State of Happiness
State of Happiness (Norwegian: Lykkeland) is a Norwegian period drama television series that portrays the discovery of vast oil reserves in the North Sea in 1969 and the profound economic and social upheaval it triggered in Norway, centering on residents of the coastal city of Stavanger as a traditional fishing community grapples with rapid industrialization and newfound wealth.[1][2] Premiering on NRK in 2018, the series was written by Mette M. Bølstad and produced by Maipo Film, spanning four seasons through 2024 and following interconnected fictional characters—including a mayor's secretary, a saturation diver, an American geologist, and a herring factory worker—whose lives intersect with real historical milestones like the Ekofisk oil field development and the 1977 Bravo blowout.[3][1][4] While grounded in documented events that propelled Norway's shift from post-war austerity to one of Europe's wealthiest nations via sovereign wealth funds and state-controlled petroleum resources, the narrative heavily fictionalizes personal stories, with only a handful of figures, such as politician Arne Rettedal, drawn directly from history.[2][5] The production has garnered significant recognition, securing multiple Gullruten awards—Norway's premier television honors—including best drama series and best actress for Anne Regine Ellingsæter in 2019, alongside international sales to approximately 50 countries and nominations at events like the Rose d'Or.[6][7][8] Critics and audiences have lauded its strong ensemble performances, meticulous period recreation, and insightful examination of how oil-driven prosperity reshaped gender roles, community structures, and national policy, though some note its emphasis on dramatic interpersonal conflicts over technical oil industry details.[9][10][2]Premise and historical context
Series premise
State of Happiness is a Norwegian period drama series that chronicles the personal and communal upheavals in Stavanger beginning in the summer of 1969, as the announcement of a massive North Sea oil discovery by Phillips Petroleum ignites rapid economic transformation.[2] The story follows four young protagonists—representing diverse backgrounds in a conservative coastal community—who navigate emerging opportunities in the nascent petroleum sector, intertwining their ambitions with evolving romantic and familial ties.[11] This multi-generational saga dramatizes the shift from a herring-dependent economy plagued by post-war stagnation to one fueled by offshore exploration, highlighting individual aspirations against a backdrop of sudden prosperity.[12] Central to the premise are fictionalized interpersonal dynamics that underscore moral quandaries arising from the oil influx, such as ethical compromises in pursuit of wealth and the strain on traditional social structures from an influx of foreign laborers and transient workers.[13] Characters grapple with temptations of newfound affluence, including extravagant lifestyles and relational betrayals, which serve to humanize the era's societal flux without altering core historical triggers like the Ekofisk field's development.[14] The narrative employs these invented backstories and conflicts to explore themes of reinvention and consequence, portraying how personal agency intersects with inexorable economic forces in a once-sleepy town rechristened a "Klondike" for its gold-rush-like allure.[11] Spanning decades, the series constructs a tapestry of evolving family legacies, where early pioneers' decisions ripple into later generations' inheritances, emphasizing resilience amid booms and busts like the 1977 Bravo blowout's environmental fallout.[14] Fictional elements, such as protagonists' hidden pasts and clandestine alliances, amplify the human cost of progress, including addiction, infidelity, and identity crises, while grounding viewer empathy in relatable struggles rather than macroeconomic abstractions.[15] This approach fictionalizes the oil age's onset to illuminate causal links between resource windfalls and behavioral shifts, prioritizing character-driven causality over detached chronicle.[12]Factual historical backdrop
The discovery of the Ekofisk oil field by Phillips Petroleum Company in 1969 initiated Norway's transition to petroleum production, shifting the nation from a post-World War II economy centered on fisheries, shipping, and hydropower toward resource-driven growth.[16] Exploration licensing began in 1965, with foreign firms bearing initial risks in the North Sea, leading to Ekofisk's confirmation as a viable commercial reserve by late 1969.[17] In 1972, Norway's parliament created Statoil (later Equinor) as a state entity to engage in operations, while establishing regulatory frameworks like the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate to oversee development and ensure national benefits from private-led initiatives.[18] Early policy emphasized saving revenues to avoid overheating the economy, laying groundwork for the Government Pension Fund Global, formally launched in 1990 to invest surplus petroleum income internationally and buffer against volatility.