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Bashar al-Shatti (Arabic: بشار الشطي; born 22 September 1982) is a Kuwaiti singer, songwriter and actor, and plays piano and guitar. He began his career as an orchestra chorale member. [ 1 ] He served as a judge in the singing competition Arab Idol .
The film depicts the daily life of a fictitious Italian daily newspaper, Il Giornale ("The Journal"). The newspaper caters to a conservative, fascist, bourgeois readership. . Its chief-editor Bizanti gives a right-wing slant to the most trivial news items, while at the same time sweetening the thornier issues, such as unemployment and police brutali
Shati Al-Qurum (also written Shatti Al-Qurm) is a residential locality and district situated on the coast of Muscat, the capital of the Sultanate of Oman. [1] Known for its upscale businesses and expensive homes, it is also notable as Muscat's Diplomatic District due to many embassies and consulates being located there.
Bashar al-Shatti This page was last edited on 4 November 2022, at 16:22 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Huda Hussein Ali Al-Radi was born in Kuwait City on August 20, 1965. [2] Her father was an Iraqi who was employed at the Iraqi Ministry of Education; he died when Huda was ten years old. Her sister Suad Hussein is also an actress.
Muddu Babu Shetty (1938 – 23 January 1982) [1] simply known as, M. B. Shetty, or Shetty was an Indian film stuntman, action choreographer and actor in Hindi cinema in 1970s. [2] [3] He had a towering personality with a bald head, often cast as the villain brought down by heroes half his size. He was the father of director Rohit Shetty.
Abdulaziz Alshatti (born 30 October 1990) is a Kuwaiti fencer who competed in the Épée Individual the 2016 Summer Olympics, and had a record of 0-1.He participated within the Independent Olympic Athletes team rather than for Kuwait, as the Kuwait Olympic Committee had been suspended by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for the second time in five years due to governmental interference.
The first known cinema in Jordan was the Petra Cinema in 1935. However, it is said that there was a cinema called 'Abu Siyah' in the 1920s and one of the first films it screened were Charlie Chaplin's silent films. [36] As opposed to Egypt and Lebanon, Jordan joined the film industry much later, with their first films being released in the 1950s.