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Silver Screen Cinderella: Soad Hosny and the Fashioning of a Cultural Image
Abstract
This paper will examine the manner in which actor Soad Hosny is framed and portrayed on-screen, and – by consequence – off-screen in contemporary Egyptian culture. Specifically, this paper will address a critical phenomenon: the majority of Hosny’s roles, and certainly the ones for which she is better known, are roles where Hosny is ‘framed’ on-screen, as an ‘image’: an entity to be viewed. Hosny, dubbed the ‘Cinderella of the Silver Screen’ by her public, is often portrayed and constructed as an object in her films: an object which is framed and presented as one especially crafted for visual consumption, not just by audiences without the film but – critically – by consuming audiences within the frame, plot and matrix of the film itself. After making a case for the construction of Hosny as on-screen ‘image’, the paper will venture beyond Hosny’s on-screen representations to consider her after-lives (and more specifically, the afterlives of her ‘image’) off-screen. As well as considering the proliferation and circulation of fetishized images of Hosny on items ranging from house-hold wares (coasters, cushions), to wall-art, to contemporary fashion items, the paper will conclude by posing – and attempting to answer – the following question: why is the nation obsessed with Hosny, and more primarily, with Hosny as an image – a visual commodity – up until the present day? As a theoretical starting point, this paper will be engaging with Richard Dyer’s seminal theories on the construction and commodification of the ‘star’ – particularly, with regards to the construction of the ‘star’ as image. In addition, this paper will draw on theoretical frameworks of studying visual and material culture vis-à-vis gender studies. Specifically, the paper will pay particular attention to the aesthetic and sociopolitical forces at work, in constructing a volatile version of ‘femininity’: a kind of ‘femininity’ which is idolized, sanctioned and sanctified, but only within the confines of an image – whether this image be projected on the silver screen, or transferred unto a coffee-cup. This will, in turn, lead us to consider the negotiation, and transformation, of the social and ideological place of ‘women’ – and women stars and entertainers, in particular – across the decades in which Hosny was active: an issue famously tackled by Hosny herself, through her iconic role in Khali Balak min Zuzu! (Watch out for Zuzu!, 1971).
Discipline
Media Arts
Geographic Area
All Middle East
Sub Area
Cinema/Film