Buzz Kulik

Directing

Buzz Kulik

Born July 23, 1922Kearny, New Jersey, USA65 credits

Seymour "Buzz" Kulik (July 23, 1922 – January 13, 1999) was an American film director and producer. He directed 72 films and television shows, including the landmark CBS television network anthology series Playhouse 90 and several episodes of The Twilight Zone. Kulik went on to direct made-for-TV movies, such as Brian's Song. After leaving the army as a first lieutenant after World War II, Kulik went to work in the mail room at J. Walter Thompson Advertising Agency in New York. He eventually saw a notice at work that they were looking for people to direct programs for a new medium called television, and Kulik responded. A lifelong baseball fan, he started directing the cameras at Yankee Stadium before starting a career directing live television programming such as Playhouse 90 and Lux Video Theater. He moved to Los Angeles in 1953 and eventually began directing some of the landmark series of the 1950s and 1960s including Perry Mason, Gunsmoke, Have Gun Will Travel, Wagon Train, Rawhide, Dr. Kildare and The Defenders (for which he directed the pilot episode). He directed a dozen episodes of Twilight Zone, which brought him lasting fame and recognition among the legion of fans who religiously watch the Twilight Zone marathons that continue to air on holidays to this day. Kulik also began directing feature films in the 1960s including Explosive Generation with William Shatner, Warning Shot with David Jansen, Villa Rides with Robert Mitchum, Yul Brynner, and Charles Bronson, and Riot with Gene Hackman and Jim Brown. He directed the first television mini-series, Vanished, with Richard Widmark and James Farentino. In 1971, he directed what many critics and fans feel is the greatest television film ever made, Brian's Song, for which he received "Best Director" honors from the Directors Guild of America. For several years in a row the lead actors in the films he directed won "Best Actor" of the year including Peter Ustinov for A Storm in Summer, James Caan for Brian's Song, Alan Alda for Kill Me if You Can, Susan Clark for Babe, and Anthony Hopkins for The Lindbergh Kidnapping. Some of the prominent long-form mini series he directed were From Here to Eternity with Natalie Wood and William Devane, Around the World in 80 Days with Pierce Brosnin and Peter Ustinov, and Kane and Abel with Peter Strauss. In the 1970s and 1980s he also directed feature films including To Find a Man, Shamus with Burt Reynolds, and The Hunter with Steve McQueen. Over the course of a career that lasted more than 40 years, Buzz Kulik established himself, and is remembered today, as one of the greatest television directors of all time.

Known For

Filmography

Her Secret Life
1987Her Secret Life
DirectorMovie
Women of Valor
1986Women of Valor
DirectorMovie
Kane & Abel
1985Kane & Abel
DirectorTV
The Hunter
1980The Hunter
DirectorMovie
Babe
1977Babe
DirectorMovie
Matt Helm
1975Matt Helm
DirectorMovie
Bad Ronald
1974Bad Ronald
DirectorMovie
Remember When
1974Remember When
DirectorMovie
Pioneer Woman
1973Pioneer Woman
DirectorMovie
Shamus
1973Shamus
DirectorMovie
Crawlspace
1972Crawlspace
DirectorMovie
To Find a Man
1972To Find a Man
DirectorMovie
Brian's Song
1971Brian's Song
DirectorMovie
Vanished
1971Vanished
DirectorTV
Riot
1969Riot
DirectorMovie
Villa Rides
1968Villa Rides
DirectorMovie
Sergeant Ryker
1968Sergeant Ryker
DirectorMovie
Warning Shot
1967Warning Shot
DirectorMovie
Dr. Kildare
1961Dr. Kildare
DirectorTV
Rawhide
1959Rawhide
DirectorTV
P
1958Pursuit
DirectorTV
Naked City
1958Naked City
DirectorTV
Perry Mason
1957Perry Mason
DirectorTV
Gunsmoke
1955Gunsmoke
DirectorTV
Climax!
1954Climax!
DirectorTV
Studio One
1948Studio One
DirectorTV