Tawfīq al-Ḥakīm (born October 9, 1898, Alexandria, Egypt—died July 26, 1987, Cairo) was the founder of contemporary Egyptian drama and a leading figure in modern Arabic literature.
Al-Ḥakīm was born into a well-to-do family. After studying law at Cairo University, he went to Paris to continue his legal studies but instead devoted most of his time to the theatre. On his return to Egypt four years later (1930), he worked for the Ministry of Justice in a rural area and for the Ministry of Education in Cairo. However, in 1936 he resigned to devote himself entirely to writing.
Al-Ḥakīm won fame as a dramatist with Ahl al-kahf (1933; “The People of the Cave”), which was ostensibly based on the story of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus but which was actually a study of the human struggle against time. This introduced his series of “dramas of ideas,” or of “symbolism.” They included Shahrazād (1934), based on The Thousand and One Nights, as well as the plays Al-Malik Udib (1939; “King Oedipus”), Pijmalīyūn (1942; “Pygmalion”), and Sulaymān al-Ḥakim (1934; “Solomon the Wise”). His output of more than 50 plays also included many on Egyptian social themes, such as Sirr al-muntahirah (1937; “The Secret of the Suicide Girl”) and Ruṣāṣah fī al-Qalb (1944; “A Bullet in the Heart”). His boldest drama was the lengthy Muḥammad (1936), which was not intended for performance.
Al-Ḥakīm made drama a respected Arabic literary genre. Prior to him, prose plays had been primarily lightweight comedy or farce, while verse had been used by such noted poets as Aḥmad Shawqī for heroic drama. Al-Ḥakīm, however, wrote only in prose—a flexible high-quality prose, often interspersed with colloquial Arabic. His autobiographical novel, Yawmīyāt nāʾib fī al-aryāf (1937; The Maze of Justice), is a satire on Egyptian officialdom.