Ingrid Bergman Once Shunned By Hollywood ( Photo Credit – YouTube )

Advertisement

Ingrid Bergman entered Hollywood like a quiet storm, which was not thunderous but undeniable. She carried a face that didn’t need layers of makeup nor did she adhere to the shimmering glamour code that others felt they must. She just simply brought something unique. It would be her talent, and with its frank strength, which would make her one of the brightest stars in Hollywood’s so-called Golden Age.

While stars like Joan Crawford depended on shimmer and melodrama, and Bette Davis found success doing her own brand of bombast, Ingrid Bergman struck a more earthy and honest note. She stepped into American cinema through Intermezzo, already known for the same film back in Sweden. David O. Selznick, like many studio heads of the time, wanted to change her, like fix her teeth, reshape her brows and polish her into something else but she held her ground. And that decision to stay true to herself ended up defining her career.

Ingrid Bergman’s Roles That Defined Her Hollywood Image

Bergman was not the diva with the glamour. Her characters never made a grand entrance nor wore flamboyant dresses. They were often soft-spoken, sincere, and somehow unforgettable in their simple substantiation. When she was Sister Mary Benedict or Joan of Arc, she had the appearance of someone who came from the real world. It was from this real world that “Saint Ingrid” emerged, a name that held onto her, in part as complimentary and in part as burden.