Ulla-Britt Söderlund

Ulla-Britt Söderlund (August 12, 1943 – July 21, 1985) was a Swedish costume designer. In a career spanning over one and a half decade, she has been recognized for her prolific work across film and television in more than 20 different productions. She won the Academy Award for Best Costume Design, which she shared with Milena Canonero for their work on Stanley Kubrick's epic period drama film Barry Lyndon (1975).

Career
Söderlund began her career creating the costumes for various Danish-Swedish screen co-productions. Her first major film credit was in Henning Carlsen's 1966 black-and-white drama Hunger, which was based on Knut Hamsun's 1890 novel of the same name. She again worked with Carlsen the following year, this time on the romantic comedy People Meet and Sweet Music Fills the Heart, which was an adaptation of Jens August Schade's 1944 novel. She then designed costumes for Mai Zetterling's 1968 dramatic adaptations, Doctor Glas and The Girls.

In the following years, Söderlund collaborated with many renowned directors, such as Gabriel Axel, Jan Troell, Stanley Kubrick, and Hans Alfredson, among others. In particular, her meticulous work on Troell's 1971 historical drama The Emigrants as well as its 1972 sequel, The New Land, garnered a great deal of attention and launched her to international prominence. Along with other career prospects, she and Milena Canonero worked together on the authentic 18th-century wardrobes for Kubrick's 1975 epic Barry Lyndon. That ambitious project required a year and a half of preparing the costumes, studying paintings, and reading books to reproduce garments for the screen. Their remarkable efforts received critical and audience admiration, ultimately winning them the Academy Award for Best Costume Design.

In the late 1970s, Söderlund worked on the acclaimed Danish television series Matador. Among her last notable film credits was designing the wardrobe for Alfredson's 1982 drama film, The Simple-Minded Murder.

Awards and nominations
Academy Awards

BAFTA Awards

Illness and death
Söderlund died of cancer on 21 July 1985. She was diagnosed with the disease in the spring of that year.