| Khosrow Shakibaei (( RIP )) - 286 sec Rest in peace khosro shakibaei!
Davood Rashidi, Amin Tarrokh, Hamed Behdad, Hassan PourShirazi Auteur : MoOZ125 Tags: khosro khosrow shakiba shakibai shakibaei shakibayi shakibaee خسرو شکیبایی  | | "Khosrow-o-Shirin" and Bakhtiari Wedding Song - 392 sec Folklore Bakhtiari music Auteur : siyasard Tags: Lori Bakhtiari Luri Parvin Aalipour Bakhtiyari Iranian Persian Iran Chaharmahal Khuzestan بختیاری لری  | | Khosrow Shakibai خسرو شکیبایی - 377 sec خسرو شکیبایی در گذشت Auteur : amirdevil Tags: Khosrow shakibai irani actor persianخسرو شکیبایی آثار فیلم هنرمند طپش بازیگر  | | SD! Daivari Titantron HD - 40 sec SD! Daivari Titantron HD Auteur : HaZeN182 Tags: SD! Daivari Titantron HD ecw raw wwe full  | | Khosrow Shakiba'i's Funeral تشيع جنازه مرحوم خسرو شكيبايي - 127 sec Subscribe.
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سلام دوستان عزیز
برای حمایت از فردوسی به بلاگ ما مراجعه فرمایید
و روی تبلیغات کلیک کنید متشکریم هم میهن
http://efer2c.blogspot.com Auteur : fer2c Tags: cinema fer2c funeral iran khosrow legend movies OneTrueMedia persia persian shakibai theatre  | | Yek Ba Yek Barabar Bood - A poem by Khosrow Golsorkhi - 476 sec A reading of Khosrow Golsorkhi's poem "Agar Yek Ba Yek Barabar Bood" If one was equal one by Hooman Hedayati
Sitar: Sina Najmai
This is a video from the 2007 Annual Persian Performing Arts Show (University of Texas at Austin) Auteur : hoomanity Tags: Khosrow khosro Golsorkhi Golesorkhi iran persian poem farsi toode islami  | | RIP Khosrow Shakibā'í 1944-2008 - 159 sec Subscribe.
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سلام دوستان عزیز
برای حمایت از فردوسی به بلاگ ما مراجعه فرمایید
و روی تبلیغات کلیک کنید متشکریم هم میهن
http://efer2c.blogspot.com
Khosrow Shakibā'í (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation. He graduated in acting from FDA. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with The Red Line, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had performed in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimia (Talisman) (1995) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakiba'i found also a large following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities. He died in July 18, 2008 of a heart attack.
Some of his films
The Red Line, 1982
Daadshah, 1983
The Lightning, 1984
The Thief and the Writer, 1985
The Rapport, 1986
The Hunt
The Train, 1987
Hamoun, 1988
Passing Through the Mist, 1989
Lucifer
Search in the Island, 1969
Banu, 1991 (released in 1998)
Sara, 1993
Remember the Flight
Once and for All, 1992
Bluff 1993
Pari, 1995
The Common Concern
Kimia, 1994
The Strange Sisters
Inspired by Love, 1995
Shadow to Shadow
Land of the Sun, 1996
Psycho
The Life, 1997
Stories of Kish ("The Lost Cousin" episode)
The Legion, 1998
The Glass Love
The Mix, 1999
A Girl Called Thunder, 2000
The Intruder, 2001
The Garden Salad, 2005
Who Killed Amir?, 2006
The Night Bus, 2007 Auteur : fer2c Tags: cinema Khosro legend movie OneTrueMedia Shakibaei theatre  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 1 of 11 - 619 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) along with Tanya Jowhary and this author in a play called "Baradaran". The play was written by Iraj Janatie-Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play may still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 2 of 11 - 580 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 3 of 11 - 584 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 4 of 11 - 602 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Khosrow & Shirin aus fünf Büchern des Nezami - پنج گنج نظامی - 1702 sec Eine kleine Kunst-Doku über den persischen Dichter und Poeten, Nezami Ganjavi und seinem Werk "Khosrow und Shirin", aus "Den fünf Büchern des Nezami", ein Sammelwerk über die Geschichte und Myhtologie des vorislamischen Irans.
