Egyptian film director rushed to Paris hospital

Youssef Chahine in coma after brain hemorrhage

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Youssef Chahine, Egypt's celebrated cinema director, is being flown to Paris on an emergency flight on Monday after falling into a coma following a brain hemorrhage, his assistant said.

The 82-year-old Chahine, accompanied by his niece, is being taken to Cairo airport by ambulance for a flight to France, Khaled Youssef, who co-directed Chahine's last film "Chaos" in 2007, told AFP.

Chahine "is in a coma following a cerebral hemorrhage," Mohammed Abdel Daher of Cairo's Ash-Shuruq hospital told the MENA news agency on Sunday, adding that Chahine is in "serious" condition.

Chahine has won official plaudits for his pioneering role in Egypt's film industry, and was awarded the Cannes film festival's 50th anniversary lifetime achievement award in 1997.

But he has never shied away from controversy during his long career, criticizing U.S. foreign policy as well as Egypt and the Arab world.

Chahine made his first film in Egypt in 1950 and it was there that he also discovered and launched the career of Omar Sharif, who shot to stardom with "Lawrence of Arabia" and "Doctor Zhivago."

He claimed Cairo stopped subsidizing his movies after his 1973 cult movie Al-Asfur (The Bird) which attributed the Arab defeat in the 1967 war against Israel to the corruption of the political classes at the time.

He also made three highly acclaimed films in the late 1990s -- Al-Muhajer (The Emigrant), Al-Masir (Destiny) and Al-Akhar (The Other) -- which focused on tolerance and the distinction between fundamentalism and terrorism.

Despite his often abrasive tone, Egyptian authorities -- officially at least -- hailed Chahine's contribution to the nation's cinema and his "daring" representation of its society.

Born in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria on January 25, 1926, Chahine received a French schooling and studied briefly at university there before moving to the United States to study theater.