[19] Petroleum extraction causally accelerated economic metrics: GDP per capita, at roughly $3,200 in 1969, exceeded $13,000 by 1980 in nominal terms, more than quadrupling amid oil revenues that by 1977 accounted for over 20% of exports and spurred mainland growth.[20] Unemployment, averaging 1.5-2% in the late 1960s but vulnerable to global cycles, stabilized below 2% through the 1970s due to sector-induced employment, contrasting with higher rates in non-oil dependent peers during the decade's recessions.[21] Stavanger emerged as the epicenter, with oil activities driving infrastructure expansions including expanded harbors, pipelines, and urban facilities from the mid-1970s, elevating it from a modest port to a hub employing tens of thousands in support industries.[22] Private incentives underpinned rapid progress; international operators like Phillips funded high-risk seismic surveys and drilling under concession terms, yielding multiple fields by the mid-1970s and enabling state participation without initial capital outlay, a dynamic that empirical records show outpaced fully state-directed models elsewhere.[17] This countered 1970s risks of fiscal strain under expansive welfare and industrial policies, as oil inflows—peaking at one-third of GDP by the early 1980s—sustained expansions verifiable in public accounts, rather than relying on romanticized pre-oil equilibria or overstating contemporaneous environmental burdens, which were managed through emerging regulations without halting output.[20]Production
Development and creation
The concept for State of Happiness originated from an idea by Maipo Film producers Synnøve Hørsdal and Siv Rajendram Eliassen, with development extending over roughly a decade prior to its premiere on Norwegian public broadcaster NRK in October 2018.[1] Writers Mette M. Bølstad and Pål Lønsdal shaped the narrative core during the mid-2010s, emphasizing the 1969 Ekofisk oil discovery by Phillips Petroleum as a driver of national prosperity through personal risk-taking and entrepreneurial adaptation, rather than collective hardship or resource plunder.[2] This approach prioritized depictions of individual agency—such as locals transitioning from declining sardine canning to oil-related ventures—grounded in the causal role of market incentives in Norway's shift from poverty to wealth.[23] The writing process involved meticulous archival research into events from 1969 through the 1990s, drawing on contemporary newspapers, technical records of offshore drilling, and policy documents to authenticate timelines like the 1971 installation of Ekofisk's first production platforms and the 1972 founding of Statoil.[24] Fictional protagonists interacted with verifiable historical figures, including politician Arne Rettedal, who served as Norway's oil minister from 1979 to 1981, though dramatic composites and condensations deviated from exact biographies to heighten interpersonal conflicts while adhering to empirical sequences of industrial milestones.[2] NRK funding supported this blend, ensuring the series avoided ideological overlays by substantiating oil's contributions to welfare expansion and the sovereign wealth fund's origins in production revenues exceeding $1 trillion by 2025.[24] Production faced hurdles in aligning fictional elements with industry realism, including consultations with former oil workers to portray profit-driven decisions—like aggressive exploration amid dry wells—as pivotal to breakthroughs, diverging from narratives framing extraction as environmentally or socially extractive without evidence of net harm to Norway's per capita GDP, which rose from $3,300 in 1969 to over $100,000 by 2020.[23] Cooperation from oil sector veterans facilitated accurate renderings of technical risks, such as subsea completions, reinforcing the series' commitment to causal mechanisms of success over retrospective critiques.[24]Casting process
The principal casting for State of Happiness occurred in the year leading up to the series' premiere on NRK in October 2018, focusing on Norwegian performers adept at portraying the raw determination and adaptive resilience of individuals navigating economic upheaval.[2] Mads Sjøgård Pettersen, previously known for roles in Occupied (2015–2018), was selected as Martin Lekanger, a saturation diver whose physicality and intensity suited depictions of high-stakes labor evolving into opportunistic ventures during the North Sea oil surge.[25] Anne Regine Ellingsæter was cast as Anna Hellevik, bringing a grounded presence to embody the shift from constrained circumstances to self-directed ambition in a transforming society.[25] Subsequent seasons, spanning the 1980s and 1990s timelines, incorporated additional ensemble members to reflect expanding narratives of industrial maturation and interpersonal dynamics, with 24 episodes across four seasons by 2024.[2] New Norwegian talent, such as those portraying familial and professional networks in Stavanger, supplemented the core cast to maintain continuity while illustrating generational progression amid sustained prosperity.