Mai Zetterling

Birthday: 1925-05-24
Deathday: 1994-03-17
Birthplace: Västerås, Västmanlands län, Sweden
Gender: Female

Mai Elisabeth Zetterling ( May 24, 1925 – March 17, 1994) was a Swedish actress and film director.

She began directing in the early 1960s, starting with political documentaries and a short film called The War Game (1962), which was nominated for a BAFTA award, and won a Silver Lion at Venice. Her first feature film Älskande par (1964, "Loving Couples"), based on the novels of Agnes von Krusenstjerna, was banned at the Cannes Film Festival for its sexual explicitness and nudity. Kenneth Tynan of The Observer later called it "one of the most ambitious debuts since Citizen Kane." It was not the only film she made that would stir up controversy for its frank sexuality (early pioneer on voyeurism).

When critics reviewing her debut feature said that "Mai Zetterling directs like a man," she began to explore feminist themes more explicitly in her work. The Girls, which had an all-star Swedish cast including Bibi Andersson and Harriet Andersson, discussed women's liberation (or lack thereof) in a society controlled by men, as the protagonists compare their lives to characters in the play Lysistrata, and find that things have not progressed very much for women since ancient times.

Credits

Year Title
1990-11-23 Sunday Pursuit
1986-11-11 Concrete Grandma
1986-03-14 Amorosa
1982-09-24 Scrubbers
1982-07-01 Love
1981-01-01 Of Seals and Men
1978-01-01 Mai Zetterling's Stockholm
1977-03-10 The Moon Is a Green Cheese
1976-03-19 We Have Many Names
1973-10-06 Visions of Eight
1972-10-15 Vincent the Dutchman
1968-09-16 The Girls
1968-06-12 Doctor Glas
1966-09-12 Night Games
1964-12-20 Loving Couples
1963-07-31 The War Game
1961-01-03 Lords of Little Egypt: Mai Zetterling Among the Gypsies