
Not to be missed: From Alexandria, Aswan film festivals to Samih Sawiris on piano, Jazz Day, El-Masreyeen - Music - Arts & Culture
Ahram Online highlights a selection of do-not-miss events this week from 30 April to 7 May in Cairo, Alexandria, and Aswan.
Alexandria Short Film Festival's 11th edition (ASFF)
27 April - 2 May
Across several venues in Alexandria
The ASFF, organized by the Arts' Circle (Dayret Al-Fann) Association, offers film screenings, panels, workshops, and masterclasses, among others.
The films compete in several categories: fiction films, documentary films, animation films, Arab films, and Egyptian student films.
Follow the festival's page for more details about its programme.
New films across cinemas
Thursday, 1 May, brings several new films to movie theatres across Egypt:
- Thunderbolts, starring Florence Pugh, Sebastian Stan, and David Harbour;
- Popeye The Slayer Man, starring Jason Robert Stephens, Sarah Nicklin, and Angela Relucio;
- Sneaks, starring Martin Lawrence, Keith David, and Lawrence Fishburne;
- Daniela Forever, starring Henry Golding and Beatrice Grannò.
Mazaher ensemble (Zar) - music
Wednesday, 30 April, 8pm
Egyptian Centre for Culture & Arts - Makan, 1 Saad Zaghloul Str., Cairo
Mazaher is an ensemble where women play a leading role. Its music is inspired by the three different musical styles of the Zar tradition practised in Egypt.
Um Sameh, Um Hassan, and Nour El-Sabah, the musicians of Mazaher, are among the last remaining Zar practitioners in Egypt.
El-Masreyeen band and Ziad Zaza - music
Thursday, 1 May, 5pm
Greek Campus, 171 Tahrir Str., Downtown, Cairo
The band, one of the most famous Egyptian bands during the past few decades, was launched in 1977 by composer and conductor Hany Shenouda.
This year, its fame shone again after its music was featured in the series Hala Khassa. The band is regularly performing in different venues.
Egyptian rapper Ziad Zaza began his musical career three years ago.
He released five EPs, two albums, and several singles. His song Dayra (2022) has garnered over 3.6 million views on YouTube.
Ali Omar El-Farouk & Ahmed Harfoush - music
Thursday, 1 May, 8pm
Room Art Space & Café, 10 Etehad Al Mohamin Str., Garden City
Dubbed "The Greatest Egyptian and American Songs," the evening will present a selection of jazz and pop classics from the golden era of music, featuring songs by Cole Porter, Abdel-Wahab, George Gershwin, Fareed El-Atrash, Jerome Kern, and Kamal El-Taweel.
The night will be filled with nostalgia, music, and escape with the guitar and vocal sounds of Ali Omar El-Farouk and Harfoush.
El-Farouk is an Egyptian-Canadian guitarist and oud player based in Montreal and Cairo.
He is an active performer, teacher, and composer with a professional career spanning more than two and a half decades.
Harfoush is an Egyptian jazz and pop vocalist based in London and has performed around the world for over two decades.
Aswan International Women Film Festival (AIWFF) - film
Friday, 2 May - Wednesday. 7 May
The 9th edition of the Aswan International Women Film Festival will be held across several venues in the southern city of Aswan.
The festival is named after Umm Kalthoum, so the star's face is featured on the AIWFF's poster.
This unique event is the brainchild of Mohamed Abdel Khalik, the festival's president, and Hassan Abou Eleila, its director.
It is also a platform for films created by women or that tackle women-related issues, featuring workshops, seminars, discussions, and screenings.
The AIWFF invites men to conversations and craft talks to build a dynamic balance between the two genders through the topics tackled and the journeys of the movies' creators.
Moreover, the festival also plays an educational role. Among its various activities aimed at developing and supporting young and aspiring filmmakers, the festival holds workshops in the weeks leading up to the event.
As a result, those from Egypt's south who participate in these workshops start to create short films.
Sheikh Mahmoud El-Tohamy - music
Friday, 2 May, 8pm
Wisdom Hall, El-Sawy Culturewheel, 26th of July Street, Zamalek, Cairo
Mahmoud, the son of the famous Sufi chanter Sheikh Yassin El-Tohamy, is among the masters of deeply rooted Islamic musical art.
He has performed Sufi poetry chants at traditional Islamic Sunni events across the country, often appearing at significant moulid events in Cairo's Al-Hussein and Al-Sayeda Zeinab districts.
El-Tohamy often collaborates with Egyptian Grammy award-winning Fathy Salama and his band Sharkiat in a project launched in 2018, titled Sufism vs. Modernism.
