Solène Delinger / Photo credit: screenshot C8 12:10pm, June 07, 2023

Tuesday, June 6, 2023, in Jordan De Luxe's show on C8, Yanis Marshall accused Nawell Madani of stealing a choreography for one of his films. Still angry with the comedian, the famous choreographer, professor of the "Star Academy", implied that a legal procedure would be initiated.

Yanis Marshall is not angry... The famous choreographer and teacher of Star Academy is terribly angry with comedian Nawell Madani, who allegedly "stole" one of his choreographies for one of his films. "My choreography was stolen, without paying me and by putting me in the credits in a movie in the cinema. This is not a joke at all! It's the worst blow I've ever been told! The same scene, the same music. I've never been called, I've never signed a contract. I have never won a euro, "he said Tuesday, June 6, 2023 during his appearance on Jordan De Luxe's show on C8.

"She has to check her mail"

Yanis Marshall then clarified that the sequence in question lasted three to four minutes, and that it had been entirely choreographed by himself and Aïsha Francis in the United States, on a Beyoncé song. Still angry with Nawell Madani, the choreographer made it known that he would not stop there. "I told her, then she has to check her mail because there is a little suite. I don't like being robbed," he said to Jordan De Luxe, implying that he had filed a complaint against the actress. Asked by Jordan De Luxe about the possibility of a meeting with Nawell Madani, Yanis Marshall replied, very cash: "It is better not for her".

READ ALSO- "So far so good" on Netflix: is Nawell Madani's series really worth a look?

Nawell Madani would have done without this new controversy. The comedian has recently made a lot of headlines with his Netflix series So far so good, which has divided critics. Accused of conveying clichés about the Maghreb community, the director had defended herself in the program Clique on Canal +: "I do not understand, she said. I did a project that highlights women for me. I was always told that it was the intention that counted. My intentions were noble. I wanted to talk about neighborhood women, those who fight, who fight for their brothers... How these girls take the place of the father who leaves or even the mother (...) I put a veiled woman, radiant, who is solar, who is much more posed than the rest of her sisters... I've also cast people you don't usually see on screen."