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Zaharira Harifai

Zaharira Harifai was an Israeli film, stage, and television actress, director, and stage artist.

Biography
Harifai was born and raised in Tel Aviv. She attended the Mikveh Israel agricultural school for high school, where she excelled, among other things, in swimming. In 1946, after finishing high school, she trained at Kibbut Gvat in the framework of the Palmach Battalion. During the War of Independence, she served as a radio operator in the Golani Brigade. == Career ==
Career
After her military discharge, she appeared in the civilian program of the Chizbatron troupe (outside the military) and studied at the drama school attached to the Cameri Theatre. After being dismissed from the Cameri Theatre, primarily for reasons related to her physical appearance, in 1958 she played the lesbian character Inez in Jean-Paul Sartre's play No Exit as part of Zavit Theater, which she co-founded with other actors. In 1959, two women attempted to commit suicide by drowning in the Yarkon River. Harifai, who was an outstanding competitive swimmer for Hapoel Tel Aviv (100m breaststroke), stripped off her dress and jumped into the water to save them, but she only managed to rescue one. In 1967, she created an evening of poetry readings called "Sealed Letters in the Book," and from then on specialized in poetry reading. She is considered among the pioneers of this art form in Israel. The Cameri Theatre and Hanoch Levin In 1968, Harifai rejoined the Cameri Theatre company and became one of its most prominent actors. She was known for her original acting style, which allowed her to stand out when portraying both supporting and leading roles. She gained particular fame for her roles in the plays of Hanoch Levin, including Rubber Merchants, Requiem, ''Ya'acobi and Leidental, and The Romantics. Other plays in which she starred included The Trojan Women and Mother Courage''. Additionally, Harifai appeared in films such as Hole in the Moon (1965), Sabina and the Men (1966), The Pill (1972), Abu El Banat (1973), Hamesh Hamesh (1980), and Diving Deep (1982). In 2007, she starred in the film Jellyfish by Etgar Keret and Shira Geffen, which won the Caméra d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Directing and later career In 1985, she released an album titled To Sing Theatre, featuring 10 songs from various plays. In the 1990s, she also began to direct for the Library Theater and the Beit Zvi School of the Performing Arts in Ramat Gan, where she also taught acting. Among the plays she directed were''Ya'acobi and Leidental (in which her daughter, Aya Sheba, performed), Yerma starring Shiri Golan, and The Master Builder starring Yoram Hatab. Subsequently, she directed the play Shards at the Acco Festival of Alternative Israeli Theatre and Dvora Baron'' by Yehudit Katzir at the Cameri Theatre. == Awards and recognition ==
Awards and recognition
Harifai received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Israeli Theatre Academy in 2001, the Israel Prize for Theatre in 2003, and an Appreciation Award at the "Woman Festival" in 2004. In 2012, she won the Israeli Theatre Prize for Best Supporting Actress for the play A Good End at the Cameri. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Harifai was married to the journalist and author Shlomo Shva, and the couple had a daughter, the actress Aya Sheba, and grandchildren. Harifai's older brother, Ben Shahar Harifai, was a military judge and a traffic court judge. She died on January 2, 2013, from cancer, and was buried at the Givat Hashlosha Cemetery. == Legacy ==
Legacy
In October 2014, a commemorative plaque was installed on her home at 14 Zecharya Street in Tel Aviv. In 2021 a street in Tel Aviv was named after her, and the bridge from which she jumped to save the women in the Yarkon River was also renamed in her honor. ==References==
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