Mary Queeny

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Mary Queeny
Queeny c. 1945
Born
Mary Boutros Younis

1913 (1913)
Tannourine, Lebanon
Died2003 (aged 89–90)
Cairo, Egypt
NationalityEgyptian
Occupations
Years active1913–2003
SpouseAhmed (or Ahmad) Galal
ChildrenNader Galal

Mary Queeny (

actress and film producer
.

Early life

Mary Boutros Younis was born in 1913 to a Lebanese Christian family in Lebanon. Her mother's cousin was Asaad Dagher, a writer and journalist at the Al-Ahram newspaper.[1]

Career

In 1923 Queeny moved to Cairo with her aunt, actress and film producer Assia Dagher, and started acting in 1929.[1] Her first role was in 1929 in the film Ghadat al-sahara (The Desert Beauty), and she went on to star in all of her aunt's subsequent films.[2]

Queeny became a popular actress and producer in a pioneering age of Egyptian cinema.[2] She appeared in 20 films and was among the first women in Egypt to appear on screen without a veil.[1]

Queeny married

Nasser government.[2]

In 1958 she established a film colour processing laboratory, which in 1963 she sold to the Misr Company (later Misr International), which was later acquired by Youssef Chahine and his niece, Marianne Khoury.[1]

Personal life and death

Film director Nader Galal is the son of Queeny and Ahmad Galal.[2] Ahmed Nader Galal is their grandson, son of Nader, and is an actor. He graduated from the directing course at the Higher Institute of Cinema in Cairo 1997.[4]

Queeny died on 23 November 2003 in Cairo of a heart attack. She was 90.[1]

Selected filmography

Actress

  • Ghadat al-sahara (1929)
  • Pangs Of Conscience (1931)
  • When A Woman Loves (1933)
  • Rebellious Girl (1940)(in which she took her first leading role)
  • Prisoner No 17 (1949)
  • The Seventh Wife (1950)
  • Sacrificing My Love (1951).
  • Women Without Men (1953), the last in which she acted, directed by Youssef Chahine

Producer

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Issa, Rose (1 January 2004). "Obituary: Mary Queeny". The Guardian.
  2. ^ .
  3. IMDb
    Note: Credited as Ahmed Galal.
  4. ^ a b "Ahmed Nader Galal". elCinema.com. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  5. ^ "Ahmed Galal". elCinema.com. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  6. ^ "L'Egypte dans l'Histoire". Ahraminfo (in French). Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  7. ^ Helmy, Samy; Queeny, Mary (1953). "Schaduf". Schaduf. Retrieved 22 March 2024. La Revue International du Cinéma, Numéro 16, 1953. This article was first published in print in RAWI's Issue 9, 2018

External links