Faten Hamama, film icon, dies aged 83:
Faten Hamama, film icon, dies aged 83:
The actress starred in almost 100 films and was described by Omar Sharif, her first husband, as his 'only love'.
2 min read
Egyptian actress Faten Hamama, Egyptian film icon and trailblazer, died Saturday at the age of 83.
Hamama, who was less than 10 when she made her screen debut, appeared in almost 100 films and worked with masters of Egypt's massive film industry, including Youssef Chahine.
She often starred with Omar Sharif. Born a Christian, he converted to Islam to marry Hamama and described her as the only love of his life.
The couple appeared together in the 1961 movie River of Love based on Leon Tolstoy's Anna Karenina.
They divorced in 1974 when Omar Sharif, then already famous in his homeland, launched a career in Hollywood.
"The Lady of the Arabic screen," as she was known, suffered "a sudden health problem which led to her death," Egypt's official news agency MENA reported.
Her son, Tarek Sharif, did not give a cause of death, while MENA said she had been hospitalised weeks earlier due to illness but had returned home.
A figure of the golden age of Egyptian cinema, Hamama's career reached its pinnacle in the 1940s and 1950s.
She starred in romantic movies alongside Abdel Halim Hafez as well as in films advocating women's rights and condemning social injustices.
Hamama also had a daughter, Nadia, from a first marriage and tied the knot for a third time with a doctor, Mohammed Abdel Wahab.
Hamama, who was less than 10 when she made her screen debut, appeared in almost 100 films and worked with masters of Egypt's massive film industry, including Youssef Chahine.
She often starred with Omar Sharif. Born a Christian, he converted to Islam to marry Hamama and described her as the only love of his life.
The couple appeared together in the 1961 movie River of Love based on Leon Tolstoy's Anna Karenina.
They divorced in 1974 when Omar Sharif, then already famous in his homeland, launched a career in Hollywood.
"The Lady of the Arabic screen," as she was known, suffered "a sudden health problem which led to her death," Egypt's official news agency MENA reported.
Her son, Tarek Sharif, did not give a cause of death, while MENA said she had been hospitalised weeks earlier due to illness but had returned home.
A figure of the golden age of Egyptian cinema, Hamama's career reached its pinnacle in the 1940s and 1950s.
She starred in romantic movies alongside Abdel Halim Hafez as well as in films advocating women's rights and condemning social injustices.
Hamama also had a daughter, Nadia, from a first marriage and tied the knot for a third time with a doctor, Mohammed Abdel Wahab.