Nawell Madani

Summary

Nawell Madani (born 1979 in Watermael-Boitsfort, Belgium) is a Belgian humorist of Algerian descent, presenter and producer. She became famous in 2012 because of the Jamel Comedy Club.

Nawell Madani
Born (1979-10-25) October 25, 1979 (age 44)

Biography edit

Born on 25 October 1979,[1] Nawell grew up in Belgium, suffered third-degree burns at the age of 2, and was a tomboy for most of her childhood and adolescence.[2] Her father is a taxi driver.[3]

She moved to Paris at the age of 21,[4] at first with the ambition to become a professional choreographer and dancer, returned to Belgium, and left again. After several tours as a choreographer, she gave up this career: "the artistic directors asked us to wear a bikini. They don’t give a damn about the dance", she declared. She was briefly an artistic director of a nightclub in Antwerp.[3] She discovered the theatre and wanted to become an actress. At the end of 2008, she joined the Studio Pygmalion where she trained for a few months.[2] She also followed courses taught by Damien Acoca,[5] and those of the “Laboratory of the Actor” directed by Hélène Zidi-Chéruy.[6] This was how she was spotted in a small room, The Pranzo, by the artistic director of the Jamel Comedy Club who invited her to a casting to join the team created by Jamel Debbouze. Madani was the only woman to join the team. In September 2011 she began her career as a comedian.[3] She left this troupe six months later:[2] "I thought to join a big family, I discovered a world full of ego and competition".[3]

On Télé Sud, she hosted the programme Backstage, where she received artists such as Rick Ross, Shaggy, Wyclef Jean, Kery James, Nas and Chris Brown. In 2011, she presented the programme Shake Your Body on MTV with Cut Killer. In September 2012, she joined as a commentator the team of Grand Journal which was being renewed.[7] In 2013, she founded the collective Jam’Girls, a television programme which met a new generation of female comedians, broadcast on Chérie 25 and Comédie. In 2014 she went for her first one-woman show, C'est moi la plus belge ("I am more Belgian"), in the Palais des Glaces in Paris[2] and did the tour of the Zeniths in France. She talked about taboo subjects, such as the virginity of North African women, or homosexuality.[3] She took a place in the festival Juste pour rire of Montreal in July 2014.[6]

In 2015, she won Best One-Man Show in the Globe de Cristal Awards.

Filmography edit

Year Title Role Director Notes
2012 Boulevard du Palais Saïda Bouati Christian Bonnet TV series (1 episode)
Lascars Sylvie Tristan Aurouet TV series (2 episodes)
2017 Alibi.com Cynthia Philippe Lacheau
C'est tout pour moi Lila Nawell Madani &
Ludovic Colbeau-Justin
2021 Stuck Together Leïla Dany Boon
L'enfant de personne Myriam Akim Isker TV movie
2023 La tête dans les étoiles Nathalie Emmanuel Gillibert
Jusqu'ici tout va bien Fara Nawell Madani & Lionel Smila TV series (8 episodes)

Awards and nominations edit

Year Award Nominated work Result
2015 Globe de Cristal Award for Best Stand-Up C'est moi la plus belge Won
2018 Magritte Award for Most Promising Actress C'est tout pour moi Nominated

References edit

  1. ^ Nawell Madani, humoriste belge, Le Figaro, Figaroscope.
  2. ^ a b c d Rachid Laïreche, Nawell Madani, vanne, vit et devient Libération, 7 February 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e Benjamin Locoge, Nawell Madani, la fureur de rire, Paris Match, semaine du 24 au 29 avril 2014, page 20.
  4. ^ Catherine Balle, C'est la nouvelle bombe comique, Le Parisien 20 March 2014.
  5. ^ Vimeo
  6. ^ a b Marie-Josée Roy, Nawell Madani au Festival Juste pour rire : une détermination qui rapporte gros, Huffington Post, 12 July 2014.
  7. ^ Lucas Armati, Au “Grand Journal” de Canal+, le nouveau souffle se fait attendre, Télérama, 10 September 2012.