Gadalla Gubara | |
Native Name: | جاد الله جبارة |
Native Name Lang: | ar |
Birth Date: | July 1920 |
Birth Place: | Omdurman, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan |
Occupation: | Cameraman, film producer, filmmaker, photographer |
Notable Works: | Tajouje |
Children: | 8 including Sara Gadalla Gubara |
Gadalla Gubara (July 1920 – 21 August 2008) was a Sudanese cameraman, film producer, director and photographer. Over five decades, he produced more than 50 documentaries and three feature films. He was a pioneer of African cinema, having been a co-founder of both the Pan-African Federation of Filmmakers FEPACI and the FESPACO Film festival (Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso).[1] His daughter, Sara Gubara, who is a graduate of Cairo Higher Institute of Cinema, Egypt, assisted him with his later film projects, after he had lost his eyesight. She is considered to be Sudan's first female film director.
Gubara was born in Omdurman, Sudan in 1920. His father was a farmer, and a part of the extended family of Muhammad Ahmad. During World War II, he served as an officer in the Royal Corps of Signals on the North African campaign. There, the Colonial Film Unit screened films such as Desert Victory, Our African Soldiers on Active Service and With Our African Troops in the Middle East for the troops. This was Gubara's first exposure to film, leading him to seek further training after the war, while stationed in London and Cyprus.[2]
After his training, the British Film Unit commissioned him to return to Sudan and make educational films about the country's agriculture schemes to be screened to local audiences across the country.
Gubara was also one of Sudan's first photographers, capturing for example the raising of the flag of the newly independent country on January 1, 1956.[3] [4] In a late recognition, some of his photographs were presented in 2015 at the retrospective exhibition '
In 1955, Gubara produced Africa's first colour film, Song of Khartoum, a contribution to the genre of documentary films about avant-garde cities. The years following independence in 1956 were marked by an atmosphere of political and cultural awakening in Sudan. Gubara became the main filmmaker for the newly established Sudan Film Unit under the Ministry of Culture and Information. During this period, he documented many events and everyday life with his camera: Government meetings with president Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt or Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassi on a state visit, the nightlife of Khartoum, the construction of railway lines, factories and dams.[6] At the end of the 1950s, he received a grant to continue his film studies at the University of Southern California, and was appointed as director of the Sudan Film Unit upon his return in 1962.[7] Wanting to produce his own documentaries and, most of all, feature films, he left the Sudan Film Unit and set up Sudan's first private film studio, Studio Gad, in 1974.[8] His first feature film Tajouj (1977) is a dramatic story about the unhappy love of two suitors towards the heroine, set in rural Eastern Sudan, and featured the actor Salah ibn Al Badya. Tajouj won the Nefertiti Statue, Egypt's highest film award, at the Cairo International Film Festival in 1982, and won prizes at film festivals in Alexandria, Ouagadougou, Tehran, Addis Ababa, Berlin, Moscow, Cannes and Carthage.
In 1984, Gubara published a semi-documentary short film called
Gadalla lost his sight at the age of 80, when his studio had been confiscated by the government, but still continued with his last film projects, with his daughter Sara Gadalla Gubara assisting him.[10] In 2006, he received the 'Award for Excellence' for his career at the Africa Movie Academy Awards.
Highlighting perhaps Gubara's most prolific era, the Sudanese author Omar Zaki wrote: In 2008, filmmaker Frédérique Cifuentes made a documentary film about Gubara, called, part of which was made available in Sudan Memory's online archive.[11] Between 2014 and 2016, many of Gubara's films were digitised by the [12] in Berlin, Germany,[13] and have been shown again to audiences in Sudan as well as abroad.[14] [15]