Kamran Pasha ( Urdu: کامران پاشا; born on 3 April 1972) is an American screenwriter, director and novelist of Pakistani origin. He was a writer and producer on the NBC series Kings, [1] after working as a producer on NBC's Bionic Woman. [2] Previously, he was a co-producer and writer for Sleeper Cell, Showtime Network's terrorism drama. [3] Sleeper Cell was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Miniseries in 2005 [4] and for an Emmy for Best Miniseries in 2006. [5] Pasha has also written for The CW series Nikita, Reign and Roswell, New Mexico as well as the Disney XD animated show Tron: Uprising. [2]
In 2011, Pasha was hired to rewrite a movie screenplay entitled "The Immaculate" for Sidney Kimmel Entertainment and producer Charles Segars. The film follows an agnostic government agent assigned to protect a 17-year-old boy who some people believe is the Messiah. [6]
Pasha wrote his first video game for the hip hop artist 50 Cent in 2008. The game, 50 Cent: Blood on the Sand, is the sequel to the bestselling 50 Cent: Bulletproof and is distributed by Vivendi Games. [7]
Pasha was born on 3 April 1972 in Karachi, Pakistan, and migrated to the United States at the age of three. He was raised in Brooklyn in the predominantly Hasidic Jewish neighborhood of Borough Park. [8] He attended Stuyvesant High School in New York, graduating in 1989. He went on to Dartmouth College, [9] where he majored in comparative religion [8] [10] and was an editor of the college newspaper, The Dartmouth.
After graduating, Pasha worked as a journalist for the Wall Street publisher Institutional Investor and the Knight Ridder financial newswire. During his tenure as a reporter, he interviewed international leaders such as the Israeli prime minister Shimon Peres, the Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and the Peruvian president, Alberto Fujimori. [8]
He left journalism in 1996 and attended Cornell Law School. [11] He subsequently enrolled in the MBA program at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, and graduated with a joint law/business degree in 2000. [12]
Pasha briefly worked as an attorney at the New York law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison before moving to Los Angeles to pursue a career in film making. He attended the MFA Producers Program at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television and graduated in 2003. [13]
His first television writing job was as a staff writer on UPN's remake of the classic series The Twilight Zone. [14]
In 2003, Pasha set up his first feature film project, a historical epic on the love story of the Taj Mahal, at Warner Brothers Pictures. [15] He subsequently wrote a screen adaptation of the Japanese anime Kite in collaboration with the director Rob Cohen and the producer Anant Singh. [16] He has also written screen adaptations of the Japanese horror film Ghost Actress by the director Hideo Nakata and adapted Deepak Chopra's novel, Soulmate. [17]
Pasha spent two years as a writer and co-producer for Sleeper Cell. In 2007, he signed on as a producer of NBC's Bionic Woman. [18]
Pasha wrote and directed the short film Miriam, which won the Gaia Award at the Moondance International Film Festival in August 2008. [19] The award is given to those who "elucidate and improve the spiritual quality of all life on the planet, and contribute[...] to the betterment of the world spirit". [20]
In 2008, Pasha accompanied his mother on the hajj, the traditional Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca. [1] Pasha blogs regularly for the Huffington Post. [21]
Pasha sold his first two novels to Simon & Schuster in 2007. The books are entitled Mother of the Believers, a historical epic that follows the birth of Islam from the eyes of the Islamic prophet Muhammad's wife Aisha, and Shadow of the Swords, a love story set amidst the showdown of Richard the Lionheart and Saladin during the Third Crusade. [22]
{{
cite news}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link)