Enas El Dighade

Enas El Dighade x.jpg

Enas El Dighade, Egyptian director, born 10 March 1953 in Cairo, Egypt.

Biography and life story of celebrity in English.

Basic info wiki card

Name in English: Enas El Dighade
Name in Arabic: إيناس الدغيدي
Full real name: Ines Abdel-Moneim El Dighade
Nationality: Egypt
Language: Arabic, Egyptian dialect
Religion: Islam
Date of birth: 10 March 1953
Place of birth: Cairo, Egypt
Age: 69 years (in 2022)
Astrological Sign: Pisces
Profession: Director, Writer, Producer
Genre: Cinema
Years of activity: 1977 – present

Biography, Life story

إيناس الدغيدي - Enas El Dighade

Enas El Dighade was born on 10 March 1953 in Cairo, Egypt. She graduated from the Higher Institute of Cinema in Cairo in 1975. She began working as an assistant director in several films, including Mouths and Rabbits, in 1977. She then directed her first film (Pardon, Law) in 1985, starring Mahmoud Abdelaziz and Najla Fathi, and is the first woman to make feature films in Egypt. To follow up on her work, some of which she co-authored, like a movie. (Adolescent memoir) 2001, or by acting like the 1990 film “One Woman Doesn’t Enough”, or by producing, where she broke into film production through a company Fife Stars produced 7 feature films (Astakuza, Dantela, Red Rose, Night Talk, Teenage Memoir, Freedom Seekers, Ma Teggi Dance) All of her directories are also highlights of her work (cheap meat), and some of her films have met intense debate from some on the grounds of themes or scenes.

Ines El Dighade has raised public opinion against her more than once because of her controversial remarks: In 2008, when she gave a television interview about her opinion that the prostitution profession should be allowed to be licensed in Egypt, she believed that “legally permitted provides the State with medical and criminal supervision over the practitioners of this profession, rather than practising it covertly and spreading diseases”, as she put it, and she was subjected to a campaign against her from opponents of what she proposed. Again on “Against the Stream”, when she said that “even though the actress appears a purely naked or naked text in the movies”, she also said that she is “not against a man and a woman living together in a relationship with each other without having a marriage as long as they are able to face society”. She also criticized the late actress’ cameo of full praise and said that she was depressed after what she withheld, and criticized Hanan’s veil left and said that the veil is not hypothetical and even if it is hypothetical she is not convinced by it and said this speech when she went to pilgrimage in 2007.

Ines El Dighade was doing a show with Hala Sarhan on the Rotana Cinema Channel, and then became the head of the channel after Hala Sarhan left.

List of works

Pardon, Law (1985), Time Forbidden (1987), Challenge, Samiha Badran Case (1989), One Insufficient Woman (1990), Killer (1991), Aila Woman for Fall (1992), Disco. Disco (1994), Cheap Meat (1995), Astacoza (1996), Dantela, Speech of the Night (1998), Red Rose (2000), Adolescent Memoir (2001), Freedom Seekers (2004), Ma Teiji Nerc (2006), Mad Princess (2009).

Awards and Honors

Ines El Dighade has received many awards and honors inside and outside Egypt, including:
– First work award from the Egyptian Society of Cinema Art in 1985.
– Certificate of appreciation from the Council of the Film Trade Union in 1986.
– Award of recognition from the Egyptian Society of Film Writers and Critics in 1989.
Award from the 11th National Festival of Egyptian Arts.
– Best Directing Award from the 13th Alexandria International Film Festival 1997 year.
– Award for outstanding production from the 13th Alexandria International Film Festival 1997 year.
– Certificate of recognition from Pyongyang International Film Festival and Best Directing Award for the 1998 film Dantila.
– Best Film Award from the 2001 Cairo International Film Festival.
– Prize of thanks from the Beirut Film Festival 2001.
– Best Film Award from the 2004 Cairo International Film Festival.
– Certificate of appreciation from the 32nd annual Film Society Festival of the 2005 Cinema Society.
– This, as well as several awards, certificates of recognition and honors.
– Selected by Newsweek in 2005 from the top 43 influential figures in the Arab world.