What exactly happened during Ingrid Bergman and photographer Robert Capa's real-life affair that inspired Rear Window?
The Big Picture While Rear Window is ultimately an original Alfred Hitchcock classic, its inspiration lies in a real-life love affair. Yes, even though you would assume that this movie was inspired by murder cases or some sort of true crime debacle, it turns out that this 1954 favorite is rooted in the passionate tale found between famous World War II photographer Robert Capa and iconic actress Ingrid Bergman.
How Did Robert Capa and Ingrid Bergman Inspire 'Rear Window'? Long before Rear Window would premiere in 1954, a young war photographer would be running around the battlefield capturing unimaginable and awe-inspiring images — that man would be Robert Capa. This was a man who did it all. He took incredible pictures of wartime, associated with people of power in the government and military, and ran with the biggest literary and filmmaking names of his time.
Their affair would last for two years, a period of time that seemed as though it went smoothly for them. Capa would move to Hollywood and get involved in film productions. After taking a role in Temptation, a 1946 film noir-thriller, the war photographer quickly realized that the movie lifestyle was not for him, and began making plans to move out of California. Ingrid Bergman, on the other hand, was ready to divorce her husband of 10 years to be with Capa.
Ingrid Bergman, on the other hand, would end up divorcing Lindström in 1950, only to get married to Roberto Rosselini soon after. Her acting career would also continue for the next couple of decades, an endeavor that she would stay active in until her death in 1982. Her roles didn't diminish in her later years either, as she performed in two of her most acclaimed films in the last decade of her life, those being 1974's Murder on the Orient Express and 1978's Autumn Sonata.
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