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Omar Sharif is celebrated in today’s Google Doodle


In honour of his birthday, Google is changing its logo in 48 countries to an illustration of Omar Sharif.

This is a snapshot of his story:

Early steps

Born in 1932 to Syrian Lebanese parents in Alexandria, Egypt, Sharif's birth name was Michel Demitri Shalhoub.

Before becoming an actor, he graduated with a degree in mathematics and physics from Cairo University and worked for several years at his father's lumber company.

He left the family business and went on to study acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, Britain's capital.

In 1954, he began his acting career and starred in films with one of Egypt's leading actresses, Faten Hamama.

In 1955, he converted to Islam, changed his name to Omar Sharif, and married Faten soon after. They had a son, Tarek, before separating in 1966 and divorcing in 1974.

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

International fame

Sharif appeared in a number of Egyptian films before the British director David Lean added him to the cast of Lawrence of Arabia.

appeared in a number of Egyptian films before the British director David Lean added him to the cast of Lawrence of Arabia. Sharif played the role of an Arab warrior. The scene showing his arrival is considered a classic piece of cinema.

He first appears as a tiny dot in the desert horizon, growing larger as his camel gallops into the frame with Peter O'Toole.

His performance brought him an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor, propelling him to international fame.

But international recognition came at a hefty personal price, as Sharif intimated in an interview with The Associated Press news agency in 2003.

"It separated me from my wife, from my family ... We didn't see each other any more and that was it, the end of our wedding," he said. "I might have been happier having stayed an Egyptian film star."

I might have been happier having stayed an Egyptian film star. Omar Sharif

Career struggles

After winning a third Golden Globe award for acting in Doctor Zhivago, Sharif's career went downhill.

He attributed his change of film fortune to what he called ''the cultural revolution'' at the end of the 1960s, as new directors focused on "making films about their own societies. There was no more room for a foreigner, so suddenly there were no more parts [for him to act]'," Sharif said.

He began appearing in films such as "The Pink Panther Strikes Again", and others he dismissed as "rubbish".

"I lost my self-respect and dignity," he told a reporter in 2004. "Even my grandchildren were making fun of me. 'Grandpa, that was really bad. And this one? It's worse'."

I lost my self-respect and dignity Omar Sharif

Health problems

Sharif had a triple heart bypass in 1992 and suffered a mild heart attack in 1994. At the time, he was declining film offers.

Away from his cinema career, Sharif was a world-class bridge player and also wrote on bridge for the Chicago Tribune newspaper. He quit the game in later years.

In May 2015, Sharif was suffering from Alzheimer's disease and was struggling to remember the biggest films of his career, according to his son, Tarek.

Sharif died in Cairo after suffering a heart attack on July 10, 2015, less than six months after his ex-wife's death.

Accolades


Omar Sharif, the Egyptian actor best known for starring in films such as Doctor Zhivago, is celebrated in the latest Google Doodle on what would have been his 86th birthday.

After beginning his screen career as a teenager in his native country, he was catapulted to international fame by a Golden Globe-winning turn in David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia in 1962.

He earned further plaudits three years later with a leading role as the titular Russian medic and poet in Doctor Zhivago as he became one of few Arabic actors to break into the Hollywood mainstream.

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He also lived an eventful life away from the big screen.

Here are five things you might know about Sharif.

1. He was a champion bridge player

After reportedly learning how to play contact bridge to pass the time on movie sets, Sharif developed a passion for the card game that eclipsed his enjoyment of acting.

He grew into an expert player and for a time was ranked among the top 50 in the world.

During the 1970s he wrote a bridge column for the Chicago Tribune newspaper, and authored several books on the game.

“I’d rather be playing bridge than making a bad movie,” he once said.

However, he later stopped playing entirely, saying he considered his passion for the game to have grown into an unhealthy addiction.

2. He once punched Ian Dury

After encountering Sharif in a London club in 1985, rock star Dury – apparently a few drinks worse for wear – decided to impart some film criticism to the actor, who had been dining with a young female companion.

“I think the first film you made was your best one, everything else was s**t,” he told him.

An argument broke out between the pair that culminated in Sharif leaping from his seat and repeatedly punching Dury in the face, according to Richard Balls’ biography of the Blockheads frontman.

Omar Sharif's life in pictures

18 show all Omar Sharif's life in pictures

1/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures American actress and singer Barbra Streisand with actor Omar Sharif (whose name is misspelt on the chair behind), circa 1980. They are recreating their love scene from the 1968 film 'Funny Girl' Getty Images

2/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif and Pierre Boulanger in Monsieur Ibrahim (2003) Sony Pictures

3/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Geraldine Chaplin and Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965) Warner Bros

4/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965)

5/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Geraldine Chaplin and Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965)

6/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Julie Christie and Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965) Warner Bros

7/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif and Rod Steiger in Doctor Zhivago (1965)

8/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Julie Christie and Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965)

9/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Julie Christie and Omar Sharif in Doctor Zhivago (1965)

10/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Omar Sharif in Lawrence of Arabia

11/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif and Ralph Richardson in Doctor Zhivago (1965) Warner Bros

12/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures 25th January 1980: Actor Omar Sharif at the Sunday Times International Bridge Pairs Championships, in London. Getty Images

13/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Actors Anouk Aimee and Omar Sharif in a scene from the film 'The Appointment', 1969. Getty Images

14/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Omar Sharif is Prince Romodanovsky, Olegar Fedoro is Boyar Lopukhin in 'Peter the Great'

15/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif and Zuleikha Robinson in Hidalgo (2004) Buena Vista Pictures Distribution

16/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Still of Omar Sharif in Monsieur Ibrahim (2003) Sony Pictures

17/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Actor Omar Sherif attends the Closing Ceremony at the Sala Grande during the 66th Venice Film Festival in 2009 in Venice, Italy Getty Images

18/18 Omar Sharif's life in pictures Omar Sharif speaks after he was awarded as Best actor of the year during the 29th Nuit des Cesars at the Chatelet theatre in Paris in 2004 Getty Images

It was not the only time Sharif’s temper got the better of him.

