Einar Axelsson
Einar Axelsson (25 February 1895 – 30 October 1971) was a Swedish stage and film actor.
Einar Rickard Axelsson was born at Lund in Skåne, Sweden. He was the son of actors Konstantin and Amelie Axelsson. He was the brother of journalist George Axelsson (1898–1966). After playing at the Folkteatern in Gothenburg (1913–1914), he joined the theater company of Karin Swanström which was active until the early 1920s. From 1925 to 1941, Axelsson was one of the leading names in various theater companies associated with Ernst Eklund. He died at Stocksund in Stockholm and was buried at Danderyds kyrkogård in Stockholm.
Movies
Swedish and Underage
Editor-in-chief
Kärlek - Ett minnesprogram
A Dream Play
Flottans överman
Rossling
The Great Amateur
Victor Wirén
Swing it, fröken
Fred
Girl in Tails
Ett dockhem
krigskommissarie
Divorced
Solkatten
Arvid Bjurstedt
Tant Grön, Tant Brun och Tant Gredelin
Iris and the Lieutenant
Bröder emellan
The Emperor of Portugallia
Fattiga riddare
Gunnar
Fia Jansson från Söder
Lindström
I dag gifter sig min man
Som fallen från skyarna
Per Jägerstam
I gult och blått
Jerry Landén
Det är min musik
Ragnar
Happiness Is on Its Way
Berger
We Home Toilers
Baron Wolfgang
Flickan i fönstret mitt emot
Dalsjö
En sjöman i frack
Film director Tallén
Magistrarna på sommarlov
Fransson the Terrible
direktör A. Borg
Nygifta
Hanna in High Society
Baltzar Hummerberg
Åh, en så'n advokat
Adolf Bergfeldt
A Crime
Dr. Bernhard Gilljams
Witches' Night
Lyckliga Vestköping
Lennart Rosén
En flicka kommer till sta'n
The Ghost at Bragehus
Arnell
Ä' vi gifta?
Bo Brehmerfeldt, Monias forlovede
On the Sunny Side
Olle Lagerberg
The Marriage Game
Gunnar Grahn
Ungdom av i dag
Perhaps a Gentleman
Baron Lejonsvan
Eva går ombord
A Little Flirt
Henry Wallé
Giftasvuxna döttrar
Erik Ehrenberg
Kärleksexpressen
Black Roses
Ådalen's poetry
Flickorna på Solvik
The Girl in Tails
Ludwig von Battwhyl
Giftas
The Smugglers
Amatörfilmen
Dick, Snyders son
Thomas Graal's Ward
The Pilgrimage to Kevlaar
The Phantom Carriage
David's Brother
The Girl from the Marsh Croft
Courtroom audience