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Nour Arida is the First Arab Woman to Book a Audemars Piguet Campaign

Nour Arida is the First Arab Woman to Book a Audemars Piguet Campaign

CairoScenea day ago

Model & Lifestyle Influencer Nour Arida Joins Serena Williams in Audemars Piguet Campaign.
May 31, 2025
When Audemars Piguet picked the faces for its 150th anniversary campaign, it chose icons. Nour Arida was the only Arab woman among them.
In the world of luxury watchmaking, Arab women aren't often on the moodboard. But this year, that changed.
For its 150th anniversary, Audemars Piguet didn't just call in the usual faces - it summoned a lineup of global icons. Serena Williams. Winnie Harlow. Tamara Kalinic. And, for the first time ever, an Arab woman: Nour Arida.
Draped in AP's legacy, the Lebanese model-slash-creative-slash-cultural force owned the frame.
'I always try to push boundaries,' Arida says, in what might be the understatement of the year. 'It's like being part of a real family, being part of the AP family.'

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Nicolas Mouawad Lives for the Role Not the Rerun
Nicolas Mouawad Lives for the Role Not the Rerun

CairoScene

time2 hours ago

  • CairoScene

Nicolas Mouawad Lives for the Role Not the Rerun

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I watched Spartacus with my dad on Sundays. That was the gateway drug.' It tracks. A child quietly obsessed with physics, but emotionally destabilised by 1960s gladiator cinema, grows up to master four languages and cry convincingly on cue. The acting epiphany arrived, predictably, via Shakespeare. Mouawad found himself performing Richard III at university and walked off stage a changed person. 'It was the first time I felt that kind of electricity,' he says. 'A beautiful, terrifying kind of joy.' He didn't run off to L.A. or start referring to himself in third person. Instead, he did what any dutiful Lebanese son with theatrical leanings and anxious parents would do: he double-majored in civil engineering and theatre. Because in the Arab world, emotional expression is important - but so is concrete income. 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Mouawad claims to have little interest in being 'known,' which is a curious position for someone regularly recognised in public and aggressively complimented in grocery stores. 'I never feel established,' he admits. 'Even when people say it, I don't believe it. My mind's always in rehearsal for something else. I can't afford to stand still. I'm afraid if I stop, I'll start believing my own bio.' Still, he's learned the art of pressing pause. After three projects back-to-back, he's taken a self-imposed sabbatical. 'No scripts. No shoots. Nothing for four or five months,' he tells me. 'I want to be home.' By 'home,' he means with his wife and young daughter, who recently joined him for a six-month shoot in Istanbul. Fatherhood has recalibrated him. The provocateur is still there - 'If everyone says they love white, I'll say I love black' - but so is the softness that comes with realising you are now the person someone else will remember as their childhood. 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British University in Egypt Student Film Festival opens submissions for Yahya El-Fakharany edition
British University in Egypt Student Film Festival opens submissions for Yahya El-Fakharany edition

Daily News Egypt

time13 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

British University in Egypt Student Film Festival opens submissions for Yahya El-Fakharany edition

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"Sukkar 2" Gets Streaming Date
"Sukkar 2" Gets Streaming Date

See - Sada Elbalad

time20 hours ago

  • See - Sada Elbalad

"Sukkar 2" Gets Streaming Date

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