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  1. Richard A. Colla

    American actor and film director

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  1. Richard Anthony Colla (April 18, 1936 – December 24, 2021), sometimes credited as Dick Colla, was an American film and television director and actor. Life and career. Richard Anthony Colla was born on April 18, 1936. [1] On screen he played Tony Merritt on the soap opera Days of Our Lives.

    • April 18, 1936 (age 87)
    • 1962–2000
  2. Richard A. Colla was born on 18 April 1936 in the USA. He was an actor and director, known for Battlestar Galactica (1978), Olly, Olly, Oxen Free (1978) and The Questor Tapes (1974). He was married to Denise Alexander. He died on 24 December 2021 in Beverly Hills, California, USA.

    • Actor, Director, Producer
    • April 18, 1936
    • Richard A. Colla
    • December 24, 2021
  3. Director: Battlestar Galactica. Richard A. Colla was born on 18 April 1936 in the USA. He is an actor and director, known for Battlestar Galactica (1978), Olly, Olly, Oxen Free (1978) and The Questor Tapes (1974). He is married to Denise Alexander. They have one child.

    • April 18, 1936
    • Overview
    • Career
    • External links

    Richard "Dick" A. Colla (born 18 April 1936; age 88) directed the Star Trek: The Next Generation first season episode "The Last Outpost", in which the Ferengi were introduced.

    Colla previously directed the unsold pilot for Gene Roddenberry's The Questor Tapes, which was written by Roddenberry and Gene L. Coon (earning them a 1975 Hugo Award nomination in the category Best Dramatic Presentation) and starred Robert Foxworth, Majel Barrett, and Walter Koenig. He went on to direct Star Trek: Deep Space Nine star Avery Brooks in five episodes of Spenser: For Hire and Brooks' Deep Space Nine co-star, Nana Visitor, in a 1985 episode of MacGyver. He also directed Diana Muldaur, Julie Newmar, and Gregory Sierra in a 1970 episode of McCloud. Other television series he directed include Gunsmoke, Ironside, CHiPs (again working with Julie Newmar), Murder, She Wrote (an episode with Samantha Eggar), and Hardcastle and McCormick (starring Brian Keith and Daniel Hugh Kelly in the title roles).

    Colla directed Star Trek: The Original Series guest actors Steve Ihnat and Stewart Moss in two feature films: 1970's Zigzag and 1972's Fuzz. The former movie also featured William Marshall and Vic Perrin, while the latter featured Peter Brocco, Vince Howard, and Bert Remsen. Colla had previously directed Steve Ihnat in the 1969 TV movie The Whole World Is Watching (co-starring Kermit Murdock) and went on to direct Stewart Moss in the pilot for Sarge (1971, starring Ricardo Montalban), the unsold TV pilot The Tribe (1974, also featuring Meg Wyllie), and the ABC Movie of the Week Live Again, Die Again (1974, co-starring Walker Edmiston).

    While Colla has always remained predominently a director for television, he inadvertently added an additional theatrical feature credit to the two he already had. He directed the two 1978 pilot episodes of the classic science fiction series Battlestar Galactica (featuring John Colicos, Ed Begley, Jr., Reggie Nalder, Geoffrey Binney, Paula Crist, Dick Durock, Sandra Gimpel, and Felix Silla), which were re-edited into a theatrical feature, premiering in the spring before the series actually started its television run in mid-September, thereby becoming the de facto start of the Battlestar Galactica franchise.

    Among Colla's many other TV movie credits are 1971's The Priest Killer (co-starring Peter Brocco, David Huddleston, Kermit Murdock, and Anthony Zerbe), 1975's The UFO Incident (also with David Huddleston), 1986's That Secret Sunday (starring Daphne Ashbrook and William Lucking), 1989's Naked Lie (also with Lucking, as well as Dakin Matthews) and Blind Witness (starring Stephen Macht), 1990's Sparks: The Price of Passion (starring William Lucking), 1993's Desperate Rescue: The Cathy Mahone Story (starring Clancy Brown and Jeff Kober), 1994's Web of Deception (starring Rosalind Chao), and 1995's Zoya (featuring David Warner) and Dazzle (featuring Natalia Nogulich). His most recent project was the TV movie Growing Up Brady, starring Daniel Hugh Kelly (Star Trek: Insurrection).

  4. Dec 24, 2021 · American film director (19362021) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Can you list the top facts and stats about Richard A. Colla? Richard Anthony Colla (April 18, 1936 – December 24, 2021), sometimes credited as Dick Colla, was an American film and television director and actor.

  5. Richard A. Colla is known as an Director, Producer, Executive Producer, and Story. Some of his work includes Star Trek: The Next Generation, MacGyver, Miami Vice, Murder, She Wrote, Battlestar Galactica, Battlestar Galactica, Hunter, and McCloud.

  6. Richard A. Colla - Battlestar Wiki. From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide. Richard A. Colla was the solely-credited director of the Original Series pilot " Saga of a Star World ." Contents. 1 Early Career. 2 Battlestar Galactica. 3 Post-Galactica. 4 Notes. 5 External links. 6 References.

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