Nelly Mazloum (1929-February 21, 2003) was an Egyptian actress, dancer and choreographer of Greek origin who taught ballet, modern dance, folkloric Egyptian dances and artistic oriental dance. Known for her sense of humor, she is famous for her role in the movie Ibn Hamidu along with Ismail Yasseen.
, a Swiss oriental dancer who took seminars with her, says: "According to her, the reason why she didn't do Raqs Sharqi in films was because "everybody else did it" and they wanted her to do other dances because she could". According to her daughter Marianna, "There were some 300 Egyptian dancers doing oriental very cheaply, they could be hired for 5 pounds per film, while my mother commanded a hefty cachet of 100 pounds because she was the only modern dancer in Egypt at that time - so why 'waste' her on something everybody else did?" She also ran a successful ballet school, which provided young artists for the National Opera of Cairo
Nelly liked the luxuries in life, and she enjoyed life to the full. She was married six times. One of her husbands was a Greek-Egyptian named Andreas Roussos (contrary to what many websites state, totally unrelated to engineer Yorgos Roussos, the father of Demis Roussos). She was married to him for four years, and he was the father of her two children, Emanuel and, 2 years later, Marianna (also known by her pet name and stage name Marhaba). Marianna says:
My father was very rich, the owner of a candy factory. He didn't want my mother to dance, so she stopped performing and concentrated on research. Although her main training was in ballet, she never missed a chance to learn Egyptian dance forms. When I was small I remember we visited my father's sweet factory and when there was a festivity, we watched the girls dance to music from the radio. Outside the building there was a cul-de-sac where these poor people always held their weddings, borrowing the tables from the factory.Moreover, she took the car and chauffeur and went around to watch people in their original surroundings, Bedouin marriages in the desert etc... She traveled the whole country for many years, from the desert to the villages, souks, cities, always looking for new dance movements.During her visits to the rich Egyptian ladies, on the other hand, she would watch their dance too: a different sort of dance, more refined than the beledi or the shaabi - she calls it hawanem. She absorbed it all. An avid reader, she never visited a bookstore without coming home with 30-40 books. She once took a whole year to study books in the National Egyptian Museum, looking for descriptions of dances and costumes in ancient times. The director gave her a special permission, and she had to handle the fragile manuscripts with gloves...
The company presented only the folkloric style of dance. Raqs Sharqi was not considered worthy of the stage, at those times, it was only done in nightclubs or in parties. As for Raqs el Hawanem it was done inside the homes. There was no company in Egypt which presented oriental dance on the stage.They performed in high-end venues like the Momtaza Gardens In 1958, the company was showcased in the great International Fair for Egyptian Cotton, at the Grand Palais in Gezina, and won more and more acclaim, as testified by numerous newspaper articles. In 1959, Mahmoud Reda, his brother Ali Reda and his sister-in-law Farida Fahmy co-founded the Reda Troupe. But it is unclear why some of their collaborators such as Atef Farag claim to be the first to present folkloric dances in the theatre and to be "the first Egyptian dance company to record Egyptian folk songs and dances from many different and remote regions of Egypt and perform them on stage"
In 1959-60, the Egyptian government wanted to establish a National Ballet Academy, and called Mr. Jukov, assistant teacher at the Bolshoi Ballet in the then Soviet Union, to help. Nelly was chosen as his assistant, for her knowledge of classical dance and of course the Arabic language, and for three years she was his right hand. Moreover, the next year, another ambitious project was formed, the establishment of a National Folkloric Academy, and yet another Russian, Mr. Ramazen, came for that purpose. Again Nelly was his bridge to the local talent. He came to her in the morning to learn the movements of folkloric dances which he then showed to the dancers in the afternoon. However, when she saw that the Russians adulterated the Egyptian style and made it more... Russian, she quit the job. But her experience with them was invaluable, helping her to organize her knowledge of technique and create a method for her own school - what would emerge as her signature style.
It was a time of great political favour. The Minister of Culture Dr. Sarwat Okasha was so enthusiastic about her work that he used to buy tickets for all the poor people to see her shows without paying. In 1961, he gave the company a floating theatre, a boat, which toured the Nile back and forth, stopping to perform at every village.
Nelly also did experimental styles like pharaonic dance (she presented it at the first 'Sound and light' show
), a "desert dance" with veil etc. One of her great successes was the biblical story Ayub el Masri, in 1962. It was also the year in she participated, with her company, to the Helsinki International Youth Festival, where she was awarded the Silver Medal for the Saudi dance Al Ghazi, representing the weaving of the bridal veil. She became the official choreographer of the Cairo Opera, for opera and operetta productions. She choreographed, among others, Mahr el Aroussa (The bride's dowry) in 1963, the first all-Arabic classical operetta.
After having formed the Ballet Academy and the Folkloric Dance Academy, the next step for the government to form a National Folklore troupe and they approached her, but asking for the troupe without her. She replied "the troupe without me does not exist", and refused, remaining independent. Mahmoud Reda's troupe
became the National Troupe.
In 1964 the government changed, and the minister of culture Sarwat Okasha fell in disgrace, together with all his proteges. Most of her dancers were lured to Mahmoud Reda's company, with a higher pay and the new people in favour made life for Mazloum very difficult, starting a slander campaign in the press. So much so that she decided she didn't have to take it any longer: she packed all her belongings, put her children temporarily in a boarding school and left Egypt to go live in Greece, starting afresh. There, she buried all the tokens of her past career in a series of trunks and vowed never to dance again, but concentrate on teaching and propagating the art of dance, founding the Athens International School where, again, she taught ballet and modern dance. She even changed her name again to Nelly M. Calvo, so that people wouldn't associate her with her past self.
the dance of high nobility which was first introduced in Europe by her and has become ever since the exceptional signature style of the Nelly Mazloum Oriental Dance Technique. She also started giving a series of seminars abroad, to Germany, Austria, Italy etc... fighting to ban the word "bellydance" in favour of "oriental dance". She also developed her own system of working out,called the Vivicorporeal Psychosomatic Alignment Technique, to support oriental dancing.
In 1992 she wrote her book on [Oriental Dance Technique]
and in 2001 she founded the Nelly Mazloum Mediterranean Archaic Dances Research Institute (MADRI), a non profit organization aiming at evolution and preservation of Mediterranean Archaic Dances Official Site As Nelly Mazloum wrote: "Archaic Dances still influence our moving center for they are rooted in the cosmic memory of our planet. They may disappear into the past but always find their way back to us through research work & Spiritual Identification."She died on the 21th of February 2003.
Her daughter, Marianna Roussou Mazloum, has continued teaching dance and Vivicorporeal classes after her mother passed away, and has continued in her role as the co-founder of MADRI in Athens,Greece. The Madri Institute organizes classes and seminars in Athens and abroad.