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Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Hend Sabry Joins Film "Kira & El Gin"


Wed 08 Jan 2020 | 03:53 PM
Yara Sameh

Tunisian actress, Hend Sabry has joined the cast of film "Kira & El Gin", co-starring Karim Abdel Aziz and Ahmed Ezz, which is scheduled to begin shooting soon.

The film is written by Ahmed Murad, directed by Marwan Hamed, and produced by Synergy Production company.

The Tunisian actress embodies a unique role, different from what she has presented in the cinema through the last period.

Hend Sabri Plays the Villain in The Blue Elephant 2

Sabry’s latest artistic work is film “El Feel El Azraq 2” (The blue elephant 2).

The sequel cast includes actors from part one including director Marwan Hamed, writer Ahmed Mourad, Karim Abdel Aziz, Nelly Karim, in addition to Sabry.

Moreover, Jordanian actor Eyad Nassar made a special appearance in the film.

El Feel El Azraq part one plot revolves around a psychotherapist (Karim Abdel Aziz) at a hospital that treats the criminally insane is shocked to find an old friend among the patients, but when he tries to help him, he discovers more disturbing discoveries.

El Feel El Azraq is produced and directed by Marwan Hamed. The story was originally translated into a film from an Arabic novel written by the famous Egyptian writer Ahmed Mourad.

Hend Sabry

Sabry, born on November 20, 1979, made her acting debut at the age of fourteen in Moufida Tlatli’s 1994 Tunisian movie “Samt al Qosoor” (Silence of the Palaces).

The movie was selected after 19 years from its debut in Dubai International Film Festival’s “100 Most Important Arab Films” list.

Following “Samt al Qosoor”, Sabry starred in several Tunisian productions until caught the attention of director Egyptian director Inas Al Degheidy who introduced her in 2002 to the Egyptian cinema through movie “Muzakirat Murahiqua” (A Teenager’s Diary).

Sabry’s role in the film gave her immediate stardom across the Arab world and paved her way to more films in the Egyptian cinema as well as highlighted her talents as a professional actress, and she became soon one of the most prominent Tunisian actresses in Egypt and the Arab world.

The actress had also starred in many remarkable Egyptian films including, “Mowaten we Mokhber we Haramy” (A Citizen, a Detective, and a Thief), “Banat West El Balad” (Downtown Girls) “Ibrahim El Abyad”, and “Oumaret Yacoubian”,  (The Yacoubian Building).

She received more than 25 awards in appreciation of her achievements as an actress including five awards for her astounding embodiment of an HIV positive woman who suffers because of her affliction from her society in the 2011 film “Asmaa”.