Auction of Omar Sharif’s Memorabilia Raises Questions about Ownership

Egyptian actor Omar Sharif holds up the Golden Lion lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival on Aug. 29, 2003. Photo by Tony Gentile/Reuters
Egyptian actor Omar Sharif holds up the Golden Lion lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival on Aug. 29, 2003. Photo by Tony Gentile/Reuters
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Auction of Omar Sharif’s Memorabilia Raises Questions about Ownership

Egyptian actor Omar Sharif holds up the Golden Lion lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival on Aug. 29, 2003. Photo by Tony Gentile/Reuters
Egyptian actor Omar Sharif holds up the Golden Lion lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival on Aug. 29, 2003. Photo by Tony Gentile/Reuters

A French auction site announced it’s selling some of the late star Omar Sharif’s memorabilia, which raised question marks about the ownership of these pieces, and how did the site acquire them.

“The late star didn’t have an apartment or house outside Egypt where he could leave his memorabilia. He used to stay in hotels, carrying with him a black suit and some shirts. He always told me, (I have nothing that can be sold. I live in hotels, and I have one suit)”, Egyptian archeologist, Dr. Zahi Hawas, who was a close friend with the late star, told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Hawas denied the allegations that some shared on social media, accusing his son, Tarek, of selling his father’s possessions, saying: “Some claim that his son, Tarek, is selling his father’s possessions, which is not true.”

Hawas noted that “Omar Sharif kept nothing when he was alive, and that his French private assistant used to take care of all his papers. So, I can’t confirm how these items got on sale, or whether they are real or fake.”

“The weirdest thing I could ever imagine to be auctioned is Omar Sharif’s coat, bank cards, and his membership card in the French equestrian union,” Producer Hossam Alwan wrote on Facebook, where he also shared a photo of these memorabilia, and one showing the late actor wearing the auctioned coat.”

Tarek, the son, commented on Alwan’s post, saying: “More information would be highly appreciated. I reported the incident to the police in Egypt and France. If those possessions are real, this means they are stolen.”

The memorabilia on auction include a coat that Sharif wore in the “Top Secret” film (1984), valued at 300 euros, alongside several personal cards, according to the auction site.

Critic Majida Maurice believes that someone stole Omar Sharif during his travels between the US and Europe, probably during his last illness, as the same thing happened with the memorabilia of Ahmed Zaki and Nour El-Sherif. “This is the worst time to sell the memorabilia of Omar Sharif, amidst the Russian-Ukrainian war which affected the whole world, including the wealthy countries. It’s a sad thing,” Maurice told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“I wish the ministry of culture could take care of this auction the same way it does with looted and recovered antiquities. History is not limited to Pharaohs. These memorabilia belong to great artists who have always made Egypt proud in international cinema events,” she added.

This incident reminded people of the Cinema Museum that was announced by the culture ministry years ago but never accomplished. “I believe the ministry of culture should work faster to establish the cinema museum, which could display the memorabilia of stars who influenced the Egyptian cinema. I hope Tarek Sharif could keep the memorabilia of his father and mother, late star Faten Hamama, because the cinema museum will open one day, and I expect it to lure a great audience,” Maurice said.

The auction is taking place seven years after the death of Omar Sharif (he died on July 5, 2015), aged 83, to conclude a journey that debuted in Egypt, with esteemed director Youssef Chahine, in “The Blazing Sun” film (1954), which he co-starred with Faten Hamama. The movie was followed by many leading roles in several films including “Lady of the Palace”, “Love River”, and “A man in our house”. Then, Sharif kicked off his international path in David Lean’s “Lawrence of Arabia” (1962), followed by “Doctor Zhivago”, “The Yellow Rolls-Royce”, and many others.



Man Meets His Biological Family 75 Years after Being Adopted

Over the weekend, Handshaw flew to Rochester, New York, where he met some of his half-siblings ahead of the family’s annual Christmas party. (Facebook)
Over the weekend, Handshaw flew to Rochester, New York, where he met some of his half-siblings ahead of the family’s annual Christmas party. (Facebook)
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Man Meets His Biological Family 75 Years after Being Adopted

Over the weekend, Handshaw flew to Rochester, New York, where he met some of his half-siblings ahead of the family’s annual Christmas party. (Facebook)
Over the weekend, Handshaw flew to Rochester, New York, where he met some of his half-siblings ahead of the family’s annual Christmas party. (Facebook)

Dixon Handshaw thought he was an only child for most of his life. But decades after being adopted, the 75-year-old learned he has a handful of siblings, whom he met just in time for the holidays.

Over the weekend, Handshaw – who lives in North Carolina – flew to Rochester, New York, where he met some of his half-siblings ahead of the family’s annual Christmas party.

“All my life, I dreamed about having siblings somewhere,” Handshaw told CNN affiliate WHAM, which captured the siblings’ first meeting at the airport on Friday. “This is my Christmas miracle.”

On Saturday, Handshaw met over 50 relatives he didn’t know existed until earlier this year, he told CNN on Tuesday. The gathering, which included cousins and their children, was a welcome surprise for Handshaw, who was the only child to his adoptive parents and has no children of his own.

“I’ve never met anybody who shares my DNA,” Handshaw said. But as soon as he met his relatives they immediately clicked, Handshaw said. “It was wonderful,” he added. “I have never felt such an outpouring of unconditional love as I had from my new family.”

Born in Buffalo, New York, in 1949, Handshaw was adopted at three months old and had a happy childhood, he said, adding that his parents were honest about his adoption.

“I always wanted to find them, but New York State sealed the pre-adoption birth certificates, and it was impossible to find out,” Handshaw said.

In 2020, original birth certificates were unsealed for adopted New Yorkers following the passage of a 2019 law.

Right now, Handshaw and his siblings are making up for lost time, but their meeting is better late than never, he noted.

“I had great adoptive parents. They were wonderful. I love them and I miss them, but I always wanted siblings, and now I have them,” Handshaw told CNN. “I thought one or two would be great. I got six!”