Zaki Rostom زكي رستم | |
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![]() Zaki Rostom
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Born |
Zaki Moharram Mahmoud Rostom March 5, 1903 Cairo, Egypt |
Died | 16 February 1972 Cairo, Egypt |
(aged 68)
Occupation | Actor |
Zaki Rostom (Arabic: زكي رستم) (1903–1972) Zaki Moharram Mahmoud Rostom was an Egyptian actor. A method actor known for portraying intimidating and often asocial villains, Rostom is regarded as an one of the influential and important actors of Egyptian cinema.
Zaki Rostom was born on March 5, 1903 to aristocratic family of prominent position in Egypt, where his father and grandfather were (Pashas) of Egypt, his father was appointed minister in the era of Khedive Ismail, and died when Zaki was still a young boy.
He was brought up by a friend of his father, Mustafa Najib, the father of the artist Suliman Najib (1892–1955), where a strong relationship started between him and some artists of the theater at that time, including the actor Abdul Warith Assar (1894–1982).
His hobby of acting started when he was a student in the baccalaureate; in 1924 he joined the National theater group, and in 1925 joined the Ramses theater group.
Rostom's best known roles include an tyrant husband in the Egyptian adaptation of Anna Karenina; River of Love (1960), a powerful brutal landlord in Youssef Chahine's Struggle in the Valley (1954), a bully merchant opposite Farid Shawki in The Tough (1957), and a sneaky drug lord in Pier No. 5 (1957).
In his last 10 years of his life he suffered from hearing impairment and severe depression. He lived in isolation and spent his time reading until he suffered a heart attack and died on February 16 of 1972 at the age of 68 years.
... a.k.a. The Victims (International: English title)
... a.k.a. Pay for Your Sins (International: English title)
... a.k.a. The Accusation (International: English title)
... a.k.a. Leila, Daughter of the Desert (International: English title)
... a.k.a. The Wanderer (International: English title)