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David Robson

ByDavid Robson, BY david robson

Analysis

How Jewish actresses made Cleopatra who she is today

The casting of Israeli Gal Gadot as Cleopatra prompted a social media storm as she was accused of the ‘theft’ of an ‘Arab’ or ‘black’ role. But Jewish actresses formed our idea of the Egyptian queen

October 15, 2020 09:57
Gal Gadot (l) and Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra on the set of the 1963 film (r)
2 min read

The journalist Sameera Khan is in denial and, as Mark Twain said, denial ain’t just a river in Egypt.

She has greeted the casting of the Israeli actress Gal Gadot as Cleopatra in a forthcoming movie with asperity: “Your country steals Arab lands and you’re stealing their movie roles,” she wrote.

Needless to say, she had supporters but probably not many Greeks among them. Cleopatra was born in Alexandria but she was as Greek as the Elgin Marbles. Her family was just in Egypt on business.

We are in deep water, as the Russian-American Yul Brynner as Rameses II, might have said as he led his army into the Red Sea in The Ten Commandments.