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New film to demystify life of actor Sharif and examine how Egypt’s politics shaped him

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Omar Sharif was as enigmatic as he was famous. Across his six-decade career, the Egyptian actor starred in Egyptian, American, British, French and Italian production­s and played hundreds of characters. But the man behind the many guises has always remained a bit of a mystery.

However, a new documentar­y, examining how the politics of 1950s Egypt shaped Sharif and his career, is set to highlight some lesser-known facts about the Dr Zhivago star, who died in 2015.

In The Life and Times of Omar Sharif, Egyptian filmmaker Mark Lotfy and Swedish director Axel Petersen will explore how president Gamal Abdel Nasser’s policies led to Sharif changing his name, converting to Islam and eventually becoming a world-renowned figure moving between Europe, the US and Egypt.

“Omar Sharif was a conversati­on piece that we could always come back to,” Petersen told US magazine Variety. “Quite early on in our relationsh­ip we realised that we had two very, very different perception­s of Omar Sharif. Me, representi­ng the West, I saw him as some Hollywood superstar, playboy, glamour man, while Mark, representi­ng the East and Egypt, had a completely different perception. He knew him as a persona non grata, like an Egyptian Judas … We couldn’t figure it out. How could our views be so different?”

This contrast of opinion inspired the two filmmakers to delve deeper into Sharif’s life. The more they came to find out, the more multifacet­ed Sharif’s identity became.

Lotfy told Variety that Sharif left Egypt partly owing to the strains he felt under Nasser’s rule. He did not want to politicall­y conform to the nationalis­m that swept Egypt in the 1950s. Born Michel Demitri Shalhoub to a Melkite Catholic family of Lebanese ancestry, Sharif changed his name and then converted to Islam when he married Egyptian actress Faten Hamama in 1955.

A few years later Sharif left Egypt, after landing the role in David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia in 1962, a part that would catapult him to global recognitio­n. However, as his internatio­nal reputation soared, his name back home was stained by his decision to move to the West. “We see him as a vessel of ideology,” Lofty said. “A reflecting surface to understand eastern-western conflict in the last century. It’s going beyond biography.”

Politics, Petersen told Variety, had a major impact on the changes in Sharif’s life. But there were times the actor was an instigatin­g force in political developmen­ts.

Sharif played a key part in organising the meeting of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin in 1977, which led to the signing of the Camp David Accords and the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. The moment, Petersen said, will serve as a turning point in the film.

A rough cut for the documentar­y is finished, the filmmakers said. It comprises archival material as well as interviews. Sigrid Helleday, whose Stockholm production company Fedra is co-producing the film with Lotfy’s Fig Leaf Studios and Corniche Media in Alexandria, said an interview with Sharif’s grandson, Omar Sharif Jr, was scheduled to take place before the pandemic struck. The filmmakers are still planning on meeting with Sharif Jr this year.

Helleday told Variety: “That’s still to be done, but that’s more or less the final footage we need. And then we’re going into post-production.”

 ??  ?? Egyptian actor Omar Sharif in 2009. He died in 2015, aged 83
Egyptian actor Omar Sharif in 2009. He died in 2015, aged 83

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