Miss Hanafi
Miss Hanafi or El Anesa Hanafy is a 1954 Egyptian comedy film written and produced by Galil al-Bendari and directed by Fatin Abdel Wahab about a man who goes through an accidental sex change. Starring by Ismail Yaseen and Omar El-Hariri, the film is based upon an actual 1947 news article about a woman-to-man instance but with the gender switch reversed to be man-to-woman for comedy effect.
Miss Hanafi is listed among the most important 100 films in the history of Egyptian cinema. In his book Dream Makers on the Nile, author Mustafa Darwish called it Ismail Yasseen's "most famous and funniest film".
Plot
Working class Hassan and the rich Hanafi are rivals for Nawaeim's love. Going to the hospital to be treated for a horrible wedding night stomach pain, Hanafi receives an accidental sex change operation. After months of recuperation, he tries to pick up the pieces of his life as an unattractive, mannish woman named Fifi. She becomes the opposite of Hanafi. Where he was brusque, she is flirtatious.Cast
- Ismail Yasseen as Hanafi / Fifi
- Omar El-Hariri as Hassan
- Magda as Nawaem
- Wedad Hamdy as Zakia
- Suleiman Naguib as Hassona
- Abdel Fatah Al Kasri
- Zeinat Sedki
Reception
The Al-Hanager Arts Centre in Cairo celebrated the work of director Fettin Abdel-Wahab as part of the 2007 Egyptian Centennials exhibition, noting him as a pioneer of the social comedy school of Egyptian cinema, and his film Miss Hanfi as among the most frequently watched and influential.
In 2006, Miss Hanafi was determined by Bibliotheca Alexandrina as one of the most important 100 films in the history of Egyptian cinema.