Siri von Essen  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Sigrid "Siri" Sofia Matilda Elisabet von Essen (17 August 1850 in Porvoo – 22 April 1912) was a Swedish-speaking Finnish noblewoman and actress.

Biography

Family

She was the daughter of the Finnish-Swedish captain and landowner Carl Reinhold von Essen and Elisabeth Charlotta In de Betou. She married Major Baron Carl Gustaf Wrangel af Sauss (1842-1913) in 1872 (divorced in 1876), with whom she had a daughter, Sigrid. After their divorce, she married the Swedish dramatist and writer August Strindberg in 1877 (divorced in 1891). Together they had three children: two daughters, Karin Smirnov (born 1880) and Greta (born 1881), and a son, Hans (born 1884 in Lausanne, Switzerland).

Historically, Siri von Essen has been remembered mainly because of the effect she had on Strindberg and his work as an author. The marital problems and the effect they had on his works attracted attention already by their contemporaries. She is considered to be the inspiration for many of his works about marital- and love problems. Their correspondence from 1875-76 was published in 1919. Her marriage to Strindberg was considered a scandal: though the spouse of von Essen had committed adultery himself, Strindberg was blamed to the dissolution of her first marriage, and was considered a debauched writer and not a suitable match for a member of the nobility. During the late years of their marriage, Strindberg suspected her of having an affair with the Danish woman Marie David.

Career

Siri herself was to say that she wished to become an actor already as a child, but that this had not been regarded as suitable for a noble and she had been prevented from acting first by her father and later by her husband, which was one reason she stated as a reason for divorce from her first spouse in 1876. Her second spouse encouraged her acting dream. She did not enroll in the Dramatens elevskola, but studied drama privately under the tutelage of Knut Almlöf and Betty Almlöf. In early 1877, she debuted on stage at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm as Camille in "A Theatre play" by L. Leroy and the title role of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer. Her debut was considered a moderate success. She was engaged as an actor at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm in 1877-1881 and at the Swedish theater in Helsinki in 1882-1893; was a director and leading lady at the Scandinavian experimental theater in Copenhagen in 1889, and a tutor in acting in Helsinki from 1894; one of her students being Martha Hedman. The critics recommended her grace, natural way of acting and intelligence in her interpretation, but claimed that she lacked energy and true passion in her play and had a weak voice. Strindberg considered her to lazy in her acting and advised her to act more energetic. Her second spouse Strindberg wrote several plays for her, which were created for her way of acting and in which she is considered to have succeeded best.

After 1877, Siri von Essen, encouraged by Strindberg, wrote articles for newspapers and publications and translated plays. She was the reporter of Morgonbladet in Helsingfors in 1876 and for Morgenbladet in Copenhagen in 1881. She continued with her translation work after having moved to Finland in 1893. She also recited at concerts.





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Siri von Essen" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools