Edited down, from the L.A. Times—
Signe Hasso, a Swedish-born stage and film actress who played strong leading ladies in American movies in the 1940s, most notably in George Cukor’s “A Double Life,” has died. She was 91. She came to Hollywood in 1940 and signed a contract with RKO, but few acting roles materialized. As she later said, she was nearly out on the street when she decided to go to New York, where she found work in the theater. Toward the end of World War II, she returned to Hollywood and signed a contract with MGM. Over the next few years Hasso worked with some of the industry’s leading directors.
She made Fred Zinnemann’s “The Seventh Cross” with Spencer Tracy, Cecil B. DeMille’s “The Story of Dr. Wassell” with Gary Cooper, Henry Hathaway’s “The House on 92nd Street” with Lloyd Nolan, and Richard Brooks’ first movie as a director, “Crisis,” with Cary Grant. But her favorite and the movie that critics apparently liked best was 1947’s “A Double Life.” It starred Ronald Colman as an actor so immersed in playing Othello that his stage character takes possession of his off-screen personality. Hasso played his wife, and Colman won the best actor Academy Award for his performance.
After the death of her son in a car accident in 1957, Hasso returned to Scandinavia to work in theater and movies. Much of the rest of her American career was spent in character roles on television, including the miniseries “QB VII” and the movie “Evita Peron.” A writer and lyricist, Hasso made perhaps her final TV appearance last year in a documentary on her legendary friend and countrywoman, actress Greta Garbo.