Najwa Foad regains her health once more

Published February 24th, 2005 - 11:20 GMT

Renowned belly dancer Najwa Foad has finally regained her health completely after the tragic car accident she encountered a while back. Because of the accident, Najwa suffered a number of broken bones and was forced to remain home for over two months until she completely healed.

 

 Najwa is currently reading different scripts for films and television drama in order to choose the most appropriate to mark her return with. She stressed that she does not care whether her return will be through the small screen or the cinema as long as it is a good script that will add to her career.

 

Previously negotiations between Najwa and the Egyptian broadcasting company were held over the production of a new film that portrays her life. It was revealed that the two sides debated heavily over the price Najwa was demanding, it being too high, and therefore no agreement was reached. 

 

Najwa had requested over a million Egyptian pound and major alterations to be done to the script of the film. The dancer also refused to have belly dancer Safwat to portray her in her early years and demanded that Dina be nominated for the first part of the film, where she will take over the second half.  

 

Najwa stressed that Dina best fits for the role, and especially since she has returned to the entertainment world, the chances of her acceptance run high. She added that she will resume talks with the production city to hope and come to an agreement, and if no agreement is reached she will look elsewhere to have her film produced. 

 

Foad is the only dancer of her generation who is still performing. The others fell along the way, retiring for fear of forgetting that they were over the hill, gaining or losing too much weight, succumbing to illness or the pressures of competition and the hard work and harder temptations that riddled their lives. Those who survived unscathed took refuge in the familiarity of domestic life. Although Fouad no longer dances in night-clubs, she still works in theatre and on television.  

 

Najwa was very popular in the 70's and 80's. Najwa's fame started to rise in the sixties. By the seventies Najwa was the top belly-dancer in the Arab world and beyond. She was on the cover of Egyptian magazines like the one of 1966 of "Al Kawakeb". Dancing has always been her priority above anything else. To be a dancer, a respected, famous dancer was her dream since she was about six. She was born in 1943 in <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Alexandria under the name Awatef. Her father was Egyptian and her mother Palestinian. Her mother died a few months after Najwa was born and her father remarried another Palestinian woman.