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Emami, Rouhollah
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Birth name
Rouhollah "Bijan" Emami
Date of Birth
26 February 1941, Tehran, Iran
Date of death
15 November 1999, Tehran, Iran
Rouhollah Emami (February 26, 1941 - November 15, 1999)
Rouhollah "Bijan" Emami (also Ruhollah, Roohollah, or Ruhallah; February 1941 in Tehran, Iran; † November 15, 1999, Tehran) was an Iranian film editor and film director.
He came from a family of artists (grandfather: Ahmad Emami, father: Ali Emami), known for their work in modern Iranian carving and inlay art.
He initially trained as a film editor at the then Ministry of Culture (now the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance) from 1960 onwards before studying directing and dramaturgy at the Tehran University of Art, from which he received an MA in 1976. He also occasionally worked there as a guest lecturer in the late 1970s.
He made his feature film debut as an editor in 1969 with the film "Khaneh-ye kenare darya" ("The House by the Sea"), directed by Dr. Houshang Kavoosi. In the following years, he made several documentaries before returning to film editing.
After his collaboration with the well-known Iranian filmmaker Sohrab Shahid Saless in the mid-1970s (including on the film "Tabiate Bijan (Still Life)", which won the Silver Bear in Berlin), he rose to become one of the most sought-after editors in the Iranian film industry and received numerous national awards for his work.
After the film industry came to a standstill in the wake of the Islamic Revolution in 1979, he worked as an editor on one of the first major film productions of the Islamic Republic of Iran ("Tobeh Nosuh" (1983) by the now internationally renowned director and activist Mohsen Makhmalbaf). Even in the post-revolutionary film landscape, he remained one of the busiest in his field, working on up to eight projects a year.
In total, in his 38 years of career, he participated in over 130 productions and collaborated with many renowned Iranian filmmakers, including Abbas Kiarostami (Zang-e-Tafrih), Sohrab Shahid Saless (Tabiate Bijan, Iran's competition entry at the 1974 Berlin International Film Festival), Parviz Sayyad (Bonbast), Masoud Kimiai (Soltan), Khosrow Sinai (Zendeh bad ! (Viva...!), Hayoola-ye daroon), Mohsen Makhmalbaf (Tobeh Nosuh), and many others.
Rouhollah Emami died of cancer on November 15, 1999.
He married the Iranian scholar Shahla Miri and had two children, Pedram and Nazgol.
Selected filmography
Director
1979: Rah-e khoda (Short) 1975: Hamase-ye Dhofar (Short)
Editor
1972: Zang-e-Tafrih | The Breaktime 1973: A Simple Event (Ein einfaches Ereignis) 1974: Tabiate Bijan | Still Life (Stilleben) 1975: Far from Home (In der Fremde) 1977: Bonbast | Dead-End 1980: Zendeh bad ! | Viva...! 1984: The Scarecrow 1986: Mute Contact 1986: The Finish Line 1986: Off-Limits 1987: Stony Lion 1987: Days of Waiting 1987: The Spell 1989: The Wage 1991: The Legend of a Sigh 1992: The Bait 1994: Bon Voyage! 1994: A Summer Midnight Dream 1994: The Precipice 1994: Redhat and Cousin 1995: The Conqueror 1995: The Enemy 1998: Love Without Frontier 1999: Corrupted Hands 1999: Maturity
Selected works of
Emami, Rouhollah
2000
Dirty Hands | Dasthaye Aloodeh (2000)
1994
Redhat and Cousin | Kolah Ghermezi va Pesar Khaleh (1994)
1991
The Legend of a Sigh | Afsane-ye-ah (1991)
1987
Stony Lion | Shir-e Sangi (1987)
1984
Matarsak | The Scarecrow (1984)
1979
Long live...! - Zende bad... (1979)
1977
VASETEHA | Intermediaries (1977)
1977
Dead End | Bonbast (1977)
1975
Far from Home | Dar Ghorbat | In der Fremde (1975)
1974
Still Life | Tabiate bijan (1974)
1972
The Breaktime | LA RÉCRÉATION | Zang-e Tafrih (1972)
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