BEIRUT: A documentary film on Lebanese musical icon Fairouz, and carrying the same name, is due to screen at Cairo’s Magnolia on Saturday, Aug. 13, 2016.
Directed by Frédéric Mitterrand, and produced by France and Lebanon, ‘Fairouz’ is a one-hour long documentary that tells the story of the famed singer in her own words, and also includes rare archival footage, according to Magnolia’s Facebook event page and reported by Al-Bawaba.
Born in 1935 as Nihad Wadie Haddad, Fairouz’s musical vocation commenced in the 1950s as she sang at the Lebanese national radio station where her relationship with Assi Rahbani, whom she would marry in 1954, and his brother Mansour developed in vibrant musical collaborations.
For the next two decades, Fairouz would achieve regional and international fame with her stunningly beautiful voice.
Fairouz did not shy away from experimentation, as evident in musical collaborations with her son, the celebrated Lebanese musician Ziad Rahbani.
The icon’s repertoire also comprises important musicals, including Mais Al-Reem (The Deer’s Meadow), Al-Mahatta (The Station) and Biyyaa Al-Khawatem (The Ring the Salesman) and the films Bent Al-Hares (The Daughter of the Guard) and Safar Barlak (A Trip to Barlak), among others.
Over the decades, Fairouz sang of — and for — the Arab world and its hopes and grievances, and thus came to be celebrated as “the singer of cities and homeland: Jerusalem, Cairo, Beirut; Palestine, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon,” reads her biography on the website of the American University in Beirut (AUB).
Fairouz recently gave her fans a special treat by appearing in a short online video hours before the opening of 2016, and in celebration of the New Year.
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