Lawrence of Arabia Actor Omar Sharif Passes Away at 83

Omar Sharif, the Egyptian actor who carved his own niche in Hollywood, has reportedly left this world at 83.

The Quint
Lifestyle
Published:
Omar Sharif in Lawrence of Arabia. (Photo Courtesy: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ud1zpHW3ito">YouTube Screengrab</a>)
i
Omar Sharif in Lawrence of Arabia. (Photo Courtesy: YouTube Screengrab)
null

advertisement

Actor Omar Sharif, best known for his portrayal of Doctor Zhivago in the hit 1966 film and for his work in Lawrence of Arabia, died of a heart attack at 83 on Friday.

His agent Steve Kenis confirmed the death of one of the few Arab actors to make it big in Hollywood. “Omar Sharif died in Cairo of a heart attack sometime this afternoon,” Kenis said when reached by telephone.

He also confirmed that Sharif, who played a wide range of dashing and dignified characters while building a reputation as an expert bridge player, had been suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.

Tributes to Sharif were quick to flow on social media.

Egyptian actor Khaled El Nabawy was one of the first who took to Twitter to express his condolences.

Sharif won international fame and an Oscar-nomination for best supporting actor for his role in Lawrence of Arabia with Peter O’Toole. He later became a huge star in his own right for his portrayal of the title character in the film based on Boris Pasternak’s novel Doctor Zhivago.

Actor Omar Sharif appears as Prince F. Romodanovsky Advisor to PeterI in the Miniseries “Peter The Great” in the ancient Russian town of Suzdal. (Photo: AP)

Born Michel Shalhoub on April 10, 1932, to a wealthy family in Alexandria, Egypt, Sharif became interested in acting while studying mathematics and physics at university in Cairo.

He worked in his father’s timber business for several years before realising his dream with a role in an Egyptian movie, “The Blazing Sun,” in 1954 opposite the Middle East’s biggest female star, Faten Hamama.

Raised as a Roman Catholic, Sharif converted to Islam and married Hamama in 1955, taking on his new name. They had a son, Tarek, who at age 9 played Yuri in Doctor Zhivago, but the couple divorced in 1974.

1965 file photo from Metro Goldwyn-Mayer shows actor Omar Sharif, in the movie based on Boris Pasternak’ s Doctor Zhivago location unknown. (Photo: AP)

Hamama died in January of this year.

Despite Sharif’s image as a sex symbol and eligible bachelor, he did not remarry, saying he never fell in love with another woman.

I’ve always been extremely lucky in my life. Even for Lawrence of Arabia I didn’t ask to be an international actor. When going to America and becoming famous, it gave me glory but it gave me loneliness also and a lot of missing my own land and my own people and my own family.
– Omar Sharif told Al Jazeera in 2007

Omar Sharif. (Photo: Reuters)

Not That Kind of Actor

After Lawrence of Arabia, Sharif played Sophia Loren’s Armenian husband in The Fall of the Roman Empire, Ingrid Bergman’s Yugoslav lover in The Yellow Rolls-Royce and several other roles before landing the title role in Doctor Zhivago.

Despite criticism, the film and Sharif’s portrayal of a physician and poet caught up in the Russian revolution were a hit.

Confirming his flexibility, Sharif next played a Nazi officer in The Night of the Generals, a Jewish gambler in Funny Girl opposite Barbra Streisand and an Austrian prince in Mayerling.

Only Funny Girl was a success and Sharif came under increasing criticism for stiff and uninspired performances.

Stint With Television

In later years, he appeared in TV mini-series and a steady string of films. For his 2003 role as an elderly Muslim shopkeeper in the French film “Monsieur Ibrahim”, he won the best actor award at the Venice Film Festival.

1962 file photo, Omar Sharif, who plays the part of Ali in “Lawrence of Arabia”, arrives for the premier in Hollywood. (Photo: AP)

Reportedly fluent in English, French and Greek, Sharif became known for his passion for bridge and thoroughbred race horses. He wrote many books and newspaper columns about bridge and licensed his name to a computer game called “Omar Sharif Bridge.”

“I’d rather be playing bridge than making a bad movie,” he was once quoted as saying.

But in 2006, Sharif said he had given it up.

I decided I didn’t want to be a slave to any passion any more except for my work. I had too many passions - bridge, horses, gambling. I want to live a different kind of life, be with my family more because I didn’t give them enough time.
– Omar Sharif

(With inputs from Reuters)

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: undefined

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT