Karin Lannby
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Karin Tekla Maria Lannby (13 April 1916, Linköping – 19 November 2007, Paris) was a Swedish actress, translator, journalist, poet and spy.[1] She served as a spy for the leftists during the Spanish civil war, and for Sweden in Stockholm during World War II.
Biography
The daughter of journalist Gunnar Lannby and Lilly Lannby, the boss of the Swedish agency of the American film company Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Through her mother, Lilly, Karin belonged to the Stockholm high society. As a student in the 1930s, Karin, being a convinced anti-fascist, joined the Swedish Communists. During the Spanish civil-war, she served as an interpreter and secretary at a hospital in Valencia. She made contact with the Comintern in Barcelona, who gave her an assignment to infiltrate the troops of Francisco Franco in the south of France. After having failed her task, she was excluded from the communists and returned to Sweden. From 1939 to 1945, she was an agent in service of the Swedish state during the war; under the code name Annette, she reported of her observations from the cultural and diplomatic circles of Stockholm's party life.
She acted in several films during the war. In 1940–41, she had a relationship with Ingmar Bergman; she is said to have been the role model for the character Ruth Köhler in the film Kvinna utan ansikte (1947). After the war, Karin Lannby changed her name to Maria Cyliakus [citation needed] and moved to France (1952), where she was active as an actress, translator and journalist.
See also
References
Literature
- Anders Thunberg (in Swedish): Karin Lannby: Ingmar Bergmans Mata Hari (Karin Lannby: The Mata Hari of Ingmar Bergman) (2009)
- 1916 births
- 2007 deaths
- People of the C-byrån
- Female wartime spies
- Swedish people of World War II
- Swedish actresses
- Swedish people of the Spanish Civil War
- Swedish translators
- Swedish poets
- Women in war 1900–1945
- Women in war in Spain
- Women in World War II
- 20th-century translators
- 20th-century Swedish women writers
- 20th-century Swedish poets
- World War II spies for Sweden
- 20th-century Swedish journalists