Sanaa Gamil started her career on stage, afterwards, she was cast in her early career in minor roles in a couple of successful films, such as
Lady of the Train (1952) starring
Laila Mourad and directed by
Youssef Chahine,
Ask My Heart (1952) by
Ezz El-Dine Zulficar,
A Window Overlooking Paradise (1953) by
Ahmed Diaa Eddine,
Shame on You (1953) directed by Essa Karama, starring
Ismail Yassine, and
April’s Fool (1954) by Mohamed Abdel-Gawad. Her real breakthrough came when she was cast for the role of Nefisah opposite
Omar Sharif in
The Beginning and the End (1960) directed by
Salah Abouseif. The film was based on a novel with the same name by the
Nobel Prize winner
Naguib Mahfouz. Sanaa Gamil won the best supporting actress award at the
Moscow Film Festival in 1961 for her role in this movie. After her breakthrough in 1960, she starred in a number of highly successful productions such as:
The Impossible (1965) by
Hussein Kamal,
The Second Wife (1967) by Salah Abu Seif,
The Message (1976),
The Unknown (1984),
La Dame du Caire (1992),
Edhak El Soora Tetla Helwa (1998) directed by
Sherif Arafa. She had four of her films voted for by
Cairo International Film Festival critics and featured among "the 100 best ever made Egyptian films in the 20th century" list back in the centenary of the
Egyptian Cinema, 1996. Not only a film actress, but more importantly a highly respected theater actress, one of the best Egyptian theater actresses. She played a number of roles on the French Stage for the
Comédie-Française. In Egypt, her notable theatrical roles include;
The Cactus Flower (1967),
Carte Blanch (1970), and
Cabaret (1974), and in a number of plays in the 1980s such as
The Visit (
El-Zeyara) with
Gamil Ratib. Sanaa Gamil received
Order of Sciences and Arts from President
Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1969, and received another one from President
Anwar Sadat in 1976. In 2016 the Egyptian director
Rogina Bassaly, made a documentary film about her, It's "Sana's Tale" ("حكاية سناء"). ==Personal life==