
Fawzia Hassan
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Fawzia Hassan.
Place of Birth: Iraq
Known For

Me and The Manager

Women's militias
After being betrayed by her husband, Zeina opens a company to help women uncover their husbands' infidelities. She becomes a symbol of the fight against violence against women and leads the largest women's strike in Iraq's history, forcing the government to take radical measures to support women's rights and combat domestic violence.

Sweet Sour
An Iraqi flavored series about different characters, a dreamer, taxi driver,hairdresser and the troublesome in comedic scenes about social problems.

The world of Ms. Wahiba 2
The nurse (Ms. Wahiba) returns again in this part, with the struggles and problems of young people in our advanced society, and with the entry of technology and the Internet world into the home.

حلم وخيال

Intiqam Mashrou

The Clamor of Silence

Babel habibiti
A festival is being held in Babylon, to which archeologists, artists, and media professionals are invited, along with an Egyptian television delegation headed by an archaeologist. This scholar meets an Iraqi girl who bears Iraqi features, and gives her appearance the impression that the archaeologist, the archaeologist, and that his dream has begun to materialize in front of him, and a group of comic situations begins.

The Game
Dr. Rafe' weds his wife after a love story. When routine and boredom start to set in, Rafe' decides to make his wife think that he is seeing someone else to make her jealous. The wife tries to find out why her husband wants to have an affair.

Hafar Al-Batin
The story revolves around Iraqi army men who, following a historic struggle with the occupying forces, were buried alive in their shelters in the Hafar al-Batin border area by huge bulldozers. Filming began in the spring of 2000, with the city of Habbaniyah selected as the primary shooting location. The film is considered the first Iraqi feature to address the Second Gulf War and involved Iraqi actors alongside Iraqi military units. Approximately 50 actors and 200 military personnel participated in the production. It is believed that the film’s original title was The Longest Day in History before settling on its final name. The film was not permitted to be screened, similar to another Iraqi film, The Countdown. It was reportedly banned because it did not meet the approval of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.