Albert Samama Chikly

Albert Samama Chikly (24 January 1872 – December 28, 1934), was a Tunisian filmmaker and photographer.[1] Considered one of the earliest pillars in World Cinema, Albert was a photographer, filmmaker, technophile, adventurer, cyclist and the pioneer of the Seventh Art.[2][3]

Albert Samama Chikly
ألبير شمامة شيكلي
Born
Albert Samama

(1872-01-24)24 January 1872
Tunis, Tunisia
Died28 December 1934(1934-12-28) (aged 62)
Tunis, Tunisia
Resting placeBorgel cemetery
NationalityTunisian
Occupation(s)Director, photographer, technophile, adventurer, cyclist
Years active1897–1934
SpouseBianca Ferrero
ChildrenHaydée Tamzali
Parent
  • David Samama (father)

Personal life

He was born on 24 January 1872 in Tunis, Tunisia to a wealthy Tunisian family with Jewish origin. His father David Samama, was a banker of the Bey who established a banking institution that later become the Bank of Tunisia.[4] His mother was a housewife. Albert continued his studies with Charles Lavigerie and then with the Jesuits in Marseille. He was a traveler that traveled to Cape Horn, China and Australia frequently even at young age. He received his nickname 'Chikli' from the brotherhood of firefighters of the island of Chikly, a small island on Lake Tunis.[5]

He was married to Bianca Ferrero, an Italian-born woman from Savoy, who was a musician."Visionario Chikly, portò il cinema (e la bicicletta) agli africani"] la Repubblica (11 July 2015).The couple had one daughter Haydée Tamzali. He later acquired French nationality

Albert died in 1934 in Tunis at the age of 62 and buried in the Jewish cemetery called the Borgel.

Career

In 1896, Albert returned to Tunisia and took the first cinematographic images with the help of photographer Soler. Accompanying the exhibition of Auguste and Louis Lumière, he broadcasts the films The Exit from the Lumière factory in Lyon and The Arrival of a train at La Ciotat station.[6] He continued to study the science and techniques of photography and cinematography and became the first person to introduce the bicycle and wireless telegraph in Tunisia. Later he introduced first X-ray machine in a Tunisian hospital.[1] In 1908, Albert filmed aerial views using a balloon between Hammam-Lif and Grombalia. He later filmed the 1908 earthquake in Messina and took probably the first underwater shot in 1909. In 1910, he filmed Tuna fishing in Tunisia under the patronage of Albert I, Prince of Monaco.[2]

Haydee Tamzali, daughter

He developed a passion for documentaries and reporting where he began to cover events throughout Tunisia for the newspapers 'Le Matin' and 'L'Illustration'. In 1911, he was commissioned to cover the Italo-Turkish War took place in Tripolitania. Then he produced documentary images, such as 'La Pêche aux éponges' or 'Trafic d'Armes off Douara'. During the First World War, he joined the photographic and cinematographic section of the French armies and became one of the twelve reporters directed by Abel Gance who filmed the trenches of the Battle of Verdun.[1][7]

In the 1920s he worked as the photographer and documentarian for travel magazines and tourist guides. In 1922 he was the cameraman in the film Tales of a Thousand and One Nights directed by Russian Victor Tourjanski. After spending many weeks among rural populations, Albert created the Encyclopedia in images of Tunisian life.[2]

In 1922, Albert made his first short fiction film Zohra which is also the first Tunisian fiction film.[7] The film received great success and was presented at the Omnia Pathé cinema in Tunisia on 21 December 1922. In the film, his daughter, Haydée Tamzali played the main role. Later she became ALbert's first female interpreter and screenwriter. Meanwhile, she becomes the first actress of the Arabian cinema.[2][6]

In 1923, he directed the film Ain el-Ghezal ou la fille de Carthage, the first feature film directed by a Tunisian in Tunisian cinema history.[7] It was produced with the support of Habib Bey.[6]

Legacy

In 1996, the biographical short film Albert Samama Chikli, this wonderful madman filming with his funny machines was directed by Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud in honor of Albert Samama.

Filmography

YearFilmRoleGenreRef.
1909Brugge en BrusselDirectorDocumentary
1909Antwerpen en OostendeDirectorDocumentary
1922ZohraDirector, editorShort film[8]
1924Ain el-Ghezal ou la fille de CarthageDirectorFeature film

References

  1. "Albert Samama Chikly (1872–1934)". Who's Who of Victorian Cinema. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  2. "Albert Samama Chikly, Prince of the Pioneers". Cinema Ritrovato. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  3. "Albert Samama Chikly: Director". MUBI. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  4. "Haydée Chikly". Columbia University. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  5. "Views From Ottoman Empire 1 Albert Samama Chickly". akbanksanat. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  6. "Three Programmes". Cinema Ritrovato. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  7. "Other: Albert Samama Chikly". Luminous-Lint. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  8. "Zohra 1922 Directed by Albert Samama Chikly". letterboxd. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
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