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Nagwa Fouad (Egyptian Arabic: نجوى فؤاد, Arabic: [ˈnæɡwæ foˈʔæːd]; born Awatef Mohamed Agami (Egyptian Arabic: عواطف محمد) on 17 January 1939) is an Egyptian belly dancer and actress. She has appeared in around fifty Egyptian films.[1]
Nagwa Fouad | |
---|---|
نجوي فؤاد | |
Born | Awatef Mohamed Agami 17 January 1939 |
Nationality | Egyptian |
Occupation | Actress • dancer • producer |
Family
editNagwa was born as Awatef Mohamed Agami, in Alexandria to a middle-class Egyptian family from Agami region.[2] Her father was Egyptian, her mother from Jaffa in British Palestine, where her father met and married the mother. Only a few months after the return to Jaffa the mother died by cancer.[3] As a result of the 1948 Palestine war and the Nakba her family came back to Egypt, so Nagwa spent some time in a refugee camp near the Suez Canal, before returning to her father's and birth city in Agami.[4]
She then changed her Egyptian folk name (Awatef) to a more artistic sounding one.
Career
editShe began belly dancing in the early 1960s. In 1976, the composer Mohammed Abdel Wahab wrote an entire musical piece exclusively for her belly dancing show titled "Amar Arbatashar" (Full Moon[a]), it was her transition from traditional oriental dance to a choreographed stage performances.
After Fouad's marriage to Ahmed Fouad Hassan, the prominent Egyptian violin player, composer and conductor, she danced in the stage show Adwoua El-Madina (City Lights), which had featured such performers as Abdel Halim Hafez, Fayza Ahmed, Shadia and Sabah. Fouad featured on many of the covers of the Ahmed Fouad Hassan's albums.
Fouad says: "Hassan nurtured my amateur's talents... He taught me the importance of studying and working on my talent if I wanted to be a big star." She also trained some Western dances at the Nelly Mazloum Dance School and joined the National Dance Troupe to study Western folklore with Russian teachers.
Nagwa Fouad learned showmanship and eye-catching techniques that she used in her performances of "Ayoub El-Masri" ("Ayoub, The Egyptian") and "Bahiya wa Yassin". In 1976, composer Mohamed Abdel-Wahab wrote "Qamar Arbaa-tashar" (Blue Moon or 14th moon) for her. Her stage performance to this piece allowed her to change the way belly-dancing was presented on stage, transforming it from traditional oriental dance to more of a choreographed lavish spectacle, adding more dramatic elements to it than ever before.
The composition served as a transition for Fouad: "I was able to combine the oriental dancing of Tahiya Karioka and Samia Gamal with Na'ema's acrobatic style and created a stage show like a dramatic piece" she says. Fouad offered original stage shows in five star hotels and productions for television for many years, not only in raqs sharqi, but also using inspiration from raqs sha'biyya (noted as folklore, or 'baladi') sometimes with folk singer, Fatma Serhan, and often with chorus ensembles of other dancers. Fouad established her own dance group, but it did not last long; she later tried to retire from dancing to become actress. She played on the stage and in the cinema and finally became a cinema producer.
Political Views
editIn 2019, Fuad expressed her support for the regime of Abd al-Fattah al-Sisi.[3]
Famous performances
edit- 1976 Qamar Arba'tashar (Moon of the 14th). Music by prominent composer Mohammed Abdel Wahab.
Notes
edit- ^ Egyptian slang, literally "moon of the 14th," used to describe beauty
References
edit- ^ The Alexandrian Nagwa Fouad
- ^ "أكاذيب الإنترنت بخصوص المشاهير والإشاعات المذيفة حولهم".
- ^ a b Nagwa Fouad to Majalla: I did not know who Henry Kissinger was when he proposed to me. If circumstances had been different I would have married him. | Al Majalla, 16 August 2019, retrieved at 23 November 2023.
- ^ The Queen of the Belly Dance - The Washington Post, 4. November 1977, retrieved at 23. November 2023.
External links
edit- Nagwa Fouad at IMDb
- Hossam Ramzy: [1]