Christina Rahm

She was described as a good singer and was often given main parts when the theater offered opera and other lyrical performances.

In 1804–09, she was active as a member in the travelling theatre of Carl Stenborg, and as such performed in Linköping, Karlskrona Kalmar and Gothenburg.

Among her parts were Jenny in Kungen och skogvaktaren (The king and the gamekeeper), Lisbet in Njugg spar, Orphale in Alexander den Store (Alexander the Great) (1784), Catau in Julie (1786), Rosalie in Den bedragne bedragaren (The deceived deceiver) (1788), baron Birkwitz in Greven av Oldsbach (The Count of Oldsbach) (1790), the abbess in The Magic Flute (1794), and Genevieve in Richard Coeur-de-lion by Michel-Jean Sedaine (1795).

When the playwright Didrik Gabriel Björn [Wikidata] launched his play Det besynnerliga spektaklet (The odd spectacle) (1790), as an after-play to Greven av Oldsbach (The Count of Oldsbach) by Brandes translated by Björn, the artists of the theatre were to thank the audience for their support in the guise of their most popular role characters.

Björn performed as himself: Magnus Bonn as Mäster Sock in Skomakaren (The Shoemaker), Anders Lundberg as Hyrkusken (The Coachman) in Engelsmannen i Paris (An Englishman in Paris) by Auguste-Louis Bertin d'Antilly, Johan Petter Lindskog as Bartholo and Bazile in The Barber of Seville, Jonas Sundman as Jonas in Mäklaren (The Broker), Carl Schylander as Mor Bobi and dansmästare Rigadoun, Johanna Löfblad as Gertrud in Njugg spar (The stingy saver), Brita Maria Modéer as the maid in Den obetänksamma (The Thoughtless one), Christina Rahm as Anna Stina in Mascarade by Holberg, Lisette Stenberg as Lady Alton in Skottländskan (The Scottish Woman) by Voltaire, Margareta Sofia Lagerqvist as Anette in Anette and Lubin by Charles Dibdin, and Eva Säfström as Trädgårdsflickan (The gardener girl) in Sophie.