[7] International actors were integrated for multinational elements, including Bart Edwards as Jonathan Kay, a Phillips Petroleum executive, to convey the influx of foreign capital and expertise without reductive antagonism, emphasizing instead the pragmatic interplay of global markets and local initiative.[25] Selections prioritized performers versed in Rogaland dialects and regional sensibilities, as evidenced by the predominance of West Norwegian actors, ensuring linguistic fidelity and cultural verisimilitude over external stereotypes of resource-driven opportunism.[25] This approach facilitated portrayals grounded in empirical accounts of oil-era motivations—risk-taking, innovation, and wealth accumulation—drawing from historical records of diver unions and entrepreneurial surges rather than ideologically laden tropes.[26] Casting avoided one-dimensional "villainous" archetypes for industry figures, opting for nuanced interpretations that aligned with documented incentives of mutual benefit in Norway's sovereign wealth model.[27]Filming and technical aspects
Filming for State of Happiness primarily took place in Stavanger, Norway, to capture the authentic urban and coastal environments central to the series' depiction of the local petroleum industry's emergence.[28] Additional locations included Bergen for transitional scenes and Lint, Belgium, where underwater shoots simulated North Sea diving operations, emphasizing the physical demands of early exploration.[29] Production spanned multiple years, with principal photography for season 1 commencing in May 2017, season 2 in September 2020, and season 3 in March 2023, allowing for period-specific adaptations across the 1969–1990 timeline.[30] Practical effects dominated sequences involving offshore platforms and saturation diving, utilizing controlled underwater facilities to replicate real-world pressures and equipment limitations, thereby underscoring the engineering feats and risks inherent in subsea oil extraction.[29] These choices prioritized tangible simulations over abstraction, enabling precise conveyance of innovations like blowout preventers and diver umbilicals that facilitated scalable resource recovery.[31] Subsequent seasons incorporated escalating visual effects, with CGI constructing expansive 1980s-era rigs and dynamic sea states to depict intensified operations amid Norway's sovereign production phase.[32][33] This technical progression aligned with budgetary expansions from NRK's core funding and co-productions with entities like Maipo Film, which supported broader set builds and effects integration for comprehensive illustrations of infrastructural growth.[30] Cinematographic techniques focused on naturalistic lighting and handheld shots during rig and harbor sequences, foregrounding the causal interplay between labor-intensive processes and output-driven efficiencies in hydrocarbon development.[1] This approach avoided dramatized peril in favor of evidentiary portrayals of machinery and workflows that underpinned economic transformation.[31]Cast and characters
Principal characters
Christian Nyman, portrayed by Amund Harboe in season 1 and Paal Herman Ims in subsequent seasons, serves as an oil rig diver whose career begins amid the 1969 discovery of the Ekofisk field.[2] He embodies the high-stakes environment of early offshore operations, engaging in saturation diving that involves prolonged underwater work under extreme pressure.[34] Nyman's arc progresses from initial optimism about the industry's prospects, partnering with Martin Lekanger to establish a diving company requiring startup capital from family networks, to later conflicts including defying his father Fredrik at a board meeting that pushes the firm toward bankruptcy in the 1980s. His choices reflect personal initiative in seizing oil-related opportunities, culminating in marriage to Toril and ongoing business challenges into the 1990s.[7] Anna Hellevik, played by Anne Regine Ellingsæter, starts as an 18-year-old secretary to mayor Arne Rettedal in 1969 Stavanger, engaged to Christian Nyman.[35] Her trajectory highlights ambition and adaptation, mastering shorthand, typing, and additional languages while entering political spheres to advocate for gender-related advancements during the oil transition. By later seasons, following Christian's death, she becomes a widow raising twins, resigning from a secure role at the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate to pursue independent ventures amid the industry's maturation.[7] Hellevik's decisions underscore self-directed career progression from clerical work to influential positions, navigating personal loss and economic shifts through calculated risks.[36] Toril Torstensen, enacted by Malene Wadel, emerges as a 17-year-old unmarried mother from a devout religious family, employed at a cannery and pregnant by an American oil worker in 1969.[35] Her evolution traces resilience amid social constraints, evolving from early dependency on her American partner to entrepreneurial independence, establishing multiple restaurants that position her as a key figure in Stavanger's nightlife by the 1990s.[7] Torstensen's path involves marrying Christian Nyman and confronting alcohol-related personal struggles, driven by opportunistic responses to the booming service sector rather than inherited advantages.[25] These leads draw loose inspiration from real North Sea pioneers, such as divers and locals adapting to the Ekofisk find on December 23, 1969, though the series fabricates most personal narratives to emphasize individual agency over deterministic historical forces.[2] Christian's entrepreneurial forays parallel early Norwegian firms capitalizing on subsea expertise, while Anna and Toril's advancements reflect documented rises of women in oil-adjacent roles during Norway's 1970s-1990s economic expansion.[36]Supporting and historical figures
