Added: 5 years ago
From: piapaws
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  • beautifull Jew woman like beautifull is everyJew

  • (continued) including this one and another video on the family website. Fortunately I was able to watch the video before the audio was edited out. I love Miss Bergman, which probably sounds very funny coming from someone who only knows her from her biographies, documentaries and movies, but I do

  • I saw her for the first time when we were studying missionaries in school and we watched the Inn of the Sixth happiness. I saw Casablanca a few months later when we were studying the French underground stuff. Of course I didn't remember most of the historical content of the film because I was absolutely in awe of Ingrid. I began to look up whatever Google could supply me with, reading every article I could scratch up and watching every video I could find...

  • She was among the best for sure.

  • she is soooooo beautiful can't compare her to no one except vivien leigh :)

  • the term 'play it again sam' was never actually used, but is famous for people remembering the film

  • La Grazia visita di rado gli umani e lei è stata la Grazia fino alla fine della sua vita.

    La dolcezza del suo sguardo ormai stanco era la stessa dei suoi 15 anni...

    Grazie Pia

  • She is my favourite actress of the Golden Age of Hollywood

  • Oh dear, proud indeed to be Swedish!

  • Im an avid Ingrid fan too! I will watch her films anytime, anyplace, anyday.

    Thanks:)!

  • A great beauty, silent though loud, strong but vulnerable, sexy but subtle.. the great Ingrid Bergman!

  • Thanks for so beautiful job!

    She's the most beautiful woman I've seen on the screen.

    My all time fave actress. I love her films.

    I love her.

  • My Beautiful Miss Bergman she was a A GREAT LADY

  • Awesome homage to a LEGEND,thanks for posting. Ingrid is and always will be a super star!The point of the clip is to show respect to One of the world's most talented actresses!

  • Thanks Pia for this part honoring your mom. I love her movies. Especially the ones with Gary Cooper since I am an avid fan of his too. I have never had the chance to see an interview with you but hope to someday. Thanks again! Great view

  • Thanks for posting Ingrid is a legend x

  • Thank you so very much for posting this Ms. Lindstrom. As you can tell from my youtube log-in name, I am a tremendous fan and admirer of your mother. Great work on this short documentary and I also have enjoyed your numerous interviews talking about your mother. She was not only a brilliant actress, but one of the worlds most courageous and gracious women.

  • Ingrid Bergman was and always will be one of the greatest actress of all time, and at the very least she is my favorite. Her face could say a thousand words, and her eyes write better stories than Tolstoy. In the much-celebrated "Play it, Sam" scene," her face looks blank but you see so much anguish and regret simmering beneath the surface.

    She was an original and there will never be one like her ever again. Thank you SO MUCH Ms. Lindstrom (or whoever piapaws really is) for posting this.

  • This is wonderful ! The times were so elegant.Thank you, Beverly

  • Not so "elegant" for all. She asked "who's the BOY at the piano". A grown man over 40! "The times" are over.

    Enjoy your future.................

  • You make a very valid point one I tend to romance over. Though I do see the " the boy " at the piano as a very talented musician, making the scene. The fact is music was one of the few opportunities for minorities.  As a transsexual,there ia a long way to equal rights.

  • See my comment above to person who you're commenting to.

  • You must understand Ingrid was the actor not the writer. I dont remember this line from the film, but I have to say (as her grandson) that she was never rascist, and (as Beverly said) the role played by Dooley Wilson was a great role for a black man in 1945.I argue that you would be hard pressed to find another role for black man in that era that showed such a level of comraderie between races.

  • It was 1940 in North Africa, still European colonialists not broken up 'til after WWII and w/US as major power geographic lines of continent redrawn to only accommodate the new 'neo-colonialism.' Not much change. You have to be realistic, she wasn't going to say who's the African-American at the piano, unfortunately.

  • "...You have to be realistic, she wasn't going to say who's the African-American at the piano, unfortunately."

    Yeah, I see your point. I guess it's just people get pissed 'cause you'd think it was like pulling teeth for writers to simply have had the young lady say something like,"Who's the GUY at the piano?" as an alternative. I like to think that shyt shouldn't've been like rocket-science. LoL! She's still my 'dream-classic-beauty-baby,' though -- the ONLY ONE.

    Thanks for sharing.

  • Oh, get over that already--yes, it's a dated and condescending line (which I highly doubt was improvised by Bergman) from an otherwise fantastic movie. This is celebrating Ingrid Bergman's life and brilliant career. If you can't deal with it, get the hell off this site!

  • I like your video clip and have rated it as awesome. Please view my clip of some rare 1940's movie star cards, including Ingrid Bergman, Humphrey Bogart, Judy Garland, Ingrid Bergman, Frank Sinatra, Gregory Peck, Errol Flynn,

    Ronald Regan, Lauren Bacall, Bing Crosby and many more.

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