Bergström studied in Mississippi in the United States as an exchange student when she was a teenager.[3]
She is married to Colin Nutley, with whom she has two children, Molly and Timothy,[4] and a stepson, Daniel Nutley.[3] They met while filming Blackjack. At the time, Nutley was married and was 20 years her senior.[4] They live in an apartment on Kungsholmen, an island in central Stockholm, where her grandparents lived. They also have a house in the country.[3][5]
Career
She first appeared in a movie directed by her father in 1978, entitled Sweet Home.[2] Bergström embarked on a film career in 1982,[1] working in the television mini-series "Time Out".[6] A year later she appeared in the satirical comedy series Vidöppet, or Wide Open in English.[3][6] In 1988, she graduated from "Teaterhögskolan", the theatre academy, in Stockholm,[6] after which she worked at the Royal Dramatic Theatre (Dramaten) and at the Stockholm City Theatre.[2][3]
In 2008, she starred in a drama about Nobel Prize-winning author Selma Lagerlöf.[1] She is known for her work in films, such as Miss Julie and House of Angels.[3]The Woman on the Roof is described as the role that made her a noted actress.[2] Although it was not a box office success, it was praised by the film critics.[6] She became more notable after her "vivid portrayal of a tough city girl" during World War II in 1939.[6] In 1990, she received the Swedish Film Academy Kurt Linder scholarship, and in 1992 Teaterförbundet Daniel Engdahl scholarship.[2]
She has been directed by her husband in films including Black Jack, House of Angels,The Last Dance.[2] Her husband has directed Bergström in films involving sex scenes; she said he found this to be uncomfortable.[7]
With Tove Alsterdal, a playwright and journalist, she wrote her first screenplay, Så olika (2009), or So Different in English.[8] She first directed Mind the Gap , which was released in 2007.[2] In 2015, she directed her fourth film, Holy Mess (Swedish: En underbar jävla jul) She is also a singer, singing more than 100 songs of Édith Piaf at the City Theatre. In 2002, she recorded an album of Piaf songs.[2]