The series incorporates portrayals of select historical figures to ground its narrative in the factual context of Norway's North Sea oil emergence, with Arne Rettedal serving as a prominent example. Played by Vegar Hoel across eight episodes of the first season, Rettedal is depicted as a pragmatic and entrepreneurial politician who champions oil prospecting and infrastructure development in Stavanger, aligning closely with his real-life advocacy for positioning the city as a hub for petroleum activities.[35][37] As mayor during key periods in the 1960s, Rettedal actively facilitated ties between local authorities and international oil firms, including provisioning base sites and promoting educational alignments with industry needs, which empirically accelerated Stavanger's economic pivot from herring fisheries to oil services and contributed to the establishment of Statoil's headquarters there by 1972.[38][23] His pro-development stance, emphasizing rapid adaptation over caution, is portrayed without exaggeration, reflecting policies that correlated with a surge in regional GDP growth exceeding 10% annually in the 1970s amid oil inflows.[39] Fictional supporting characters, including family members of the central figures such as siblings and parents, recur to illustrate interpersonal and communal strains amid economic upheaval, often embodying conservative attachments to pre-oil livelihoods like fishing and small-scale trade. These roles highlight dynamics of familial loyalty versus individual ambition, without direct historical counterparts but informed by the era's documented social fabric in Rogaland. Colleagues and minor executives in the series function as composites representing the influx of foreign technical expertise, particularly American engineers from firms like Phillips Petroleum following the 1969 Ekofisk field discovery, which drew over 1,000 expatriate workers to Stavanger by the mid-1970s and catalyzed skill transfers in drilling and seismic technologies.[38] Union representatives and local skeptics appear as recurring antagonists to innovation-driven characters, symbolizing resistance from entrenched labor groups tied to declining sectors, a tension rooted in historical accounts of initial opposition to offshore risks and environmental unknowns during parliamentary debates on oil licensing in the early 1960s. The series maintains epistemic distinction by limiting real-person depictions to verified figures like Rettedal—among only five such instances overall—while using composites to avoid anachronistic or unsubstantiated attributions.[2]Episodes and seasons
Season overviews
Season 1, broadcast in 2018 on NRK, covers the years 1969 to 1972, centering on the transformative discovery of the Ekofisk oil field in the North Sea.[2] The narrative begins with Phillips Petroleum's announcement of the find on December 23, 1969, after drilling at 69 meters depth, marking Norway's entry into offshore petroleum extraction.[40] Key events include initial test drilling, the lighting of the gas flare on the Ocean Viking rig, and the start of production in July 1971, alongside early infrastructure developments like pipelines to shore. Personal and communal adaptations in Stavanger unfold amid these milestones, highlighting shifts from traditional fishing economies to oil-related opportunities.[15] Season 2, premiered on NRK in January 2022, spans 1977 to 1980, depicting the consolidation of Norway's oil industry during its expansion phase.[41] The season explores intensified production from fields like Ekofisk and Statfjord, with Norway establishing Statoil in 1972 for state control, leading to rapid economic growth and infrastructure booms such as new rigs and supply bases.[42] Family and social dynamics intensify amid worker migrations, safety concerns, and ethical debates over foreign involvement, culminating in the Alexander L. Kielland platform capsizing on March 27, 1980, which killed 123 of 212 aboard and prompted regulatory reforms.[7] Season 3, the final season premiered on NRK TV on October 26, 2024, and covers 1987 to 1990, addressing challenges and adaptations in the industry following the 1986 oil price collapse.[43] Despite global recession, Norway's sector experiences steady output from mature fields, with efforts toward technological advancements like subsea completions and early diversification into gas exports.[44] The storyline examines post-crash recovery, including layoffs in service sectors, renewed investments after prices stabilized around $18 per barrel by 1987, and tensions over long-term sustainability as production peaks approach.[40]Key narrative arcs
