Edition 2021
Courtisane: Out of the Shadows
A compilation of short films in the context of Out of the Shadows / Courtisane festival.
Atteyat Al-Abnoudy (1939-2018) was born Atteyat Awad Mahmoud Khalil into a family of labourers in a small village
along the Nile Delta. A child of Nasserism, she studied law
at the University of Cairo while supporting herself financially by working as an actress and assistant director at the
theatre. At the beginning of the 1970s, she decided to study
film at the Cairo Higher Institute of Cinema, where she
created Horse of Mud, which was not only her first film but
also Egypt’s first documentary produced by a woman. Her
graceful focus on the disadvantaged and the unrepresented
in Egyptian society would earn her the nickname “the poor
people’s filmmaker,” but it also enkindled a confrontation
with censorship. “The censors didn’t like to show the people
as very poor after twenty years of revolution in Egypt. They
think cinema, especially documentary, should be propaganda for the state. In a way, it’s the fault of the filmmakers
who were making documentaries over the past twenty
years. They made at least eleven films about the construction of the Aswan High Dam, but they spoke only about the
machines, the tractors, the engineers. Nobody talked about
the working people who died and suffered to help build
this Dam.” Despite its limited circulation, Horse of Mud
went on to win numerous international prizes, after which
Al-Abnoudy made her graduation film, Sad Song of Touha, a
portrait of Cairo’s street entertainers — which she created in
collaboration with her husband, poet and songwriter Abdel
Rahman Al-Abnoudy. She continued her studies at the
International Film and Television School in London until
1976 and persisted to document the daily lives and struggles of economically and socially marginalized groups in
Egypt, while exposing the structural inequalities within the
socio-economic system. In films such as Permissible Dreams
(1983) and Democracy Days (1996), she attended to the lot of
Egyptian women, a choice of subject matter which has frequently invited the displeasure of government authorities.
Against the grain, Atteyat Al-Abnoudy managed to produce
more than thirty films which were shown worldwide, albeit
rarely in her own country. Before her death in 2018, she
left her film estate to the Cimatheque — Alternative Film
Centre in Cairo, which continues to advocate her legacy of
independent and committed filmmaking.
“I don’t want to be labelled a women’s filmmaker because I make films about life, and women are only a
part of this life. I make films about people who I know,
who I relate to (class-wise speaking) — humble and poor
people. About their struggle to live, about their joy, and
about their dreams. I still learn from them, from what
they are doing and of their wisdom about life. I give the
floor to my people to speak out. That is why they call me
‘the poor people’s filmmaker’.”