Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dagmar Ingeborg Edqvist (20 April 1903 – 21 January 2000) was a Swedish writer and screenwriter. Best known for her works on women empowerment, her novels have been adapted for film and the stage. Early life. Dagmar Edqvist was born on 20 April 1903 in Visby, Sweden.

  2. Dagmar Edqvist, egentligen Dagmar Ingeborg Hasslöf Edquist och född Jansson den 20 april 1903 i Visby, död den 21 januari 2000 i Luleå, [4] var en svensk författare. Edqvists mest kända bok är förmodligen Fallet Ingegerd Bremssen (1937; filmatiserad fem år senare ), och hon var under 1930-, 1940- och 1950-talen en av Sveriges mest ...

  3. 1903-04-20 — 2000-01-21. Author. Dagmar Edqvist was one of the most widely read Swedish authors of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. A constant thread which runs through her extensive written output is the debate regarding equal opportunities for women. Dagmar Edqvist grew up in Visby.

    • April 20, 1903
    • January 21, 2000
  4. Sweden. Dagmar Edqvist was the daughter of a lecturer in Visby, completed upper secondary school in 1922, and married a teacher in 1923. She made her debut in 1932 with the publication of the widely-discussed novel Kamrathustru, which, together with Rymlingen fast, 1933, was made into a film.

  5. Author and screenwriter. Born in Visby, 1903. Deceased in Luleå, 2000. Foto: Åke Jansson. 1903 - 2000. Author/screenwriter Dagmar Edqvist (at times spelled Edquist) graduated in Stockholm in 1922. Her collaborators include Ingmar Bergman, Hasse Ekman and Sven Nykvist.

  6. Film facts. Quotations. Plot summary. Images/video (10) Collaborators (44) Dagmar Edqvist's novel Musik i mörker (Music in Darkness) was published in 1946. Bergman writing on the genesis of the film in Images: My Life in Film : In spite of all that happened, Lorens Marmstedt did not throw me out.

  7. Dagmar Edqvist was born on 20 April 1903 in Visby, Sweden. She was a writer, known for En kvinna ombord (1941), Lågor i dunklet (1942) and Livet går vidare (1941). She died on 21 January 2000 in Luleå, Norrbottens län, Sweden.