The primary narrative arc spans the inaugural season, tracing the perilous exploratory drilling efforts in the North Sea, where international firms like Phillips Petroleum confront repeated dry wells and equipment failures, culminating in the dramatic gas flare ignition on the Ocean Viking rig on December 23, 1969, signaling the Ekofisk field's vast reserves and triggering Stavanger's pivot from fishery decline to petroleum hub.[2][45] This breakthrough propels characters such as commercial diver Christian Nyman into the high-risk offshore operations, where underwater hazards and technical innovations directly yield career advancements and community-wide economic influxes, with local employment surging as rigs transition from testing to extraction phases aligned with Ekofisk's actual production commencement in June 1971.[46] A concurrent arc examines interpersonal fractures induced by the oil windfall's disparities, as exemplified by Toril Nyman's entanglement with an American executive, whose departure amid the 1969 discovery announcement exacerbates familial tensions rooted in religious conservatism and sudden class mobility, fostering relational breakdowns that echo broader societal rifts between traditional livelihoods and influxes of foreign capital.[47][2] These strains intensify across seasons, with wealth accumulation from early 1970s contracts leading to inherited conflicts for offspring, such as Anna Hellevik's navigation of widowhood and industry entanglements in the late 1980s, where oil prosperity amplifies personal agency amid volatile market dependencies.[7] Overarching multi-season threads underscore generational transmissions, wherein pioneering figures like the Nymans hand off stakes in the maturing sector—mirroring Norway's demographic evolution from a 1960s population of fishing-dependent coastal workers to a 1980s cohort bolstered by petroleum-funded welfare and urbanization—to heirs confronting the causal fallout of resource extraction, including operational escalations post-1971 that embed family legacies in the industry's infrastructure buildout.[15] This progression ties fictional outcomes to verifiable milestones, such as the 1972 parliamentary designation of Stavanger as oil capital, which cascades into localized booms altering inheritance patterns and social fabrics.[48]Themes and analysis
Economic and industrial transformation
The series portrays the discovery and exploitation of North Sea oil reserves as the central catalyst for Norway's economic ascent, shifting the nation from a subsistence-based economy reliant on fishing, agriculture, and shipping to one characterized by industrial abundance and technological prowess. This transformation is depicted through scenes of rigorous exploration and infrastructure development, such as the construction of offshore rigs like the Ocean Viking, presented as feats of private-sector engineering and determination that unlocked vast hydrocarbon wealth beginning with the 1969 Ekofisk field strike by Phillips Petroleum.[17][2] In line with historical evidence, the narrative emphasizes oil's direct contribution to prosperity via private initiative complemented by pragmatic state policies, including licensing concessions to international firms while imposing high taxes and establishing partial state participation through Statoil (now Equinor). This approach generated petroleum revenues that, by the 1980s, accounted for up to 20% of GDP and funded expansive welfare systems without the mismanagement pitfalls of full nationalization observed in resource-dependent economies like Venezuela, where similar endowments led to fiscal collapse due to politicized control.[49] The series underscores verifiable outcomes, such as the creation of approximately 200,000 direct and indirect jobs in the petroleum sector by the 2000s, alongside technology spillovers that bolstered sectors like maritime engineering and manufacturing.[50] Norway's establishment of the Government Pension Fund Global in 1990 exemplifies the depicted fiscal discipline, with the fund amassing over $1.5 trillion by saving the bulk of oil surpluses—effectively channeling excess revenues equivalent to several percentage points of GDP annually into diversified global investments. This strategy has mitigated Dutch disease symptoms, such as currency appreciation eroding non-oil competitiveness, by adhering to a fiscal rule limiting withdrawals to an estimated 3% real return, thereby sustaining long-term growth and averting the boom-bust cycles critiqued in left-leaning analyses that downplay resource-driven gains in favor of redistribution concerns.[51][52] Empirical metrics affirm the causal prosperity engine: oil exports propelled GDP per capita from roughly $3,200 in 1970 to $106,000 by 2023, enabling Norway to maintain low unemployment below 4% and high living standards without over-reliance on resource depletion.[21]Social changes and individual agency
In State of Happiness, social transformations are portrayed through characters exercising personal initiative amid the oil boom's upheavals, such as Anna Hellevik's relocation from a rural farm to Stavanger for secretarial work in the emerging petroleum sector, symbolizing women's expanded professional opportunities and defiance of conventional domestic expectations.[53][24] Anna's arc underscores causal links between individual choices—like acquiring typing skills and navigating male-dominated offices—and broader shifts toward gender parity, as she influences political and business decisions while balancing family obligations.[53] Similarly, figures like fisherman-turned-oil prospectors exemplify ambition overriding traditional livelihoods, with decisions to migrate inland reflecting opportunistic responses to new economic incentives rather than imposed collectivism.[54] These narratives highlight urban migration's role in societal flux, mirroring Stavanger's real expansion post-1969 Ekofisk discovery, where the regional population surged from approximately 102,000 in 1970 to over 170,000 by 1985, driven by influxes seeking oil-related employment.[55] Characters' agency in seizing such prospects fosters depictions of innovation, as personal risks in drilling ventures and administrative roles propel community-wide prosperity, contrasting with inertia among traditionalists who resist forsaking fishing or farming.[38] Historically, the oil influx correlated with nuanced gender dynamics: while national female labor force participation climbed from 44% in 1960 to 54% by 1980, local booms temporarily depressed women's full-time engagement in affected areas by up to 14% in earnings terms, as household wealth enabled part-time or homemaking shifts, though welfare expansions later bolstered overall participation.[56][57] Individual ambition in the sector, evidenced by entrepreneurs and workers adapting to high-risk platforms, accelerated technological adaptations like subsea completions, yielding net economic gains that funded public goods.[17] Proponents of this individualism argue it catalyzed Norway's transition to a high-wage economy, with oil revenues enhancing intergenerational mobility—sons of oil-boom beneficiaries showed 10-15% higher earnings persistence—and supporting education investments that raised tertiary enrollment from 10% in 1970 to 25% by 1990.[58] Health metrics improved concurrently, with life expectancy rising from 73.4 years in 1969 to 76.1 by 1985, attributable in part to revenue-financed universal healthcare. Such outcomes validate causal realism in opportunity pursuit, as personal drives outweighed collectivist stasis. Critiques within the series, voiced by conservative characters decrying eroded family ties and moral drift, echo real concerns over rising divorce rates—from 1.1 per 1,000 in 1970 to 2.2 by 1980—potentially exacerbated by wealth-induced independence and work migrations straining unions.[59] Yet empirical aggregates affirm net advancements: despite localized family strains, oil-enabled policies mitigated disruptions via parental leave and childcare, yielding sustained life satisfaction gains, with Norway's rankings in global well-being indices climbing post-boom due to equitable wealth distribution.[60] Traditionalist pushback, while culturally resonant, yielded to evidence of superior outcomes in health, literacy, and income equality compared to pre-oil baselines.[61]Environmental and ethical debates
The series State of Happiness portrays the nascent Norwegian oil industry's environmental hazards, including risks of spills and worker injuries during exploratory phases in the late 1960s and early 1970s, reflecting historical incidents like the 1977 Ekofisk blowout that released oil and gas but caused no fatalities.[62] These depictions underscore early operational uncertainties, yet empirical records indicate subsequent regulatory reforms, such as the Working Environment Act and safety delegate systems implemented post-Ekofisk, dramatically reduced incidents; Norway's offshore sector now maintains one of the world's lowest major accident rates, with hydrocarbon leak frequencies dropping over 90% since the 1980s through mandatory risk assessments and technological upgrades.[63][64] Critics, often aligned with environmental advocacy groups, have faulted the series for insufficient emphasis on oil extraction's long-term ecological footprint, echoing broader media narratives that amplify risks while downplaying efficiency gains; however, data reveals Norwegian oil production emits less than half the CO2 per barrel compared to global averages, owing to electrification of platforms and gas reinjection practices adopted since the 1990s.[65] Such portrayals risk overstating downsides amid institutional biases in academia and outlets favoring alarmist framings, yet causal analysis shows petroleum revenues—totaling over $1 trillion by 2023—have financed the Government Pension Fund Global, which allocates 2-3% of assets to unlisted renewable infrastructure and enforces biodiversity safeguards on investees, including avoidance of critical habitats.