- Source: Reza Badiyi
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Reza Sayed Badiyi (also known as Reza Badiei; Persian: رضا بدیعی; April 17, 1930 – August 20, 2011) was an Iranian-born American film and television director. His credits also include developing the title sequence montages for Mission: Impossible, Hawaii Five-O, Get Smart, and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Early life and education
Badiyi was born April 17, 1930, in Arak, Pahlavi Iran. His parents were from Isfahan, Iran. He graduated from the Academy of Drama in Iran. He worked with the Audio Visual Department in Tehran, (Honarhayeh Zeeba), and completed 24 documentary films, prior to leaving the country.
Badiyi moved to the United States in 1955, in order to continue his film studies at Syracuse University. He was invited by the United States Department of State to continue his studies in America after winning an international film award for Flood in Khuzestan. He graduated from Syracuse University with a degree in filmmaking.
Career
Badiyi moved to Kansas to work for Calvin Co., an industrial film production company. Badiyi often worked with Robert Altman. Badiyi was assistant director on the low-budget 1957 film The Delinquents, which marked Altman's feature film debut as a director and the cult classic horror film Carnival of Souls, made in 1962.
Early in his career, he directed episodes of Get Smart, Mission: Impossible, Hawaii Five-O, The Incredible Hulk, Mannix, The Six Million Dollar Man, Starsky & Hutch, The Rockford Files and Police Squad!. He also directed the definitive "fashion show" sequence of the third season of the popular Doris Day Show. Perhaps his most famous work was crafting the briskly-edited title visualisation (i.e., the opening and closing credits with theme music) for the original Hawaii Five-O. There were lowlights, as well, including directing the unsold pilot for Inside O.U.T., a spy-oriented comedy executive produced by Harry Ackerman and starring Bill Daily, Alan Oppenheimer, a then-up-and-coming Farrah Fawcett and a chimp for Screen Gems in 1971.
In the 1980s and 1990s, he directed episodes of Falcon Crest, Cagney & Lacey, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, La Femme Nikita, Sliders and Baywatch and Early Edition.
Badiyi set a Directors Guild of America record for directing the most hours of episodic series television ever.
Awards
In the mid-1970s he received the Golden Ribbon of Art award from the reigning Shah of Iran. He later won various awards, including the Humanitas Prize for an episode of Cagney and Lacey. He was honored by the Directors Guild of America for directing over 400 hours of television. In May 2010, Badiyi was honored at UCLA for his 80th birthday and his 60th year in the entertainment industry. In 2009, he was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Noor Iranian Film Festival in Los Angeles, and after his passing in 2011, the festival made the award his namesake.
Personal life
He was the father of three children which included Mina, Alexis and Natasha.
Badiyi's third and last marriage was to actress Tania Harley from 1987 until his death in 2011, with whom he had two daughters, Alexis and Natasha. His second marriage was to actress and writer Barbara Turner; with whom he had one daughter, Mina. By this marriage to Turner he was the stepfather of actress Jennifer Jason Leigh and Carrie Morrow. His first marriage was to Gwendolyn Davis which ended in divorce.
= Death
=Badiyi died in Los Angeles, California on August 20, 2011, at the age of 81, having struggled with various health issues.
Filmography
= Director
=This is list showing a selection of entertainment directed by Reza Badiyi, in order by start date. He directed more than 430 television episodes from 1963 onward.
2006 – The Way Back Home
2003 – She Spies
1999 – Early Edition
1999–1998 – Sliders
1999–1998 – Mortal Kombat: Conquest
1997 – La Femme Nikita (TV series)
1997 – Buffy the Vampire Slayer
1997 – The Cape
1996 – Baywatch
1994–1996 – Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
1992–1994 – In the Heat of the Night
1985–1986 – T. J. Hooker
1982–1988 – Cagney & Lacey
1982-1984 – Joe Dancer
1978–1980 – The Incredible Hulk
1977–1979 – The Rockford Files
1976–1978 – Baretta
1974 – The Six Million Dollar Man
1970–1971 – The Doris Day Show
1969–1979 – Hawaii Five-O
1969–1972 – Mission: Impossible
1969 – The Good Guys
References
External links
Reza Badiei at IMDb
Reza Badiyi at Memory Alpha
Reza Badiyi at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
OCPC Magazine Cover story: Reza Badiei - The last TV tycoon
Veteran TV director Reza Badiei feted