Cassette 90 band - music
Saturday, 3 May, 8pm
Wisdom Hall, El-Sawy Culturewheel, 26th of July Street, Zamalek, Cairo
The band consists of eight musicians who revive songs from the 1990s, including those by Egyptian singers Mostafa Amar, Hisham Abbas, Alaa Abdelkhalek, and Ehab Tawfik.
International Jazz Day - music
Tuesday, 6 May, 8pm
Theatro Arkan, Sheikh Zayed City, Cairo
International Jazz Day, organized by Cairo Jazz Society, will feature over 40 of Egypt's jazz stars.
These include vocalist Noha Fekry, pianist Fathy Salama, guitarist Amer Barakat, and saxophonist Shady El-Qasseer.
Abdel-Halim Nowera Ensemble for Arab Music - music
Sunday, 4 May, 8pm
Cairo Opera House, Main Hall, Zamalek, Cairo
In memory of the prominent 20th-century Egyptian singer and composer Mohamed Abdel-Wahab, the ensemble will perform some of his best-known works.
The ensemble was founded in 1967 by maestro Abdel-Halim Nowera.
Its mission is to revive the authentic musical heritage, presenting various traditional vocal and musical forms.
The evening, conducted by maestro Ahmed Amer, will feature singers Ahmed Abdel-Kerim, Rehab Omar, Hossam Hosni, and Essam Mahmoud, among others.
Egyptian Philharmonic Orchestra featuring Samih Sawiris - music
Wednesday, 7 May, 8pm
Cairo Opera House, Main Hall, Zamalek, Cairo
The Egyptian Philharmonic Orchestra will celebrate its 20th anniversary with a special concert featuring Samih Sawiris, a well-known Egyptian businessman, who will perform on the piano.
Conducted by maestros Ahmed El-Saedi and a guest conductor Lena-Lisa Wüstendörfer, the orchestra will perform Joja Wendt's Concert for Piano and Orchestra "The Challenge," followed by Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C minor.
Sawiris, a business tycoon and the executive chairman and CEO of Orascom Development Holding, has been studying piano as a hobby for eight years, supported by El-Saedi.
His first appearance on stage was in 2023, accompanied by the Cairo Symphony Orchestra, in a grand charity concert in Gouna.
Additionally, in the first half of the evening, the Al Nour Wal Amal Orchestra, conducted by Tamer Kamal, will perform two pieces: Saint-Saëns' Danse Macabre and Breval's Sinfonia Concertante for Flute, Bassoon, and Strings.
The soloists of the orchestra are Basma Ahmed on the flute and Mariz Makram on the bassoon.
Al Nour Wal Amal, founded in the 1060s, is Egypt's renowned orchestra of blind and visually impaired women musicians.
The orchestra has toured the world performing in more than 30 countries across five continents.
Follow us on:
Facebook
Instagram
Whatsapp
Short link:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CairoScene
2 hours ago
- CairoScene
Egyptian Artist Wael Shawky Stages Exhibitions in Arles & Edinburgh
Wael Shawky's exhibitions in France and Scotland present newly commissioned and existing works that draw on myth, history, and sculpture across film and installation formats. Jun 23, 2025 Egyptian artist Wael Shawky is currently the subject of two large-scale exhibitions in Arles, France, and Edinburgh, Scotland, where new and existing works are being presented across film, sculpture, and installation. In Arles, the exhibition is housed inside a 5,000-square-metre former ironworks. At its centre is a constructed version of Mount Vesuvius, positioned within a theatrical indoor landscape. A film that blends Greek and Egyptian origin myths is screened at the end of an indoor street, bordered by kiosks filled with sculptural works in clay, bronze, and glass, including masks, jars, and animal forms. At Talbot Rice Gallery in Edinburgh, Shawky is showing 'The Secrets of Karbala' (2015), the third and final film in his 'Cabaret Crusades' trilogy. The two-hour film portrays the Crusades from the 12th to 13th centuries using glass marionettes produced by Murano artisans. The production involved a team of 300 and draws on Arabic historical texts to narrate the events from a different geographical lens. The use of glass puppets, chosen for their fragility, removes the need for human performance and emphasizes the sculptural qualities of the work. Both exhibitions feature a combination of historical reference, mythological narrative, and stylised production, with the Arles presentation incorporating newly commissioned elements.


