Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /home3/dodecasaurus/itopmovies.com/Library/NG/Autoloader.php on line 113

Notice: fwrite(): write of 8192 bytes failed with errno=122 Disk quota exceeded in /home3/dodecasaurus/itopmovies.com/Application/Model/Filecache.php on line 75
Asta Nielsen


Asta Nielsen

Birthday:

09/11/1881

Place of birth:

Vesterbro, Copenhagen, Denmark:

Biography:

Asta Sofie Amalie Nielsen (1881–1972) is considered one of the most influential figures in early film history. Born on September 11, 1881, in Copenhagen, she grew up in modest circumstances. Her father died when she was young, and the family had to move frequently. Despite these difficult circumstances, Nielsen developed a strong affinity for the stage even as a young girl. She took acting lessons and gained her first experience at small theaters before becoming a mother to a daughter in 1901. The decisive turning point in her career came in 1910 with the Danish film “Afgrunden” (The Abyss). Her passionate, modern performance made her internationally famous overnight. Unlike many of her contemporaries, Nielsen did not act in an overly theatrical manner, but relied on subtle facial expressions and psychologically rich body language. This new style of acting made her one of the first major international stars of silent film. Shortly thereafter, she moved to Germany, where she became one of the most sought-after actresses between 1911 and the early 1920s. Together with director Urban Gad, to whom she was married for a time, she starred in a series of successful films. Nielsen often portrayed strong, independent female characters who challenged social norms—an approach that was both unusual and courageous at the time. Among her best-known works are Die arme Jenny (1912), Engelein (1914), and especially her extraordinary portrayal of Hamlet (1921), in which the title character is raised as a woman. With the advent of sound film, Nielsen increasingly withdrew from the cinema. She was convinced that her expressiveness was better showcased in silent film and later focused on theater work, art, and writing. In 1946, she published her memoirs, “The Silent Muse,” in which she reflected openly on her life and work. Asta Nielsen remained a cultural icon into her old age. She spent her final years living a secluded life in Denmark and died on May 25, 1972, in Frederiksberg. Her influence on the art of film is still felt today: she is regarded as a pioneer of a modern, natural acting style and as one of the first women to possess true star power in the international film industry.



Credits

Asta Nielsen - Europas erste Filmikone (2023)
as Self (archive footage)
Sex, sensationer & superstjerner: Historien om dansk stumfilm (2020)
as Self – Interviewee (archive footage)
Play On! Shakespeare in Silent Film (2016)
as Self
Den talende muse - samtaler med Asta Nielsen (2003)
as (archive footage)
Die Asta - portræt af Asta Nielsen (1995)
as Self (archive footage)
Asta Nielsen (1968)
as Herself
Asta Nielsen. Eine große Künstlerin (1933)
as herself (archive footage)
Unmögliche Liebe (1932)
as Vera Holgk
Das gefährliche Alter (1927)
as Elsie Lindtner
Kleinstadtsünder (1927)
as Selma Karchow
Gehetzte Frauen (1927)
as Clarina
Dirnentragödie (1927)
as Auguste - Old Street Walker
Laster der Menschheit (1927)
as Tamara
Die Gesunkenen (1926)
as Anna Grosser
Lebende Buddhas (1925)
as Tibetanerin
Hedda Gabler (1925)
as Hedda Gabler
Athleten (1925)
as Prinzessin Wanda Hoheneck
Die freudlose Gasse (1925)
as Maria Lechner (Mizzi)
Die Frau im Feuer (1924)
as Josephine
Die Schmetterlingsschlacht (1924)
as
Der Film im Film (1924)
as Self
Das Haus am Meer (1924)
as Enricos Ehefrau Teresa
I.N.R.I. - Ein Film der Menschlichkeit (1923)
as Maria Magdalena
Der Absturz (1923)
as Kaja Falk
Die Tänzerin Navarro (1923)
as Navarro
Erdgeist (1923)
as Lulu
Vanina oder Die Galgenhochzeit (1922)
as Vanina
Brigantenrache (1922)
as Brigantenbraut
Fräulein Julie (1922)
as Julie
Irrende Seelen (1921)
as Nastassja Baraschkowa
Die Geliebte Roswolskys (1921)
as Mary Verhag
Hamlet (1921)
as Hamlet
Steuermann Holk (1920)
as Isabella Bouflon
Kurfürstendamm (1920)
as Girl Lissy / Mulatto / Filmstar / Maria
Graf Sylvains Rache (1920)
as Madelaine
Der Reigen - Ein Werdegang (1920)
as Elena
Mata Hari (1920)
as Mata Hari
Nach dem Gesetz (1919)
as Sonja Waler - Journalist - Her Daughter
Rausch (1919)
as Henriette Mauclerc
Mod lyset (1919)
as Komtesse Ysabel, grevindens datter
Das Ende vom Liede (1919)
as Dora Waren
Die Börsenkönigin (1918)
as Helene Netzler
Das Eskimobaby (1918)
as Eskimo Ivigtut
Eine Rose der Wildnis (1918)
as Wanda
Im Lebenswirbel (1918)
as Margit
Das Waisenhauskind (1917)
as Esther
Aschenbrödel (1916)
as Lotte
Die weißen Rosen (1916)
as Thilda Wardier
Dora Brandes (1916)
as Dora Brandes
Das Liebes-ABC (1916)
as Lis
Engeleins Hochzeit (1916)
as Jesta Schneider
Vordertreppe und Hintertreppe (1916)
as Sabine Schulze
Die ewige Nacht (1916)
as Marta
Das Versuchskaninchen (1916)
as Jesta
Die falsche Asta Nielsen (1915)
as Herself
Die Tochter der Landstrasse (1915)
as Zigeunerin Zirzi
Asta Nielsen als Mannequin (1915)
as
Das Feuer (1914)
as Wanda Petri
Zapatas Bande (1914)
as
Das Kind ruft (1914)
as Elana
Engelein (1914)
as Jesta
Die Filmprimadonna (1913)
as Ruth Breton
S1 (1913)
as Von Hessendorffs Tochter
Die Suffragette (1913)
as Nelly Panburne
Der Tod in Sevilla (1913)
as Juanita
Die Sünden der Väter (1913)
as
Jugend und Tollheit (1913)
as Jesta Müller
Komödianten (1912)
as Kamma
Das Mädchen ohne Vaterland (1912)
as Zidra
Wenn die Maske fällt (1912)
as Sanna
Die Kinder des Generals (1912)
as Thekla von der Linde
Der Totentanz (1912)
as Bella Burk
Die arme Jenny (1912)
as Jenny Schmidt
Zu Tode Gehetzt (1912)
as Paula Müller
Die Macht des Goldes (1912)
as Creszenz Fitzinger
Die Verräterin (1911)
as
Balletdanserinden (1911)
as Camille
Der fremde Vogel (1911)
as Miss May Wolton
Zigeunerblut (1911)
as Luscha
In dem großen Augenblick (1911)
as Annie
Den sorte drøm (1911)
as Stella, cirkusdanserinde
Nachtfalter (1911)
as Olga, Mademoiselle Yvonne
Heißes Blut (1911)
as Jonna
Afgrunden (1910)
as Magda Vang
Asta Nielsen (1968)
Director
Hamlet (1921)
Producer