Modern Screen (Dec 1954 - Dec 1955)

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Her recent life has made inqrid more glamorous in appearance, more maternal in outlook. Her concern is for Roberto, Renzo, the three other children. INGRID BERGMAN: after five years with Rossellini BY JIM NEWTON ■ Five years ago in one of the most widely-publicized love affairs of the century, Ingrid Bergman left her husband, her daughter and her Hollywood motion picture career for the tempestuous love of the charming, balding, Italian movie director, Roberto Rossellini. Today, five years and three children later, Ingrid is starring at the Stoll Theatre in London in her husband's new production of ]oan Of Arc At The Stake. With Ingrid are her children: the twins, Ingrid and Isabelle, two and a half, Robertino, four and a half, and Renzo, thirteen, Rossellini's son by a previous marriage. Also an Italian governess, a Swiss nurse and an interpreter for Renzo, who speaks virtually no Engbsh. While their parents are resting or rehearsing, the Rossellini children are piled into a Rolls Royce with three bicycles — their father believes in ex pensive and expansive living — and | driven to Hyde Park where they ride \ and play under the supervision of dieir nurses. Ingrid, at thirty-seven, is still an incredibly beautiful and appeahng I woman. But life with Rossellini has ' changed her appearance, her personal philosophy and her values. In Hollywood, Ingrid cared little about clodies or coiffure. She never wore make-up or jewelry. ^ Now she has a stylish ItaUan haircut, beautifully tailored suits, and an extensive collection of boutique jewelry: gold and diamond earrings, large cocktad rings, and half a dozen gold bracelets which she wears on both arms. In her outlook, the change is even more pronounced. "When I was young," she says, "I put ambition first and children second. Now that I am older, it is the other way. around. I still want to act,