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Bergman's last role was in the television miniseries "A Woman Called Golda" in 1982.
Ingrid starred in Ingmar Bergman's "Autumn Sonata" in 1978, which earned her a nomination for the Best Actress
Academy Award. This was also her last film.
"Anastasia" (1956) marked
Ingrid's return to Hollywood, earning her an Oscar for
Best Actress and a place in her estranged fans' hearts.
Her affair and consequent marriage with director Roberto
Rossellini during the making of the 1949 film "Stromboli" sparked
controversy and outrage in the United States, and she remained
in Italy for the next six years, working with her new husband
on five films.
She made three films with Alfred Hitchcock: "Spellbound," "Notorious" and "Under Capricorn."
In 1942, she began filming both Ernest Hemingway's "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and the perennial classic, "Casablanca."
She won her first Oscar for Best Actress in the 1944 film "Gaslight."
Ingrid made her Broadway debut in 1940's production of "Liliom."
the play that the music "Carousel" would later
be based upon.
In 1939, she moved to Hollywood to film the remake of "Intermezzo."
In 1935, Ingrid had her first speaking role in a film, Gustaf Molander's "Munkbrogreven."
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