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Everything you need to know about Sweden’s Oscar winner

Alicia Vikander is the first Swedish actor to win an Oscar since Ingrid Bergman in 1974. But who is this rising star?

Everything you need to know about Sweden's Oscar winner
Swedish actress Alicia Vikander. Photo: Rich Fury/Invision/AP

1. She rose to fame from nowhere

Her international breakthrough came in 2012, when she co-starred in the British adaptation of historical epic 'Anna Karenina', and in the Danish costume drama 'A Royal Affair', nominated for a best language film Oscar.

But while the 27-year-old brunette was hardly a household name three years ago, last year she appeared in at least four major movies, including British sci-fi psychological thriller 'Ex Machina', where she starred as the humanoid robot Ava and for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe.

“It's been suddenly wonderful to be introduced in rooms to meet actors and filmmakers and people behind the cameras that I've looked up to my entire life,” she said.


Alicia Vikander back in 2011. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/SCANPIX

2. But here's how it all started

Born in Sweden's second city of Gothenburg in 1988, Vikander initially dreamed of becoming a ballerina, studying at the Royal Swedish Ballet School in Stockholm before injuries cut her dance career short in her teens.

Her focus then turned to acting, and her on-screen career gained traction after appearances in Swedish short films and the popular television drama series 'Andra Avenyn' from 2008 to 2010.

Soon after she began looking for work in American and British films, sending audition tapes to casting directors. But neither Vikander nor her agent received a single response. She told W magazine: “I never even heard 'No, thank you', so I decided I had to get myself to London.”

3. She finds inspiration in her own movies

Vikander said she found parallels in her roles in 'Ex Machina' and 'The Danish Girl', with both the android Ava and Gerda pondering what it means to be a woman.

At a White House event for 'The Danish Girl', for which she became the first Swedish actor to win an Oscar since Ingrid Bergman in 1974, celebrating lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the media, several attendees said they were moved by her portrayal of Ava.

“Three trans women came up to me separately to tell me they had felt such a connection with Ava in 'Ex Machina', and her dream of finally coming to full female fruition,” Vikander recently told British newspaper The Guardian.


Vikander with 'The Danish Girl' director Tom Hooper and co-star Eddie Redmayne. Photo: Philip Davali/Polfoto/AP

4. She is outspoken on feminist issues

Growing up in Sweden, a country famous for its focus on gender equality, it is perhaps no surprise that Vikander takes a strong stance on women's issues. In 2015 she joined a number of fellow actors, both male and female, criticizing the Hollywood gender pay gap.

“It's all about information,” she said. “It's all about bringing awareness, to educate people and the more you bring something into the limelight I think it makes, maybe not the biggest step, but small steps and you will continue to make change.”


Vikander accepting her Oscar for best supporting actress. Photo: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

5. What's next for this Swedish star?

Vikander has scored a role in the upcoming 'Jason Bourne' sequel, which will see Matt Damon return to the big screen as the amnesiac super spy. “It's great,” her agent told The Local when news of her part in the action flick was first announced last year.

The Swede is currently dating German-Irish actor Michael Fassbender, but has consistently declined to speak about it in public, even going so far as to refusing to smooch for a kiss camera at the Bafta Awards earlier this month.

However, the shy pair seem to have learned from the awkward experience and, to the delight of the audience, shared a kiss before Vikander went on stage to accept her Academy Award on February 28th. They reportedly met while playing a married couple in upcoming drama 'The Light Between Oceans'.


Vikander and Fassbender at the Academy Awards 2016. Photo: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

OSCARS

‘Another Round’: a spirited Oscar-winning ode to life

Danish film ‘Another Round’ (‘Druk’ in the original Danish), which won an Oscar on Sunday for best international feature film, is a dark existential comedy about the joys and dangers of being drunk, and letting go to embrace life.

'Another Round': a spirited Oscar-winning ode to life
Thomas Vinterberg accepts the Oscar for International Feature Film on behalf of Denmark.Photo: A.m.p.a.s/Reuters/Ritzau Scanpix

It is the fourth Danish film to win an Oscar for best non-English language film, after ‘In A Better World’ in 2011, ‘Pelle the Conqueror’ in 1989 and ‘Babette’s Feast’ in 1988.

Filmmaker Thomas Vinterberg, who is also nominated for best director, gave a moving, tearful speech, paying tribute to his daughter Ida, who was killed in a car accident four days after shooting began in May 2019.

“We ended up making this movie for her, as her monument,” Vinterberg said at the gala in Los Angeles.

“So, Ida, this is a miracle that just happened, and you’re a part of this miracle. Maybe you’ve been pulling some strings somewhere, I don’t know. But this one is for you.”

The movie is set around four old friends, all teachers at a high school near Copenhagen. Martin, played by Mads Mikkelsen, is a history teacher going through a midlife crisis, depressed about his monotone life.

To spice things up, the quartet decides to test an obscure theory that humans are born with a small deficit of alcohol in their blood, resolving to keep their blood alcohol level at a constant 0.05 percent from morning till night.

At first, they experience the liberating joys of inebriation, before things quickly go from bad to worse. 

But the film refrains from passing moral judgement or glorifying alcohol.

“‘Another Round’ is imagined as a tribute to life. As a reclaiming of the irrational wisdom that casts off all anxious common sense and looks down into the very delight of lust for life … although often with deadly consequences,” Vinterberg said when the movie came out last year.

Vinterberg was devastated by the loss of his daughter, and production on the movie was briefly halted, but he soon resumed shooting.

He said he was spurred on by a letter she had written about her enthusiasm for the project, in which she was to have had a role.

But the film took on a new dimension.

“The film wasn’t going to be just about drinking anymore. It had to be about being brought back to life,” Vinterberg said in the only in-depth interview he has given about her death, in June 2020 to Danish daily Politiken.

Selected for the 2020 Cannes Film Festival which ended up being cancelled due to the pandemic, ‘Another Round has already won several awards, including a BAFTA for best film not in the English language, and a Cesar in France for best foreign film.

The film is carried by Mikkelsen, who previously teamed up with Vinterberg in the 2012 psychological thriller ‘The Hunt’ (‘Jagten’).

In one of the most talked-about scenes in ‘Another Round’, Mikkelsen even shows off his dance talent — the former Bond villain was a professional contemporary dancer before becoming an actor.

READ ALSO: How Danish Oscar-nominated dark booze comedy was inspired by director’s tragic loss

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