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Andeel is an Egyptian cartoonist. His work has come into the forefront since the
2011 Egyptian revolution The 2011 Egyptian revolution, also known as the 25 January revolution ( ar, ثورة ٢٥ يناير; ), began on 25 January 2011 and spread across Egypt. The date was set by various youth groups to coincide with the annual Egyptian "Police ho ...
.


Biography

Andeel was born in Kafr al-Sheikh in 1986. Andeel would often visit
Cairo Cairo ( ; ar, القاهرة, al-Qāhirah, ) is the capital of Egypt and its largest city, home to 10 million people. It is also part of the largest urban agglomeration in Africa, the Arab world and the Middle East: The Greater Cairo metro ...
with his parents despite not living there. He says he loved Cairo from a young age and decided to move there when he was seventeen years old after he finished high school. His first job was with '' Al Gael'' newspaper. A year later, he moved to '' Al Dostour'' newspaper where he worked under veteran cartoonist Amr Selim. From there, Andeel moved to another privately owned paper, '' Al Masry Al Youm'', and cofounded its quarterly comics magazine, ''
Tok Tok ''Tok Tok'' was a quarterly Arabic comic magazine published in Cairo, Egypt. It was the first independent self-published comic magazine in the country and was in circulation between 10 January 2011 and 2020. History and profile ''Tok Tok'' was f ...
''. Andeel liked cartoons as a kid. His father showed him the work of Egyptian cartoonist Salah Jaheen, which he says has had a huge impact on his work. Many of the work Andeel was exposed to prior to Jaheen was foreign, so seeing Jaheen’s work about Egypt was a motivating factor to his getting involved in cartooning. Before becoming a prominent cartoonist, however, Andeel tried his luck at script writing and standup comedy. Most of Andeel's work is based on political satire. His uncle told him that his paternal grandfather was a filmmaker who made a feature film called ''Horses'', which he took to the Berlin Film Festival. Due to racism, it was overlooked for the big prize though it clearly deserved it, and on the boat back to Egypt he threw the only copy of the film overboard and retired from cinema. Knowledge of this outrage compelled Andeel to move to Cairo and become a professional cartoonist at a very early age, as well as making short films (such as “Who Knows?”, a psychedelic film noir set in the wild west), writing TV scripts, designing newspapers, co-founding “Tok Tok” comics magazine, launching “Radhio Kafril Sheikh el Habeeba,” and using Facebook a lot. He is studying for a certificate in social work. In 2012, he got married.


References


External links


www.madamasr.com
{{authority control 1986 births Living people Egyptian editorial cartoonists People from Kafr El Sheikh Governorate Artists from Cairo Egyptian screenwriters Egyptian satirists Egyptian political satire People of the Egyptian revolution of 2011 21st-century Egyptian artists 21st-century Egyptian male artists