
Acting
Inger Valborg Lassen var datter af kommunelærer, cand. mag. senere skoledirektør i Odense Valdemar Sigfred Charles Lassen (19-11-1868 - 22-02-1939) og hustru Harriet Valborg Rasmine Schmidt (1875-1936), der var en søster til skuespillerne Robert og Albrecht Schmidt. Hun debuterede hos Ove Jarne i efteråret 1932 i Svendborg i "Forår i Wien" og virkede ved hans selskab indtil sommeren 1934. Derefter kom hun i et par sæsoner på Dagmarteatret, hvor hun bl.a. medvirkede i "Nu er det morgen", "Kortene på bordet" og "Det levende lig". Sit egentlige københavnske gennembrud fik hun imidlertid på Frederiksberg Teater i årene 1938-41, bl.a. optrådte hun i "Hendes gamle nåde", "Høfeber" og "Anonyme fædre". Senere var hun 1941 tilknyttet Nørrebros Teater, hvor hun bl.a. spillede prinsessen i "Valsedrømme" og sang "Jeg ejer en mand - en bedårende mand" - 1942 Nygade Teatret, 1944 Det ny Teater og fra 1945 var hun fast tilknyttet Folketeatret. Hun spillede de fleste roller indenfor lystspil og operette. En af de sidste roller på Folketeatret var sammen med ægtefællen Angelo Bruun i "Kærlighed". Sygdom og sorg over ægtefællens død var årsag til at hun de seneste år ikke stod på scenen. Hun medvirkede i den tysk/danske film "Für 2 groschen zärtlichkeit" fra 1958. Fra TV huskes hun for sin præstation som moderdyret i Tennessee Williams" Glasmenageriet". Inger Lassen var søster til skuespilleren Finn Lassen. Hun blev 3. september 1937 gift med skuespilleren Angelo Bruun, der døde i 1956.

A young, beautiful girl arrives at Krogerød Kro on Mols and shocks the innkeeper by telling him that he is her father. At the same time, the inn is about to lose its liquor license, threatening its very existence. The innkeeper tells the girl that both he and his friend from his military days have paid child support to her, as no one knew which of them was her real father.

At Helene Dragstrup's 20th birthday, her grandmother Margrethe decides that it is time that Helene learns something about life outside the protective walls of the estate.

The good people of a small community in the countryside near Copenhagen enjoy life and find their way to love.

When a young woman falls in love with a gown in a shop window it leads to adventure and romance exceeding even her own vivid imagination.

Two young skippers, Hans Tønnesen and Poul Nielsen, have a small cargo ship that transports freight from Copenhagen to the provinces. Poul and Hans are in love with the same girl, Margit, who is the daughter of master baker Bonnekamp. However, Margit chooses Poul. On their wedding night, Hans cannot sleep. He sits in his boat and hears a splash in the water. He jumps into the water and rescues a young girl, Kristiane, from drowning. She is distraught because she is pregnant and does not dare tell her parents. Hans offers to marry her and acknowledge paternity, but on the way to his own wedding, his engine stalls.

It's all about an anonymous little gray book originating from sexually advanced Paris. The book doesn't look like much, but shouldn't be judged by its cover. Wherever this book goes, something will happen. And for sure, this book goes around.

This film is based on a true story, depicted in the novel of the same name, "Der kom en dag" (The Day Came), written by Flemming B. Muus. Quote: On April 9, 1940, we surrendered, under protest, to an army that broke all treaties, attacked our borders, occupied our country, and seized all executive power. But soon, the will to resist was born. Groups of people came together in a common desire to help win the war and liberate our country.

In the charming old Copenhagen neighborhood of Nyboder lives a group of quirky and distinctive characters. Among them is Albertine, who one day is visited by her young niece Ditte, who has run away from a strict upbringing at home. She has fallen in love with her dance teacher Johny, who, however, is not very keen on surrendering to the young woman's charms. Fortunately, circumstances bring the two closer together.

Three girls (around 20 years old) who have grown up in different parts of Denmark get a strange letter. It turns out they are sisters, and will inherit from their late mother, if the can stay together one month in the same house. They end up in a lot of (romantic) trouble, because of speculations of who their father(s) might be.

The action begins one early summer morning in a hostel, where we see, among others, two young girls, a law student, Ruth, and a small office lady, Ilse. From their conversation, we understand that Ilse has a very bourgeois outlook on life. By chance, these two girls come across one of Ruth's fellow students, Pontus Berthelsen, who is spending the summer holidays in a fisherman's cabin. Ilse, who has little world experience, quickly takes an interest in Pontus, who possesses a lot of innate charm. Pontus does his best to conquer Ilse, but her bourgeois attitude means - at first - that she does not fall for his rather deft approaches.

