Julian Strøm Explained

Julian Strøm
Birth Date:February 24, 1901
Birth Place:Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway
Death Place:Oslo, Norway
Occupation:Actor, theater director

Julian Tidemann Strøm (February 24, 1901 – October 7, 1992) was a Norwegian actor and theater director.[1] [2] He is known as a pioneer of Norwegian puppet theater.[1] [3]

Family

Julian Strøm was the son of the artisan Julius Strøm and his wife Marie Kristine.[1] He married the teacher Selma Hanna Johnsgård (1901–1989) in 1927. He was the father of the puppeteers Birgit Strøm[1] and Elisabeth Strøm Henriksen, and the grandfather of the actress and director Camilla Strøm Henriksen.[4]

Career

Strøm grew up in Kristiania (now Oslo) and studied acting. He performed as a student at the National Theatre in Oslo, and he made his debut at the private Mayol Theater in 1920.[1] In the early 1920s, Strøm was engaged at the Stavanger Theater, where he staged Veslefrikk med fela (Little Freddy and His Fiddle) with children in all the roles. He later moved back to his hometown, where he joined the artists' colony in Ekeberg.[1] In the 1930s and 1940s, Strøm held reading and cultural evenings. He also ran his own one-man theater with support from the church and the Ministry of Education, and later also in a touring partnership with the National Traveling Theater.[1]

Puppet theater

Strøm was head of the People's Theater (Norwegian: Folketeatret) puppet theater from 1953 to 1959, which became a platform for him to develop his ideas. Puppet theater was not widespread in Norway at that time, and Strøm's goal was for it to become a recognized art form. The first production at the People's Theater puppet theater was Gjete kongens harer (The Shepherd for the King's Hares), which was based on the folk tale of the same name.[5]

When the People's Theater merged with the New Theater (Norwegian: Det Nye Teater) in 1959 to form the Oslo New Theater, Strøm moved there. Strøm's daughter Birgit Strøm took over the management of the Oslo New Theater Puppet Theater.[1]

Strøm participated in a number of puppet theater performances and adventure series for NRK's children's and youth department through Julian Strøms Dukketeater (Julian Strøm's Puppet Theater) at the broadcaster.

Film

Strøm was also a film actor, and he debuted as the title character in Rasmus Breistein's film Felix in 1921. After that it was 50 years until his next film appearance, when he played Johannes Bakken in Per Blom's film Anton in 1973.[1] This role won Strøm the Golden Shrimp (Norwegian: Den gyldne reke) award in Drøbak that same year.[6] Strøm also appeared in other films in the 1970s.

Awards

Strøm received the King's Medal of Merit in gold in 1978.[7]

Filmography

Television films

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Øystå . Øystein . Julian Strøm . Norsk biografisk leksikon . 2009 . Norwegian . November 12, 2020.
  2. Book: Schulerud . Mentz . Norsk kunstnerliv . 1960 . Cappelen . Oslo . 587.
  3. Book: Rubin . Don . World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: Volume 1: Europe . 2014 . Routledge . London . 627.
  4. Web site: Camilla Strøm Henriksen . IMDb . November 14, 2020.
  5. Web site: Gjete kongens harer . Sceneweb . November 15, 2020 . Gjete kongens harer (1953) var en figurteaterproduksjon av Folketeatret. Gjete kongens harer var en urpremiere basert på en dramatisering for figurteater av Angnar Mykle, bygget på eventyret etter Peder Christen Asbjørnsen og Jørgen Moe med samme tittel. Produksjonen var den første premiere på Dukketeatret, som var en underavdeling av Foketeatret..
  6. News: Endresen . Ole Kjeldsberg . Norges første filmfestival startet i Drøbak . November 16, 2020 . Østlandets Blad . August 21, 2012.
  7. Web site: Tildelinger av ordener og medaljer: Julian Strøm . Det norske kongehus . November 17, 2020.