Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,634,628 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

`ENGLISH PATIENT' IS PERFECT RX FOR TOURISM IN EGYPT : TOURISM BOOM.


Byline: William Arnold For other persons named William Arnold, see William Arnold (disambiguation).

William Arnold (1587-1675) was an early settler in Rhode Island.

The son of Thomas Arnold of Malcombe Horsey & Cheselbourne, Dorset, England and his wife Alice Gull(e)y.
 Seattle Post-Intelligencer The Seattle Post-Intelligencer is one of two daily newspapers in Seattle, Washington, United States, the other being the Seattle Times. History
The P-I, Seattle's first newspaper, was founded on December 10, 1863 as the Seattle Gazette
 

``The English Patient,'' which captured nine 1997 Oscars, including Best Picture, is fulfilling a tradition of past Best Picture winners: It has inspired a tourism boom in its romantic setting of Egypt.

Ever since the 1935 winner, ``Mutiny on the Bounty Mutiny on the Bounty

activities of mutineers, Captain Bligh, island wanderings (1789). [Am. Lit.: Mutiny on the Bounty]

See : Rebellion
,'' turned Tahiti into a major tourist destination A tourist destination is a city, town or other area the economy of which is dependent to a significant extent on the revenues accruing from tourism.

It may contain one or more tourist attractions or visitor attractions and possibly some "tourist traps".
 in the '30s, Best Picture winners - which tend to be big historical epics set in exotic places - have had a remarkable way of sending legions of travelers on pilgrimages.

The 1958 winner, ``Bridge on the River Kwai River Kwai may refer to either of two rivers in western Thailand, namely:
  • The Khwae Noi River, or
  • The Khwae Yai River
,'' for instance, overnight turned the River Kwai-Kanchanaburi prison camp site into Thailand's third largest tourist draw, and 40 years later it still is, with a sound and light show simulating the film's effects for visitors. Similarly, the 1962 winner, ``Lawrence of Arabia'' is credited with single-handedly creating Jordan's tourist industry.

More recently, 1993 winner ``Schindler's List'' has drawn hundreds of thousands to Poland's former concentration camps. (The Polish government even sponsors a ``Schindler's Poland'' tour.)

``The English Patient'' is doing the same for Egypt, even though the film's lush, sensuous scenes of the Egyptian desert were not filmed in Egypt at all, but in Tunisia. (Historically, this incongruity in·con·gru·i·ty  
n. pl. in·con·gru·i·ties
1. Lack of congruence.

2. The state or quality of being incongruous.

3. Something incongruous.

Noun 1.
 doesn't seem to have much effect on the phenomenon: ``Kwai'' was filmed in Ceylon, ``Bounty'' off Catalina Island Catalina Island: see Santa Catalina. .)

But what makes this case even more unusual is that the movie is creating tourist interest not so much in Egypt's famous archeological attractions (even though the film's hero is an archeologist), as in that specific period of history that has been so long downplayed by the country's tourist authority: the 70 or so years before 1952 that Egypt spent as part of the British Empire British Empire, overseas territories linked to Great Britain in a variety of constitutional relationships, established over a period of three centuries. The establishment of the empire resulted primarily from commercial and political motives and emigration movements .

As one Egyptian government tour guide told me, ``It's really quite amazing. Since the movie came out, I've had a hundred foreign tourists ask me to show them Shepheard's Hotel or the old British section The British section is one 12 international sections of the Lycée International de Saint Germain-en-Laye. Students are taught a British curriculum in addition to the French curriculum. Its headmaster as of 2007 is Mr. Shaw Latimer.  of Cairo or the location of the Cave of Swimmers. I don't even know where those places are. We're totally unprepared for this.''

But no one is complaining. Since Islamic fundamentalists declared war on foreign tourists in 1992, Egypt's most vital industry (and greatest source of foreign exchange) had been on life support.

The tourist industry made a spectacular comeback in 1996, with a record 3.8 million visitors. The office of Tourism Minister Mamduh Beltagui grudgingly concedes ``The English Patient'' has ``probably played a part'' in this success.

Finding British Egypt

But what is left of that colonial world for the traveler to experience? Certainly not Shepheard's Hotel, the legendary hostelry that was the social center of British Egypt from the day Samuel Shepheard founded it in 1841. When I found my way to Cairo's teeming teem 1  
v. teemed, teem·ing, teems

v.intr.
1. To be full of things; abound or swarm: A drop of water teems with microorganisms.

2.
 Midan Opera, where the hotel reigned for a century, it was long gone - destroyed in an anti-British riot in 1952.

What stands for Shepheard's in Cairo today is a gigantic, glass-and-steel, five-star hotel with the same name built in 1957 a few miles west on the east bank of the Nile. What stood for the hotel in the movie was partly Venice's Hotel des Bains, and mostly a large set at the Cinecitta Studio in Rome, designed from pictures of the old Shepheard's and interiors inspired by another famous Cairo hotel of the period, the Windsor.

The Windsor Hotel
For other uses of Windsor Hotel, see Windsor Hotel (disambiguation).


