The Wind Is My Lover (1949)
December 13, 1949Release Date
The Wind Is My Lover (1949)
December 13, 1949Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Viveca Lindfors
Singoalla
Alf Kjellin
Erland Månesköld
Edvin Adolphson
Latzo
Lauritz Falk
Assim
Naima Wifstrand
Cioara
John Elfström
Erasmus
Märta Dorff
Elfrida Månesköld
Georg Funkquist
Chaplain
Jean Georges Chambot
Sorgbarn, Singoalla's and Erland's child
Magnus Kesster
Gypsy
Marie-Hélène Dasté
Erland's mother (French version)
Fernand Rauzéna
Erasmus (French version)
Vibeke Falk
Helena Ulfsax
Bertil Malmberg
Writer
Romney Brent
Chaplain (English version)
Louis Seigner
Chaplain (French version)
Raymond Froment
Production Manager
Christian-Jaque
Director / Writer
Allan Ekelund
Production Manager
Lorens Marmstedt
Producer
Robert Gys
Production Design
Pierre Véry
Writer
Lennart Wallén
Editor
Christian Matras
Director of Photography
Jean-Charles Carlus
Production Manager
Roger Desormière
Conductor
Jacques Desagneaux
Editor
Gösta Petersson
Assistant Production Manager
Maurice Hartwig
Location Manager
Willy Mattes
Original Music Composer
Marcel Protat
Props
Hugo Alfvén
Original Music Composer
Media.
Details.
Release DateDecember 13, 1949
Original NameSingoalla
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 44m
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
Wiki.
Singoalla is a 1949 Swedish–French film directed by Christian-Jaque, starring Viveca Lindfors and Alf Kjellin. It is based on the romantic novel The Wind Is My Lover by Viktor Rydberg, which in turn is based on a medieval legend of the love between a gypsy and a nobleman. It was produced in three language versions: Swedish, French, and English. The Swedish and French versions were entitled Singoalla. The English version had three titles: Gypsy Fury (USA), The Wind is My Lover (UK), and The Mask and the Sword (UK). The Swedish and English versions starred Alf Kjellin as the nobleman, but the French version starred Michel Auclair. All three versions were edited separately – even scoring is slightly different. The Swedish and French run over 100 minutes, the English only 63 minutes.