The reluctant young star of Death in Venice
Björn Andrésen won screen immortality aged 16, when he appeared as Tadzio, the sailor-suited Polish boy whose beauty bewitches an ageing homosexual composer in Luchino Visconti’s 1971 adaptation of Thomas Mann’s “Death in Venice”. The film caused a sensation on its release, said The Daily Telegraph, and was hailed as a masterpiece. Visconti dubbed its child star “the most beautiful boy in the world”, a tag that was taken up by the press. But for Andrésen, the whole thing was a nightmare that, he said, “screwed up my life quite decently”.
He was born in Stockholm in 1955. He was never told his father’s identity; and when he was 10, his mother died by suicide. It was his grandmother who pushed him into acting because, he said, she “wanted a celebrity in the family”. She sent him off to multiple auditions, one of which was for “Death in Venice” – Visconti having cast his net widely for a child with the requisite “pure beauty”. At the screen test, Visconti told the boy to undress and pose shirtless in skimpy swimwear. In the footage, Andrésen looks deeply uneasy – and things were little better when they started filming, in the heat of a Venetian summer. “Luchino was the sort of cultural predator who would sacrifice anything or anyone for the work,” Andrésen recalled. With no lines, he was given just four directions: “Go, stop, turn, smile.” His co-star, Dirk Bogarde, wrote in his memoir that to preserve the boy’s alabaster complexion, Visconti never allowed Andrésen “to go into the sun, kick a football about, swim in the polluted sea or do anything which might have given him the smallest degree of pleasure”.
The film made him an overnight star. Visconti took him to gay clubs, which he detested, and sent him on a promotional tour to Japan, where he was mobbed. He was ill-prepared for fame, said The Times, and found it hard to resume ordinary life. “You come back to school and you hear, ‘Hi there, angel lips,’” he recalled. He was still only a teenager, but in a 2021 documentary, “The Most Beautiful Boy in the World”, he said that he was treated like “a sex object. Big game.” People often assumed that he was gay, and in his early 20s he was offered gifts and places to live by rich older men. “I thought it was because they liked me. But actually, I was just a trophy.” He had been “naive”, he admitted. He stopped accepting work that had anything to do with his looks, and grew a long beard. In 1983, he married Susanna Román, a poet. In 1986, their baby son died of sudden infant death syndrome. He blamed himself, descended into depression, and disappeared from view for several years. His final film role was in “Midsommar”, a hit 2019 horror movie. In 2021, he was reported to be living alone in a rented flat. “My career is one of the few that started at the absolute top and then worked its way down,” he said. “That was lonely.”