The Windsor Hotel (opened 1878, closed 1981) in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, is often considered to be the first grand hotel constructed in Canada, and for decades billed itself as
 was also badly damaged in the riots of 1952, but it survives reasonably intact two blocks from the original site of Shepheard's. These days, it's run down and caters mostly to backpackers, but it's loaded with seedy Victorian atmosphere. Numerous framed stills in the lobby attest to its frequent use as a movie location. The desk clerk assured me ``English Patient'' author Michael Ondaatje Noun 1. Michael Ondaatje - Canadian writer (born in Sri Lanka in 1943)
Ondaatje, Philip Michael Ondaatje
 stayed there when researching his novel.

The British period also survives in the thousands of art-deco apartment buildings sprinkled throughout the city; in the stately old Mena House Hotel just a stone's throw from the Giza Pyramids; in the former British military headquarters at the tip of Gezira Island (off-limits to tourists but visible from the Gezira Sheraton Hotel); and in the splendidly gothic (circa 1900) Egyptian Museum, where the high ceilings, gloomy hallways and Victorian display cases look like a set from ``The Mummy.''

Luxury in Luxor

Farther down the Nile, at Luxor, British Egypt has a more luxurious legacy in the stately Winter Palace Hotel, which sits on the Nile Corniche cor·niche  
n.
A road that winds along the side of a steep coast or cliff.



[Short for French route en corniche : route, road + en, on + corniche,
 between the temples of Karnac and Luxor. Built to attract the aristocracy of Europe, it's been called the most perfect survivor of a Victorian British hotel in the former colonies, with cavernous rooms, geometrically designed gardens, a lobby the size of most Holiday Inns and exposed beams in gentlemen's bars that evoke Rudyard Kipling and Somerset Maugham (both once guests here).

And even farther down the Nile, in the town of Aswan, the spirit of British Egypt is even stronger. This exquisitely lovely setting, where feluccas sail amid the rocky outcroppings of the first cataract of the Nile, was the favorite British resort in Africa.

When the British built the first Aswan dam in 1902, they also built the Cataract Hotel, which still regularly makes the lists of the world's great hotels. Situated on a rise overlooking the cataract, everything about the place evokes turn-of-the-century elegance, from its beveled glass elevator and high-ceiling fans to its lush Oriental carpets and formal gardens. It was on the hotel's veranda that Agatha Christie wrote ``Death on the Nile Death on the Nile is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie and first published in the UK by the Collins Crime Club in November 1937 and in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company the following year. The UK edition retailed at seven shillings and sixpence. ,'' and the 1978 movie version filmed several scenes at the Cataract.

For the true movie-buff traveler, however, the real romance of British Egypt - the true piece de resistance of the trip - is back in Cairo, where one block west of the Windsor Hotel lies what may be the best-preserved '30s-era theater district in the world. One can walk for miles, passing one once-luxurious movie palace after another, all still functioning as single screens (video and multiplexing have made little headway here).

On the Shari' Tal'at Harb, right across from a McDonald's, I stumbled upon my favorite: the Metro, an art-deco masterpiece that, in British days, was the Middle Eastern showcase for MGM MGM
 in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc.

U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925.
 films. Its single feature (``Fled'') was being advertised by a dozen color lobby cards and the kind of oversized o·ver·size  
n.
1. A size that is larger than usual.

2. An oversize article or object.

adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized
Larger in size than usual or necessary.
 posters that have been extinct in America since the '50s. A uniformed usher used a flashlight to show me to a seat in the vast auditorium. Before the film, they showed - so help me! - a newsreel.

Without trying to be, this magnificent place is an uncanny museum of the moviegoing experience - and reason enough to justify a movie fan's pilgrimage to the lost Egypt of ``The English Patient.''

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Ralph Fiennes, left, and Kristin Scott Thomas Kristin Scott Thomas OBE (born 24 May 1960) is an Academy Award-nominated English actress. Biography
Kristin Scott Thomas was born in Redruth, Cornwall. Her father was a pilot for the Royal Navy and died in a flying accident in 1964, and she is the older sister of the
 stroll through colonial Egypt in a scene from ``The English Patient.''
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:TRAVEL
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 30, 1997
Words:1127
Previous Article:HOLY SEPULCHER'S DOME RESTORED IN TIME FOR EASTER.(TRAVEL)
Next Article:TOURS, ETC : RAFTING IN IDAHO IS ON TAP.(TRAVEL)



Related Articles
The future of rural tourism.
Tourists and terrorists. (how terrorist acts by Islamic fundamentalists have reduced tourism in Egypt)
Hair of the dog.(political tourism)(How To Forget The Election)(Cover Story)
... Fueled by increases in visitor spending. (Santa Monica, CA's tourist industry)
The political economy of tourism in Syria: state, society, and economic liberalization.
YBOR CITY, FLORIDA: A RICH HISTORY AND A WEALTH OF HOSPITALITY.(travel industry)
STATE WILL RENEW EFFORTS TO LURE VISITORS.(TRAVEL)
CALIFORNIA TOURISM BOOMS.(TRAVEL)(Statistical Data Included)
18 KILLED OUTSIDE EGYPTIAN HOTEL : FOUR GUNMEN SHATTER CALM BY OPENING FIRE ON GREEK TOURISTS.(NEWS)
ARAB AFFAIRS - Jan. 2 - Oil Exporters Head For Another Growth Year.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles