Adam Nimoy

Adam B. Nimoy (born August 9, 1956) is an American television director. Nimoy is the son of the actor Leonard Nimoy and the actress Sandra Zober. He is married to actress Terry Farrell.[1]

Adam Nimoy
Born
Adam B. Nimoy

(1956-08-09) August 9, 1956
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
Loyola University
OccupationTelevision director
Years active1992–present
Spouse(s)
(
m. 2018)
Children5
Parent(s)Leonard Nimoy
Sandra Zober
RelativesAaron Bay-Schuck (stepbrother)

Early life

Adam Nimoy was born in Los Angeles, California,[2] to actor Leonard Nimoy and actress Sandra Zober. He has an older sister, Julie (born 1955).[3][4] Following his parents' divorce, Nimoy gained a stepbrother, Aaron Bay-Schuck, when his father married Susan Bay.[3]

He obtained his Bachelor of Science at University of California, Berkeley and his Juris Doctor at Loyola Law School.[5] He has two children with his former wife Nancy.[3]

Career

Lawyer

Adam Nimoy began his work in the entertainment industry as an attorney in entertainment law specializing in music and music publishing. According to lead singer Kurt Harland, Adam was instrumental in clearing the many Star Trek samples used on Information Society's self-titled debut record, such as the "Pure energy!" snippet used in the #3 US hit "What's On Your Mind? (Pure Energy)".

Business affairs executive

He was a business affairs executive for EMI America Records and Enigma Records before becoming a TV director.[6]

Director

His credits include episodes of NYPD Blue, Nash Bridges, The Practice, Ally McBeal, Gilmore Girls, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Babylon 5, The Outer Limits, for which he directed his father in the episode "I, Robot", and Sliders.

For the Love of Spock

After his father's death in 2015, Nimoy revealed a documentary project the two of them had been working on about the elder Nimoy's famous Star Trek character which the younger planned to direct.[6] Nimoy stated that with his father's passing, the project would now take on a stronger focus on the life and career of Leonard Nimoy, as well as the character of Spock. In March 2015, Nimoy announced plans to crowd-fund the project's $600,000 budget and provide credit and other perks to the fans who contributed. By that June, the project successfully completed funding through Kickstarter.com, raising $621,721, ahead of its July 1 deadline. The documentary, For the Love of Spock, received the support of interview subjects including William Shatner, George Takei, Walter Koenig,[7][8] J. J. Abrams, and Seth MacFarlane.[9] The film was released on April 16, 2016, at the Tribeca Film Festival.[7][10]

Nimoy appeared as himself in "The Spock Resonance", the November 5, 2015, episode of the CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory, in which he interviews Star Trek fan Sheldon Cooper (Jim Parsons) for the documentary on his father (who had previously lent his voice to the episode "The Transporter Malfunction", in the series' fifth season).[11]

Lecturer

Nimoy has taught Thesis Film Post Production and Advanced Approaches to Directing at the New York Film Academy.[5]

Author

His memoir, My Incredibly Wonderful, Miserable Life, was published by Pocket Books in 2008.[6]

Miscellaneous

Special thanks are given to Adam in the liner notes of the album Emergency Third Rail Power Trip (1983, Enigma Records) by the band Rain Parade. "Spock" is also thanked.

Personal life

Nimoy had been dating actress Terry Farrell, who portrayed Jadzia Dax on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, prior to their announcement of their engagement in August 2017. They married on March 26, 2018, in a civil ceremony at City Hall in San Francisco on what would have been his late father's 87th birthday.[1]

gollark: I guess it could *technically* go on your lap.
gollark: I mean, it's obviously much worse in terms of calculation throughput.
gollark: You mean faster as in latency or boot time or what?
gollark: Calculators are a vaguely weird and annoying product because they're very expensive, worse than equivalent general-purpose computing things like phones, and basically *only* exist for exams.
gollark: It always annoys me that foolish human brains are really bad at running things like high-quality RNGs or cryptography.

References

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