Mohamed Hefzy, Valérie Garcia Team on French-Lebanese Dramedy Series ‘Nadine’ Set in Parisian Fashion World (EXCLUSIVE)
Mohamed Hefzy, the Egyptian producer whose banner Film Clinic is presenting three movies at the Venice Film Festival, is teaming with French producer Valerie Garcia’s banner Gabman on a coming-of-age dramedy series set in the Parisian fashion world.
The eight-part series is created by Amina Abdelwahab and Hend Radwan (“Paranormal”), and is co-written by Abdelwahab, Claire Saint-Pierre (“Aspergirl”) and Georges Hazim (“Son of a Dancer”). Christophe Saber, an Egyptian-Swiss helmer who directed the critically acclaimed shorts “Discipline” and “Sacrilege,” is on board to direct “Nadine.”
The project was selected to take part in the Qumra Mentoring Program of the Doha Film Institute and received a grant. As such, “Nadine” is being supported by the Doha Film Institute and the French National Film Board (CNC).
The story revolves around Nadine, a self-conscious 18-year-old from a strict Lebanese family living in the Paris suburbs, whose life is turned upside down after she gets scouted by a supermodel and is launched into a plus-size modeling career. But as she trades her job working at the family’s shawarma shop for modeling, she finds herself juggling her conservative parents’s expectations while navigating the chaotic Parisian fashion world, leading to numerous culture clashes.
The show was penned in collaboration with Dina Hamzeh and Omar Layza (“Anxious in Beirut”). Abdelwahab said the idea for the show was inspired by the true story of how an Egyptian friend of hers was studying engineering and working at a convenience store in Melbourne, Australia, when he was scouted by Tyra Banks. “He just shifted careers and now he’s a Calvin Klein model,” she said.
But that’s not the only source of inspiration. Abdelwahab shares that “Nadine’s journey is deeply personal to [her]. Like her, I’ve struggled with my weight and my sense of identity,” she said, adding that this “series is my way of reclaiming that narrative and exploring what happens when the world labels and defines you before you’ve had the chance to define yourself.”
Speaking to Variety ahead of Venice, Hefzy said, “When I first heard the concept for ‘Nadine,’ I was reminded of how shows like ‘Ramy’ and ‘Mo’ crossed cultural thresholds by bringing Arab American stories to audiences worldwide.”
Hefzy added that he was struck that “we had rarely seen such a breakout depicting the Arab diaspora or Arabs living in Europe.” He felt like “Nadine” “could do the same for the French Arab community,” featuring “characters in a way that is touching and humorous and at the same time, very modern and relevant.”
Garcia, who is producing the series at Gabman with Manon Cominassi, described the series as a “fresh, inclusive, unapologetic story of a relatable misfit, that transcends generations, cultures and borders.”
Now in development, the project reteams Radwan and Hezfy, who last collaborated as executive producers on the hit series “Paranormal.”
Both Garcia and Hefzy have a strong track record. Garcia, who previously co-headed one of France’s leading distribution shingles, Mars Films (“Two is a Family,” “CODA”), launched Gabman in 2022 and is currently financing “A Beautiful Journey,” an English-language film starring Shailene Woodley, with Anonymous Federation.
Hefzy, who’s played a big role in championing emerging talent from the MENA region, is at Venice with “Hijra,” the second feature from Saudi filmmaker Shahad Ameen, Suzannah Mirghani’s “Cotton Queen” and Yanis Koussim’s horror film “Roqia.”