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- The Jimi Hendrix Experience perform live at Stockholm Concert Hall Jan. 9, 1969, in a showcase with Jethro Tull. This is the first performance of two featuring "Killing Floor", "Spanish Castle Magic", "Fire", "Hey Joe", "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)", "Red House" and "Sunshine Of Your Love". During this visit to Stockholm, Jimi Hendrix granted two interviews - one with Ulla Lundström and the other with Lennart Wretlind. The performance was video-taped by Sveriges Radio TV.
- Rogosin took the fight for equality to his homeland with his astonishing and powerful fourth feature Black Roots. The film, which is ripe for rediscovery, featured an extraordinary cast, including Reverend Frederick Douglass Kirkpatrick; attorney and feminist activist Florynce ""Flo"" Kennedy; and musicians Jim Collier, Wende Smith, Larry Johnson and Reverend Gary Davis. All tell stories of heartbreak and despair while their songs blow the roof off the rafters. In an extension of the famed shebeen scenes in Come Back, Africa, the participants in Black Roots spoke openly about politics and race in a way that is still rarely seen on screen. In 1970, it was a radical and daring move by a great director. A deeply humanist film, Black Roots combines tales of oppression with hauntingly beautiful images of the faces of black men, women and children.
- A brutally unmasking triangle drama of a relationship and its appendage. He is desperate for her, while she is emotionally absent, except when she plays with her self-absorbed love
- A family entertainment program hosted by the inn-keeper Lasse Holmqvist, presenting guests, performers, musicians and cultural personalities mainly form the south of Sweden.
- "Dokument utifrån" (Document from outside) is the longest running news program in Swedish Television. It's been around since 1971 and is still active. "Dokument utifrån" presents documentaries from around the world.
- A current cultural magazine that moved in all areas of art and culture in the world.
- "We young people" - a meeting with teenagers and popular artists in their own basement area.
- An exposé on the nightlife of Sweden's capital, Stockholm, in company with Danish actor/singer Max Hansen and Swedish actress Lena Granhagen.
- Miriam Makeba performs at Berns salonger in Stockholm, Feb. 3, 1966, supported by Sivuca (Severino Dias De Oliveira) on acoustic guitar/accordion, William Satler on double bass and percussionist Leopoldo Fleming. Among the 14 songs presented "Forbidden Games" and "The Click Song" was included. The concert recorded by Swedish National Television was later released on DVD in 2003.
- "Cheat sheet for idle - skills you might do without" - 'The Drunk Trio': Ivar Wallin, guitar, Erik Wiberg, accordion and Bror Wiberg, mandolin, play songs by Harry Rydell. The farm trader Sixten Landby talks about how to become a peddler, while cycling on a path to his own story about the profession. Kuno Persson, poet and ore prospector, stands on the beach and reads his own poem about the river.
- "Exercise with TV" - a Swedish fitness program for the whole family with dietary advice, physical information and reports.
- Festival of the Midnight Sun, a.k.a. the Mantorp Festival became the biggest fiasco in Swedish pop festival history. The festival was presented the midsummer weekend 19-21 June 1970 at Mantorp Raceway. A local band, Magazine Story, from Linköping, had the honor of opening the festival with Clabbe af Geijerstam as MC. The raceway and surroundings were almost empty. Clabbe's welcome speech explained that the sun was the guest of honor at the festival, which was dedicated to "peace, friendship, love, community and everything that can be thought of as beautiful".
- A sympathetic portrait of the Swedish sculptor Sivert Lindblom, one of our time's most engaged sculptors for and of the design of public space. Hearing a young Sivert Lindblom (age 36) reason about his world of thought and view of art is an ear and eye opener that leads us back and forth into his unique language of form and imagery. We get to follow how his early discoveries from a point and then to a line lead us to his originally most famous and iconographic work: Sivert's own Profile rotated 360 degrees.
- "Witch Ride Over Stockholm - A Visit to Blåkulla" - a story from the night's adventure and dangers.
- Swedish Television broadcasted all nine matches that Sweden participated in during the Word Cup 1958 in Sweden. It became the big breakthrough for television in Sweden. The Swedish Football Association concluded an agreement with Sveriges Radio TV, which was allowed to broadcast nine matches live for a total compensation of SEK 800,000.
- "Sweden's Magazine" was a café show presenting a wide variety of entertainment, culture, famous people, current events and issues and programs for children.
- The news program "Aktuellt" was first shown on Swedish Television, Sept. 2, 1958. During the first month it was a three day/week program.U
- A very early Swedish family magazine program that featured all kinds of everyday phenomena and general tasks for the citizens of Sweden.
- A Swedish live pop music show presented by the artists and groups appearing.
- A comedy party show shaped in a similar form as Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1967).
- Swedish vocalist Anita Lindblom sings Feber "Fever", Se'n den da'n du for från stan, Visa om Mackie Kniven "Mack the Knife", Reptilvisan, Sån't är livet "You can have her", and Kattvisa.