[66][67] Ethical debates extend to the industry's role in enabling energy transitions, with proponents arguing oil wealth has subsidized Norway's hydropower dominance (covering 90% of electricity) and international biodiversity efforts, such as $1 billion contributions to Brazil's Amazon Fund since 2008, directly tied to state oil taxes; environmentalists counter that ongoing Arctic drilling contradicts net-zero pledges, but verifiable metrics affirm trade-offs favor sustained low-emission outputs over abrupt cessation, which could elevate global imports from higher-intensity producers.[68][65] This tension highlights oil's pragmatic contributions to funding verifiable protections, rather than inherent ethical vice, as revenues have averted fiscal pressures that might otherwise compromise environmental stewardship.[69]Release and distribution
Domestic premiere and broadcast
State of Happiness premiered domestically on NRK1, Norway's public service broadcaster, with its first season debuting on October 28, 2018.[70] The season comprised eight episodes, each approximately 45 minutes long, airing weekly on Sunday evenings at 19:40, alongside on-demand availability via NRK TV from the same day.[70] [71] The second season aired starting January 2, 2022, following the established format of eight weekly episodes on NRK1 Sundays, with episodes released on NRK TV at 06:00 on premiere day.[72] The third and final season commenced on October 27, 2024, beginning with two episodes on NRK1, followed by one per week, and full-season access on NRK TV from October 26.[43] NRK scheduled the series in prime-time slots to showcase Norway's historical shift into the petroleum era, leveraging its mandate as a public broadcaster to produce content on national developments.[73] The first-season premiere drew strong viewership, reflecting widespread interest in the narrative of the 1969 oil discovery and its societal impacts.[73] Subsequent seasons sustained high engagement, with NRK reporting audience figures exceeding typical drama series benchmarks for the broadcaster.[73]International availability
"State of Happiness" has achieved international distribution primarily through public broadcasters and niche streaming platforms catering to European and North American audiences, with content typically offered in original Norwegian audio accompanied by English subtitles. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the series was acquired by BBC Four, which began airing season 1 in 2020 and continued with subsequent seasons, including season 3 premiering on November 23, 2024, available via BBC iPlayer.[74][75][76] In the United States and Canada, the show streams on MHz Choice, a service specializing in international television, accessible directly or as a channel add-on via Amazon Prime Video, with season 1 and later episodes available since at least 2020.[77][78] Earlier U.S. distribution included Topic, a streaming service under First Look Media, which secured rights alongside the BBC deal for season 2.[74] Following the Norwegian premiere of the final season on NRK on October 16, 2024, international expansions included continued availability on BBC platforms and MHz Choice, broadening access to the series' conclusion depicting the 1980s oil boom era.[7][77] No dubbed versions in major languages beyond subtitles have been widely reported, reflecting the show's targeted appeal to audiences interested in Scandinavian historical dramas rather than mass-market adaptations. The narrative's deep embedding in Norway's Ekofisk oil field discovery and regional socioeconomic shifts has constrained broader global penetration, with distribution largely confined to English-speaking markets and select European services.[79]Reception and impact
Critical evaluations
Critics have praised State of Happiness for its realistic depiction of the socioeconomic upheaval in Stavanger following the 1969 North Sea oil discovery, highlighting how individual ambition and industrial innovation propelled Norway from relative poverty to prosperity.[2] Reviewers in outlets like The Guardian described the series as a "wonderful find" for its gripping portrayal of personal and communal transformations amid rapid wealth creation, emphasizing authentic character arcs driven by opportunity rather than melodrama.[10] Similarly, Are You Screening awarded it a perfect 10/10, commending its high-drama style akin to Downton Abbey in capturing the era's causal shifts from fishing dependency to energy sector dominance, grounded in historical fidelity.[54] Norwegian reception has been particularly strong, with the premiere drawing critical acclaim for mythologizing the nation's oil-fueled ascent while attending to granular details of 1970s Stavanger life, including labor dynamics and cultural clashes with American firms.[73] International audiences, via platforms like BBC4, echoed this, with Daily Mail noting the series' effective tension in reflecting the perilous yet exhilarating realities of offshore drilling, which empirically correlated with Norway's GDP per capita rising from $2,500 in 1969 to over $10,000 by 1980.