisti Stêrk takes us on a journey through the history of Swedish comedy. From Julia Cæsar to Clara Henry, from Hjördis Pettersson to Gina Dirawi.
- The satirical group Public service from SR's "Godmorgon världen" takes us on a journey through time. In today's topical sketches, politicians and celebrities are satirised, interspersed with voices from Public service in the past. The debate from the start of SVT and our relationship with the beloved television and radio. Who should own and who should decide and how should it sound? A satire about Public service.
- A portrait of one of Swedish design's most colorful profiles, Stig Lindberg. He created everything from industrial design, glass, porcelain, ceramics, plastic and textiles to children's book illustrations, sculpture and painting.
- Birgit Åkesson (1908-2001) was a Swedish a dancer, choreographer and dance researcher. She was one of the leading figures in European avant-garde dance.
- Seven Swedish scenographers/production designers tells about their experiences with theater work. The drama is a visual expression. It's the pictorial direction. For the first time on Swedish TV, this hidden art form is being presented.
- The cultural magazine that reflects all of Sweden's cultural life, range and practitioners.
- About the Swedish filmmaker Jan Troell. He is currently working on the feature film "Så vit som en snö" and is guest of honor at the Gothenburg International Film Festival. Follow Ann Victorin and photographer Olle Holm to Sweden's southern tip, home to Jan Troell in Skåne. He talks about his long career as a filmmaker when he directed films such as "Utvandrarna", "Sagolandet" and "Hamsun".
- The Uniqueness of the Dance - told and interpreted by Swedish dancer, choreographer, and dance researcher Birgit Åkesson.
- "Stories from the Back Pocket" - A long line of the Nordic region's most famous and esteemed authors tell a tale, a memory, a rare narrative probably never heard before.
- "The art that annoyed many" - about paintings and sculptures that aroused irritation, outrage or protests among politicians, art critics and public opinion.
- A daily observation on the year of Design in Sweden 2005.