CairoScene
2 hours ago
- CairoScene
Five Films That Define Salah Abu Seif's Cinematic Legacy
Nearly three decades after his passing, Abu Seif's legacy endures through the generations of filmmakers he inspired, and the stories he told that still ring true... Jun 23, 2025 Today marks the death anniversary of Salah Abu Seif (1915–1996), a pioneer of Egyptian cinema and a defining voice in the rise of cinematic realism in the Arab world. Often credited with introducing neorealism to Egyptian screens, Abu Seif placed everyday life at the heart of his films, examining themes of class, power, and social change. His filmography includes landmark works like 'Al-Fetewa' (1957), 'El Kahera 30' (1966), 'Bedaya w Nehaya' (1960), and 'The Second Wife' (1967), many of which were adapted from major literary works and remain essential viewing in Arab cinema history. His collaborations with writer Naguib Mahfouz helped shape a cinematic language that felt both grounded and poetic. Nearly three decades after his passing, Abu Seif's legacy endures through the generations of filmmakers he inspired, and the stories he told that still ring true... Raya w Sekina (1952) Starring Negma Ibrahim, Zouzou Hamdi, Anwar Wagdy, and Shoukry Sarhan, 'Raya w Sekina' follows the story of two serial killer sisters who lived in Alexandria in the early 20th century. The plot follows the infamous case as they work with their accomplices to murder working-class women and stea ltheir jewellery. Shabab Emraa (1956) Starring Taheyya Kariokka, Shoukry Sarhan, and Shadia, 'Shabab Emraa' follows the story of a young man from the country who arrives in Cairo to finish his education. His landlady, a widow and successful businesswoman in the quarter of the Citadel, seduces him. Although she teaches him much about life, she also makes him forget his obligations to his family, his studies, and his religion. Ana Horra (1959) Starring Lobna Abd Elaziz in the role of Amina, 'Ana Horra' follows a young girl who is unable to accept Egyptian society's male-biased gender roles. 'Ana Horra' is the first of Salah Abu Saif's Empowerment of Women Trilogy, followed by 'Al-Tariq Al-Masdood' and 'El Banat wel Sayf'. Bedaya w Nehaya (1960) Based on Naguib Mahfouz's novel by the same name, 'Bedaya w Nehaya' tells the story of a family after the death of a father: one brother turns to crime, another leaves to work in a different city, and the youngest pursues a military career. Their sister, Nefisah, becomes a prostitute after a failed love affair. El Kahera 30 (1966) Another film based on a Naguib Mahfouz novel, 'El Kahera 30' follows the story of Mahgoub Abd El Dayem, a young man who comes from Upper Egypt to the slums of Cairo. After meeting someone from his village, he is offered a job to marry the minister's mistress, on the condition that the minister visits her once a week.

Egypt Today
13 hours ago
- Egypt Today
Egyptian documentary MEMOIRS OF M.A. DRAZ screens exclusively at London's Aga Khan Library
Following its successful release in Egypt, screening at Cairo's Goethe and French Institutes as well as Zawya cinema, the highly acclaimed Egyptian documentary MEMOIRS OF M.A. DRAZ by Maggie Morgan will be screened exclusively at London's Aga Khan Library on June 24th at 5 pm. The event will be attended by several noteworthy individuals, including the Egyptian ambassador to London and his wife, the consul general and his wife, producer Noha El Kholy, and the grandchildren of M.A. Draz. MEMOIRS OF M.A. DRAZ is a poignant documentary that delves into the extraordinary life of Azharite scholar Mohamed Abdallah Draz. After decades of his passing, his great-granddaughter uncovers a treasure trove of letters, diaries, and photographs that piece together the life of a man she had only known through childhood stories. The film explores themes of education, equality, and the importance of preserving cultural heritage, showcasing Draz's progressive views on gender equality long before the rise of feminism in the Middle East while also taking viewers on a journey from Draz's humble beginnings in Mahallet Diyay to his scholarly pursuits in Paris, highlighting his commitment to providing equal opportunities for both his daughters and sons. Days after the release of the film at Cairo's favorite indie cinema, Zaywa Cinema, the Egyptian documentary MEMOIRS OF M.A. DRAZ soon became the talk of the town, with critics highly praising it, including esteemed Egyptian film critic Mahmoud Abd El Shakour, who hailed it as 'one of the best films of the year in terms of idea, structure, and topic.' MEMOIRS OF M.A. DRAZ world premiered at the eighth Aswan International Women Film Festival, where it won the Rasheeda Abdelsalam Special Jury Award and the Euro-Mediterranean Award. Elevating the documentary to an unforgettable cinematic experience, the film has garnered critical acclaim for its hauntingly beautiful narration by actor Sedky Sakr and the evocative musical score by Khaled Al Kammar. Directed by Maggie Morgan and co-written alongside Taghreed El-Asfoury, MEMOIRS OF M.A DRAZ was produced by Noha El-Khouly; lensed by Amgad Reyad, Olivier Dury, Emad Nabil, and Akram Mamdouh; and edited by Amgad Shafik and Tamer Abdullah.