[80] User aggregates support this, with IMDb scoring 7.8/10 from over 3,700 ratings, often citing the show's balanced exploration of growth's human costs without romanticizing stagnation.[2] Some academic critiques, primarily from environmental and gender studies perspectives, fault the series for an ostensibly uncritical embrace of capitalism, arguing it links oil extraction to women's emancipation in ways that obscure ecological trade-offs and legitimize resource urbanization.[53] For instance, analyses in journals like Dialog portray the narrative as evoking "petromelancholia," a nostalgic attachment to fossil fuel eras amid contemporary sustainability pressures, potentially downplaying long-term dependencies on non-renewable wealth that Norway mitigated through its sovereign fund established in 1990.[81] These views, often from institutions with documented progressive biases, contrast with the show's empirical alignment to verifiable outcomes: oil revenues funded infrastructure and welfare expansions, elevating life expectancy from 73.6 years in 1969 to 83.2 by 2023, underscoring causal realism over ideological caution. Defenders counter that such criticisms impose anachronistic green priorities on a period drama faithful to primary accounts of ambition-driven progress, rather than fabricating dystopian undertones absent in the historical record.[31]Awards and recognition
The first season of State of Happiness garnered significant acclaim at the 2019 Gullruten Awards, Norway's premier television honors, securing five wins from eight nominations, including Best Drama Series, Best Actress for Anne Regine Ellingsæter's portrayal of Ingrid Nyman, Best Costume Design, Best Script, and Best Direction.[6][78] These victories underscored the series' fidelity to depicting the socioeconomic upheavals following Norway's 1969 North Sea oil discovery, elevating a niche historical narrative to mainstream validation within Norwegian broadcasting.[6] Subsequent seasons continued to receive nominations across acting, writing, and technical categories at Gullruten ceremonies; for instance, the third season earned nods for Best Drama Series and Best Makeup in 2025, alongside wins for Best Sound Design (Hugo Ekornes) and Best Production Design.[3][8] Internationally, the series was nominated for Best Drama TV Series, Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series (Amund Harboe), and Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series at the 2019 Monte-Carlo TV Festival, reflecting its appeal in dramatizing resource-driven national transformation beyond domestic audiences.[82][83] Additional recognition included a 2022 Rose d'Or nomination for Best Drama.[8]- Gullruten Awards Wins (Season 1, 2019): Best Drama Series; Best Actress (Anne Regine Ellingsæter); Best Costume Design; Best Script; Best Direction.[6]
- Monte-Carlo TV Festival Nominations (2019): Best Drama TV Series; Outstanding Actor; Outstanding Actress.[82]
- Gullruten Awards (Season 3, 2025): Best Sound Design (win); Best Production Design (win); Best Drama Series (nominee); Best Makeup (nominee).[3]
Viewership metrics
The first season of Lykkeland, broadcast on NRK in 2018, achieved an average viewership of nearly 1.3 million across episodes, including both linear TV and on-demand streaming, representing a substantial portion of Norway's population of approximately 5.3 million at the time.[43] [84] Peak episodes, such as the premiere, exceeded 1 million viewers when combining broadcast and replay metrics.[84] The second season, airing in 2021–2022, sustained strong engagement with an average approaching 1 million viewers per episode, though finale viewership initially reached about 500,000 before rising with delayed viewing.[43] [85] These figures underscore consistent audience draw for the series' portrayal of Norway's oil economy emergence, with NRK anticipating further growth from streaming replays.[86] The third and final season, premiering on NRK in October 2024, saw an initial linear premiere episode of around 370,000 viewers, lower than prior seasons amid competition from other dramas, but NRK projects increases via on-demand platforms, consistent with patterns in previous releases.[87] [88] Internationally, the series has been distributed via BBC Four since 2020, with episodes available on BBC iPlayer, appealing to audiences interested in historical dramas of economic transformation, though specific overseas viewership data remains undisclosed by broadcasters.[89] Availability on platforms like Filmin in select markets has supported post-2020 streaming access, correlating with expanded global interest in resource-driven societal shifts depicted in the narrative.[90]| Season | Average Viewers (Norway, incl. streaming) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (2018) | ~1.3 million | Premiere peaked over 1 million total.[43] |
| 2 (2021–2022) | ~1 million | Finale grew post-broadcast.[43] |
| 3 (2024) | Initial ~370,000 (premiere linear); projected growth | Streaming expected to boost totals.[87] |