The 94th birth anniversary of legendary singer Abdel Halim Hafez is being observed on Wednesday, June 21.
Born in 1929, Halim was adored by countless Egyptian and Arab music lovers due to his several artistic displays. He was mainly known and treasured by the people because of his songs and heaven-like singing voice.
Halim's numerous tracks are still admired and loved by different audiences because of the example of humanity that these iconic tracks set off.
He was not only known for his stellar singing talent, but also for being a prolific actor, music director, and conductor.
Fondly known as the "The Idol of the masses", he was one of the most successful, rare Egyptian stars, with over fifty songs and 16 movies to his name.
Halim is also regarded as one of the greatest Egyptian musicians of all time along with Umm Kulthum, Mohamed Abdel Wahab, Mohamed Fawzi, and Nagat Elsaghir.
Throughout his career, he had many hit records, performed concerts at famous venues like Royal Albert Hall in London, and had many songs in the Cairo Opera House.
The remarkable singer and musician shot to fame with his success in "Ahwak" (I adore you) song, composed by notable musician Mohamed Abdelwahab
From then till now, he has established himself as one of the greatest Egyptian musicians and singing Legends along with Umm Kulthum, Mohamed Abdel Wahab, Mohamed Fawzi, and Shadia.
The late star is well-known for some of his notable works, such as Lahn El Wafa’ (The Song of Faithfulness), Mawed Gharam (Love Rendez-vous), Fata Ahlami (The Man of My Dreams), Yom Men Omri (A Day of My Life) and his last film Abi Foq El Shagara (My Father Atop a Tree).
The prominent star was born on June 21, 1929, in El-Halawat village in the Egyptian countryside. Hafez is not his real family name. His real name was Abdel Halim Ali Ismail Shabana, but Hafez Abdel Wahab, a radio executive, discovered him and in turn, Hafez took Abdel Wahab’s first name as his last, according to Elcinema.com.
With the overwhelming success of Abdel-Halim’s first breakthrough in the film Our Sweet Days (1955), Egyptian Cinema was liberated from much of its classicism and pushed in a more youthful direction.
On this basis, the new cinema favored the vividness and fun of youth, who tended to dress casually, ride bicycles, or visit their sweethearts in boats, exactly as Abdel-Halim did in Days and Nights (1955), which gave him much praise from his fans and critics alike.
The greatest cinematic success Hafez achieved resulted from his success as a singer in the first place.
Moreover, Hafez’s participation in “Our Sweet Days” along with veterans Faten Hamama Omar El-Sherif and Ahmed Ramzy, established the idea of a younger cinema, which prevailed afterward.
Thereafter, Hafez also stabilized his cinematic success in several films such as “Ayam w Lialy” (Days and Nights), “Banat el-Youm” (Nowadays’ Girls), “El-Wisada el-Khalia” (The Abandoned Pillow), “ El-Khataya” (The Sins) among others.
The iconic star died in 1977, at the age of 48 after battling a parasitic worm for several years. There have been numerous actors and singers who have delivered many successful films at Egypt’s box office, however, very few have had an everlasting impact on generations like Halim.