Background
Sarafian was born in New York City on April 28, 1930, to Armenian immigrants.
Sarafian was born in New York City on April 28, 1930, to Armenian immigrants.
He studied pre-law and pre-medical at New York University and was a poor student, but changed over to studying film, at which he excelled.
He compiled a versatile career that spanned over five decades as a director, actor, and writer He is best known as the director of the 1971 film Vanishing Point. He left college to join the United States Army, in which he served as a reporter for an Army news service.
He also acted in a local play Altman directed.
His television career began in the early 1960s in Kansas City as Altman"s assistant. Sarafian soon began to direct television shows himself, and in 1963 scored one of his greatest successes as director of the "Living Doll" episode of The Twilight Zone.
His first feature film was Andy in 1965. His greatest success as a feature film director came with Vanishing Point, which followed the action-packed adventures of a man driving a white Dodge Challenger car from Denver, Colorado, to San Francisco, California, in 15 hours.
Critics disliked the movie, but it became a cult hit.
Besides The Twilight Zone, Sarafian"s directing credits on television included episodes of the television series Gunsmoke and Batman. In addition to Andy and Vanishing Point, he directed a number of feature films, including Run Wild, Run Free in 1969, Manitoba in the Wilderness in 1971, and The Manitoba Who Loved Cat Dancing in 1973. In his film acting career, he played a gangster in Bugsy in 1991 and a hitman in Bulworth in 1998, and in 2001 he voiced the animated God Beaver character in Doctor Dolittle 2.
Sarafian died at the age of 83 in Santa Monica, California, on September 18, 2013, of pneumonia, which he contracted while recovering from a broken back.
On television, he played a coffee shop owner as a regular member of the cast of the 1985-1986 Columbia Broadcasting System situation comedy Foley Square, starring Margaret Colin.