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Photo: AP
Sabah
Photo: AP

Arab world's beloved singer Sabah dies

Lebanese icon known for powerful voice, musical talent, who was part of crop of legendary Arab singers that included Fayrouz, dies at 87.

Lebanese singer and actress Sabah, an icon of Arab music, died Wednesday after a career that spanned over six-decades, Lebanese media said. She was 87.

 

 

The diva was famous across the Arab world for her powerful voice, musical talent and joyful brazenness and is considered among the last of the "giants" – a crop of celebrated Lebanese singers that represent a golden age, including Fayrouz, Wadih el-Safi, Nasri Shamseddine and others.

 

Sabah. She was universally admired for her love of life and positive outlook even in her old age (Photo: AP) (Photo: AP)
Sabah. She was universally admired for her love of life and positive outlook even in her old age (Photo: AP)


Sabah, whose real name is Jeanette Feghali, first came to prominence in the fifties as a singer and actress in Egyptian movies.

 

Ultimately, she participated in at least 25 plays, four radio musicals, 85 films and sang 3,000 songs, according to Charbel Alasmar, a Lebanese-Canadian composer who has documented Sabah's career.

 

The peroxide-blond with a throaty laugh and playful smile was nicknamed "shahroura," Arabic for "singing bird" and "the Sabbouha," a diminutive for "Sabah" by millions of fans across the Middle East.

 

The singer was nicknamed 'shahroura,' Arabic for 'singing bird' (Photo:AP) (Photo: AP)
The singer was nicknamed 'shahroura,' Arabic for 'singing bird' (Photo:AP)

 

In Lebanon, she was humorously mocked for refusing to leave the limelight, clinging to youth through surgeries, marriages to younger men and garish outfits.

 

But she was universally admired for her love of life and positive outlook even in her old age.

 

"Our giants are leaving, our cedars are diminishing. Farewell our shahroura, our beloved, rest in peace," wrote Lebanese singer Ragheb Alameh in a Twitter posting.

 

Also on Twitter, Lebanese politician Walid Jumblatt wrote: "She was a great singer of a Lebanon that my generation knew, that will never come back."

 


פרסום ראשון: 11.26.14, 15:36
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