
Age: 59
male
Ali Mosaffa (علی مصفا) was born in Tehran, Iran. His father, Mozaher Mosaffa is a renowned Persian poet and professor of Persian literature at the University of Tehran (UT). Mosaffa mother, Amir Banoo Karimi is also a leading scholar and professor of Persian literature at the University of Tehran (UT) and the eldest daughter of the legendary Persian poet, Amiri Firuzkuhi. As a child, Ali Mosaffa discovered his interest in story writing and english, contributing to his fluency in the language. He is a graduate of Civil Engineering from the University of Tehran (UT) where he showed an interest in acting; making his debut in the 1991 film, Omid. Mosaffa went on to win the prize for best male actor the following year at the Fajr International Film Festival for his role in Darius Mehrjui's film, Pari. Mosaffa met his future wife, Iranian actress Leila Hatami on the set of Dariush Mehrjui's 1996 film, Leila. The two married in 1999 and have two children, a son named Mani (born February 2007) and a daughter named Asal (born October 2008). Ali Mosaffa is also known for The Mix, Pari, The Tower of Minoo, The Last Step, Beloved Sky, There Are Things You Don't Know, The Past, What's the Time in Your World, Death of the Fish, Duet.

After eight years abroad, Farhad returns to Iran and steps into the world he once left behind. Wealth, status, and charm place him at the center of constant attention, yet his heart belongs to a single face. A girl from a forgotten dream. A memory from childhood. Her name is Fargol. Quiet, graceful, and raised in a modest family, she appears again in Farhad’s life like a fragile echo of the past. Their reunion sparks a love that feels destined, yet every step draws them into a web of class differences, family expectations, and a fate far harsher than either imagines. Farhad’s closest friend, Hooman, fights his own battle. A rich young man in love with a girl far outside his social circle. Their parallel struggles reflect a society where love and reality collide, and the cost of choosing the heart grows steep. But the true key to the story lies with an elderly woman named Parichehr. Her life, marked by heartbreak, secrets, and survival, becomes a mirror that reveals what love endures and what it destroys. As her past unfolds, Farhad and Fargol find their own future hanging in the balance. A romantic drama woven with social tensions