Eine Einsicht in die iranische Bilder-und Dichtungskunst unter dem Islam. Auteur : ariapars Tags: Nezami ganjavi پنج گنج نظامی گنجوی خمسه خسرو شیرین khosrow shirin parviz eslam avicena ahura mazda avesta farhad dariush sassanian farokhzad zarathustra ariapars zoroaster  | | Muhammad Hassan & Khosrow Daivari assaulted Shawn Michaels - 413 sec April 4, 2005 - RAW: Muhammad Hassan & Khosrow Daivari assaulted Shawn Michaels leaving him unconsious in the ring.. Auteur : MagicWrestling Tags: RAW: Muhammad Hassan Khosrow Daivari assaulted Shawn Michaels  | | khosrow shakibaee remembrance - 265 sec a tribute to Shakibaee Auteur : sy892966 Tags: khosrow khosro shakibaee shakibaei shakibaey  | | Khosrow Shakibaei Funeral - 321 sec Khosrow Shakibaei Funeral Auteur : mohsen186 Tags: Khosrow Shakibaei Funeral  | | PressTV Special خسرو شکیبایی-Khosrow Shakibai Funeral - 474 sec The funeral precession of one of Iran's leading actors, Khosrow Shakibai was held in Tehran on Sunday July 20, 2008. Press TV's Reporter's File reports: Auteur : maryamsanati Tags: Khosrow Shakibai Funeral Press TV Susan Modaress Emad Khodabakhsh Reporter's File Khosro  | | khosrow shakibaee - 158 sec khosro shakibaee
shakibaee shakibai khosrow khosro خسرو شکیبایی Auteur : saeedkeb Tags: shakibaee shakibai khosrow khosro خسرو شکیبایی  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 5 of 11 - 601 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 6 of 11 - 602 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  | | Hamoun-For Khosrow Shakibai Part 7 of 11 - 601 sec Khosrow Shakiba'i (March 27, 1944, Tehran, Iran — July 18, 2008, Tehran) (Persian: خسرو شکیبایی) was a celebrated Iranian stage and cinema actor. He ranks amongst the most accomplished of actors of his generation.
Khosrow Shakibai's father was an army Colonel who died from cancer when Khosrow (called Mahmoud by family and close friends) was only fourteen. Khosrow studied acting at Faculty of Fine Arts of University of Tehran. He began his stage career in 1963 and initiated his film acting in 1982 with Khatt-e Ghermez (The Red Line)*, directed by Masoud Kimiai. He had played in seven feature films when the film director Dariush Mehrjui offered him the title role of Hamoun, a film that over time has achieved a cult status.
Shakibai's performance in Hamoun marked a turning point in his career. He received a Crystal Phoenix at Fajr International Film Festival for his portrayal of Hamoun, a literary intellectual who gradually loses his touch with reality and becomes entrapped into an obsessive and destructive conflict with his estranged wife whom he deeply loves. Shakibai played also in some major television series. He won a Crystal Phoenix for Kimiā (The Philosopher's Stone) (1994) directed by Ahmad-Reza Darvish.
Shakibai found also a considerable following for his voice, brought about through publication of the recordings of his readings of poems by such luminaries of the modern Persian poetry as Forough Farrokhzad and Sohrab Sepehri.
Shakibai is credited for helping to raise the stature of performing arts in Iran by the end of the 1980s, when the authorities in charge tended to neglect this area of cultural activities.
He married twice. From his first marriage with the actress Tānyā Joharí he has one daughter named Poupak, and from his second marriage with Parvin Koush'yār one son named Pouryā.
Khosrow Shakibai died at 6 am on July 18, 2008, of liver cancer in Pārsiān Hospital in Tehran. Earlier it had been reported that Shakibai's death had been a consequence of his heart failure.
On Sunday, July 20, 2008, the body of Khosrow Shakibai was laid to rest in The Artists Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran. His funeral procession began at 9 am from Vahdat Hall (Tālār-e Vahdat), Hafez Street, in Tehran.
* Khosrow's first appearance on Television was in the fall of 1976 (1356) with Tanya Johari and this author in a play called "Baradaran. " The play was written by Iraj Janatie Ataie and directed by Faramarz Sedighi. The play might still exist in the archive of Iranian Television. Auteur : faridb2000 Tags: Hamoun Shakibai Persian Cinema Mehrjuee Iranian Films Khosrow  |
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