- About the birth of nuclear energy in Sweden. There reactors R0-2 for research and development, and one R3 at Ågesta producing 28 GWh/year. Two years later, in 1972, the first commercial power plant was running.
- Ante Nordlund from Mobacken invites you to his super-show.
- A visit to Swedens largest outdoor market/funfair, Kiviks marknad. Spectacular vaudeville shows, revival preachers, horse trading and ancient forms of entertainment.
- "An Evening Without Borders" - A benefit concert for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. held at the Royal Opera House in Stockholm, Sweden.
- An interview with Austrian-American director, Josef von Sternberg, recorded for Swedish television in 1968. Sternberg browsed and recounted stories from his book "Fun in a Chinese Laundry" published 1965, along with discussing scenes from his films "The Salvation Hunters" !925), "Underworld" (1927), "I Claudius (1937), and "The Saga of Anathan (1953).
- An anti-cold show with Misses Svensson and Ingvar, as well as Mr. Berg, Burman and Burman, Domnérus, and Jörgensen.
- The film shows electronically dissolved and distorted images of well-known celebrities, framed by a psychedelic musical setting.
- A talk-show dealing with current events adding comedy and entertainment.
- Sture Mars pointed his film-camera towards the cultural and social life of Stockholm. He recorded unique moments and events like the ongoings in Gamla Bro, Hippie forums, the Magnus Ladulås pub, the grand opening of Kulturhuset, festivities at the University of Uppsala, and those that are forced to live and work in the streets and corners of the big city.
- Miss Julie is for the female actor what Hamlet is for the male actor. A role everyone wants to have played at some point. In the autumn of 2005, it was Maria Bonnevie's turn to play Julie against Mikael Persbrandt's Jean at Dramaten.
- People and events in richly illustrated weekly magazine. Broadcasted from Malmö, Gothenburg and Stockholm.
- Outlook - journal for girls and boys - news for young people.
- A Swedish news program that featured news and documentary films.
- A family entertainment show featuring Sigge Fürst along with guests of all sorts.
- Monica Zetterlund sings - mostly about people, accompanied by Jan Johansson's Quartet featuring Georg Riedel, Rune Gustafsson and Egil Johansen. The songs/ballads with lyrics by Tage Danielsson, Beppe Wolgers, Bertolt Brecht, Gustaf Fröding, Olle Adolphsson and Povel Ramel.
- The Liberian American Swedish Mining Company (LAMCO) was a mining company that mined iron-ore in northern Liberia at the Nimba massif. About 15,000 Swedes worked for Lamco and the project was cited as a successful example of international cooperation. But in this film the Swedish TV viewers were presented a very different picture. The film broke with the conventional African portrayal and the Swedes in Liberia were portrayed as colonial-era heirs. The film was supplemented with a debate.
- About the rockers in Stockholm and how they co-exist with the police.
- About a motel where comic events and stories were woven together around those who worked at the motel and their visiting guests.
- "Prisma: illustrated art and cultural revue" - about current events, trends and notable people in the world of artistic culture.
- A 3-part series about drugs, drug traffic and drug addicts. All participants appeared completely open regarding identity and views. The program series was widely mentioned and started a discussion about the large quantities of prescribed and illegal drugs in our society.
- The Sex Pistols brief visit to the club Kåren, Stockholm, Sweden. Two gigs, Wednesday July 27, 1977 for people over 23 years, and Thursday July 28 for people over 15 years of age.
- A portrait of the American poet, biographer, journalist, and editor, Carl Sandburg (1878-1967). He won three Pulitzer Prizes: two for his poetry and one for his biography of Abraham Lincoln.
- Current news, reports and stories about newspapers and the people that work there.
- At Alpgatan 57 in Stockholm, the Dahlberg family lives: the master painter Oscar Dahlberg and his children Karl-Göran and Lisa, his employees the bachelors Vicke and Fabbe, the maid Vivan and the new tenant Greta. On the other side of the farm, Oscar's sister Sofie lives with her fiance Ludde and son Gösta, who is the neighborhood mischief maker.
- The dancers performed in the harbor, at a fish market and a shipyard, in a pond, at a football arena and in a discotheque, at the city's major avenue, and on a large bridge. The choreography encompassed neoclassical work, jazz dance, social dancing, operetta features, disco dancing and some playful Spanish movement. Equally broad, the music featured jazz rhythms, pop-rock, experimental sound art, and classical tones.
- A film about the Swedish silversmith Wiwen Nilsson, from Lund. Various silver works are displayed in his home. Pictures from his workshop, where a silver vase is made. Lund Cathedral's crypt is visited and a silver cross is viewed. The short documentary was produced by Dansk Fjernsyn for screening in Sweden.
- "Superstition now and then" - ethnology could be divided into the study of spiritual and material folk culture. Carl-Herman Tillhagen has always been most interested in the spiritual part, the folklore.
- About the apostle from Lapland, Lars Levi Læstadius (1800-1861), and the Læstadian congregation's 100th anniversary in Pajala, in northernmost Sweden.