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Pål Sverre Hagen

Pål Sverre Valheim Hagen ,was born in Stavanger, Norway is a Norwegian stage and screen actor. He appeared in the hit Norwegian film Max Manus and played Thor Heyerdahl in the Oscar-nominated 2012 film Kon-Tiki.

Pål Hagen,is the son of Roar Hagen, a Norwegian cartoonist ,who has long been associated with Norway's largest daily, VG. He lived in Jåtten, a neighborhood in the city of Stavanger in southwestern Norway. When he was eight, his family moved to Østlandet, and by the age of 19 he was living in Nesodden, near Oslo. He attended Romerike folkehøgskole for a year, then studied at the Norwegian National Academy of Theatre in Oslo from 2000 / 2003.

In July 2000, after getting accepted to the Academy of Theatre, he was interviewed by the Aftenbladet. He described himself as being from Stavanger in southwestern Norway, and spoke in a Stavanger dialect. He had studied drama in upper secondary school and auditioned unsuccessfully for the Academy of Theatre a year earlier. He tried again in 2000, and was invited to try for a third time, in which he succeeded.

His stage debut was in 2003 in Frode Grytten's Bikubesong (Beehive Song) at Det Norske Teatret in Oslo.

In the same year, he played many parts at the same theater, including leading roles in Herr Bima og herr Bramati by Tord Akerbæk and Skråninga by Carl Frode Tiller (2004).

Hagen went on to play the title roles in Anton Chekhov's Ivanov and in Raskolnikov, based on Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment, both at Hålogaland Teater. He said that playing Raskolnikov had been "extremely dark and extremely difficult," and that he had had to take six months off after the end of the play's run to "recharge my batteries.

In 2006 he became an official member of the repertory company at Det Norske Teatret, and performed there in Verdas mest forelska par (World's Most-in-Love Couple), Få meg på, for faen! (Touch Me, For God's Sake!), and Gabriel García Márquez's Ingen skriv til obersten (Nobody Write to the Colonel).

Hagen played "Prince Hal" in a three-hour and forty-minute version of William Shakespeare's Henry IV Parts 1 and Part 2 staged in 2008 at Det Norske Teatret.

He told Kroepelien that in recent years he had worked hard on trying to use his body expressively, noting that "in roles like" Bjørn Diesel "in Verdas mest forelska par I began to explore an expressive language, something I have really always liked. I got a good opportunity to go more deeply both as the elephant in Fyrverkerimakarens dotter [The Fireworks Maker's Daughter] and Hanen in Ingen skriv til obersten.

Regarding his appearance in Henry IV, he said, "this is my first encounter with Shakespeare, and all I can do is admit that I have an overwhelming and massive piece of material ahead of me. Because really understanding the characters and the setting demands a lot more than a script."

In the autumn of 2009, he played in a dark comedy, Ett lykkelig sjølvmord (A Happy Suicide).

He said that the actor whose work meant the most to him was Bjørn Sundquist. "I've learned a lot from him. We're both interested in a kind of energy. An energy that's undefinable, but that's totally essential for expression. It is an important kernel of the kind of acting I want to do. And it's good to meet others who are looking for the same thing."

In the autumn of 2010 Valheim Hagen played" Edmund Tyrone" in the Riksteatret's production of Eugene O'Neill's Lang dags ferd mot natt (Long Day's Journey into Night). Liv Ullmann played his mother, Mary Tyrone, and Sundquist played his father, James Tyrone. In an article about this production, a writer for Dagbladet noted that Sundquist had played Falstaff to Valheim Hagen's Prince Hal in 2008, and that they had played father and son the year after in the film Jernanger, "in roles that were too small for their talents."

In 2014, he played Stavrogin in Demoner , based on Fyodor Dostojevskij's The Devils. The play premiered on February 8th at the National Theater in Oslo.

Hagen had his film debut in Cry in the Woods (Den som frykter ulven) in 2004. He appeared in several other films, including Erik Poppe's 2008 film Troubled Water (De usynlige). For this film he won the Kanonprisen for best performance by an actor in a leading role. A 2012 article in Filmmagasinet praising Troubled Water as a great Norwegian film gave part of the credit for its excellence to "unbelievably good acting" by Valheim Hagen and other members of the cast.

In 2008, in addition to Troubled Water, Valheim Hagen appeared in four other well-received films: Cold Lunch (Lønsj), House of Fools (De gales hus), Max Manus, and The Storm in My Heart (Jernanger).

January 2009 profile in Aftenposten noted that he was in three different movies that were running simultaneously in Oslo cinemas – The Storm in My Heart, Max Manus, and Troubled Water – and was also rehearsing the "surrealistic comedy" Eit lykkeleg sjølvmord at Det Norske Teatret.

In the autumn of 2011 Hagen played the lead role in a four-part, four-hour Norwegian TV miniseries, Buzz Aldrin, What Happened to You in All the Confusion? (Buzz Aldrin, hvor ble det av deg i alt mylderet?), based on the debut novel by Johan Harstad.

Hagen won international notice playing explorer Thor Heyerdahl in the 2012 film Kon-Tiki, based on Heyerdahl's book. An October 2011 article in VG about the making of the film reported that "the filmmakers had to pinch their arms when Pål Sverre Valheim Hagen (31) pulled off Heyerdahl's characteristic Larvik English for the first time. "We all got chills. It was a very special experience," said director Espen Sandberg. The very first scene Valheim Hagen did as Heyerdahl showed him giving a lecture in Washington, D.C., under the auspices of the National Geographic Society, and Sandberg said that he "did it so convincingly that the filmmakers stood their open mouthed," feeling "that it was Thor standing in front of us. Of course I knew it was Pål Sverre, but sometimes magic happens, and fortunately we managed to capture it."

A Dagsavisen profile of Hagen in August 2012 in connection with the release of Kon-Tiki said that he had "nearly perfected" the distinctive way in which Thor Heyerdahl spoke English. He explained that "It was a conscious choice to speak English the way he did. The most important thing for me is that those who see it get a kind of 'feeling for Thor.' For very many people, the way he spoke is something they remember well. He had a special 'sound'!"

He said he had considered it a challenge to "find" the real Heyerdahl, as the explorer had been a "master" at projecting a public image. "It's important to remember that when the film is taking place, Thor Heyerdahl hadn't become a legend yet. He hadn't become Heyerdahl yet."

Kon-Tiki was chosen by the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences as one of five nominees for its award for best foreign-language film of 2012. In explaining its choice, the Academy singled out Hagen for praise, saying that his performance created a feeling of intimacy in a film with a very broad scope.

The film was also nominated for a Golden Globe.

Known For

Credits

Cast Credits

Krigsseileren (2023)
Starring as Sigbjørn Kvalen (3 episodes)
Furia (2021)
Starring as Asgeir (8 episodes)
Exit (2019)
Starring as William Bergvik (16 episodes)
Beforeigners (2019)
Guest starring as Doktoranden (6 episodes)
Valkyrien (2016)
Starring as Leif (8 episodes)
Buzz Aldrin, hvor ble det av deg i alt mylderet? (2011)
Starring as Mattias (4 episodes)
Gullruten (1998)
Guest starring as Pål Sverre Hagen
  • Episode 2017-05-12: 2017 (May 12, 2017)
God kveld Norge med Dorthe (1997)
Guest starring as Pål Sverre Hagen
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