In 2003 he was given a suspended sentence for headbutting a police officer in a Parisian casino.

“It made me the hero of the whole of France,” he later said, unapologetically. “To headbutt a cop is the dream of every Frenchman.”

3. He was a big fan of Hull City Football Club

Sharif shared a flat with Hull-born actor Tom Courtenay in the 1960s, during which time the Yorkshireman passed on his passion for the Tigers.

Sharif remained a lifelong Hull City fan and was awarded an honorary degree by the city’s university in 2010.

Courtenay and Sharif reunited at Wembley to watch their beloved team narrowly beaten by Arsenal in the 2014 FA Cup final.

4. He claimed to receive thousands of marriage proposals a week

Strikingly handsome and notoriously charming, Sharif once boasted he received 3,000 offers of marriage in Doctor Zhivago's opening week.

He in fact married just the once, to fellow Egyptian actor Faten Hamama, with whom he feel in love after they co-starred in a film early in his career. He converted to Islam and changed his name from Michael Shalhoub to Omar el-Sharif so they could marry, but they divorced 19 years later after having one son together.

Although he never remarried, there were many more women in his life. Commenting on a second son he fathered during a brief affair with an Italian journalist in 1969, he said: “I don’t consider him to be my son, although I concede that he was probably produced by a sperm of mine. But then it is possible that I might have 100,000 sons.”

5. A besotted fan tried to seduce him at gunpoint

While staying in a hotel room in Dallas in the 1960s a drunken female fan forced her way into Sharif’s hotel room and ordered him to take his clothes off.

But an essential part of his anatomy, quite understandably, refused to respond to the threat of a bullet.

“Using her free hand she sought to encourage me,” he later recounted. ”In vain. As it would have been with anyone.”


The Google Doodle for April 10 celebrates the actor Omar Sharif on what would have been his 86th birthday.

Sharif is most famous for his iconic role and first appearance in the 1962 film, Lawrence of Arabia, which got him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination.

Who is Omar Sharif?

Omar Sharif was born Michael Dimitri Shalhoub in Alexandria, Egypt on April 10, 1932. Sharif excelled academically, studying in British Victoria College in Alexandria and then graduating from the University of Cairo with a degree in mathematics and physics.

He had a natural affinity for languages and would become fluent in English, Italian, French, Spanish and Arabic.

His mother was a renowned society hostess who actually counted King Farouk as one of her regular visitors prior to his deposition in 1952.

His father was in the lumber industry and Sharif worked with him for a time, however, much to his father’s disappointment, Sharif left for London when he got accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

Sharif became a star in his home country in the late 1950s and subsequently married the Egyptian actress Faten Hamama, converting to Islam so the wedding could go ahead.

Lawrence of Arabia was Sharif’s first English-language role, one he reportedly got after the film’s director, David Lean, spotted a photograph of the actor and decided to give him a screen test.

The film went on to become a critical and box-office hit, scoring ten Oscar nominations, including a Best Supporting Actor nod for Sharif.

Lawrence of Arabia turned Sharif into a bonafide Hollywood star, and the actor followed the epic film with another, starring in The Fall of the Roman Empire.

He worked again with David Lean in 1965 when the director decided to cast him in the eponymous role of Doctor Zhivago in the adaptation of Boris Pasternak’s Nobel prize-winning novel.

Throughout his career, Sharif confounded stereotypes, playing everyone from Sherif Ali in Lawrence of Arabia and a Russian doctor in Doctor Zhivago to an American gambler in Funny Girl opposite Barbra Streisand.

Though his later acting career failed to build on the highs of these films, plagued by heavy gambling and hell-raising with Peter O’Toole, Sharif famously said he had no regrets about his life: ‘I don't know the meaning of the word. If I was back there again, I would do it the same way. Luckily, not everything I did was rubbish for money. I have had some great moments.’

What is a Google Doodle?

Google Doodles are the tech giant’s way of commemorating significant cultural events around the world. They are referenced on the Google homepage with a doodle - an illustration or animation - that is incorporated into the Google logo.

The very first Google Doodle was simply a stick-man standing behind the second ‘o’ in the Google logo. The search engine co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page drew it in 1998 to commemorate their trip to that year’s Burning Man Festival. Users responded positively to the frequent changes to Google’s homepage logo, and so the Doodles became an everyday feature.

The Google Doodle celebrates actor Omar Sharif on what would have been his 86th birthday

Today, a team of ‘Doodlers’ - illustrators, graphic designers, animators and artists - work on the Google Doodles. The logos are hyperlinked to a page that provides the reader with more information about the cultural event being celebrated.

The latest Google Doodle celebrates Omar Sharif with illustrations of that show the actor in ‘true dashing form’. It was created by guest artist Sophie Diao to honour an actor who ‘continued on an incredible journey that made his indelible mark on Cinema in the Arab world and beyond’.

Recent Google Doodles include celebrations of the Commonwealth Games 2018, the Pakistani singer and activist Nazia Hassan, and Pi Day.

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