Director
Alexander Singer
Born 1928 · New York City, New York, USA
Alexander Singer (born 18 April 1928, in New York City, New York, died 28 December, 2020) was an American director. He began his career behind the camera in 1951 as a cinematographer on the short documentary Day of the Fight, directed by his high school friend Stanley Kubrick. Singer turned to directing a decade later with the film A Cold Wind in August. Although he directed other films, such as the Lee Van Cleef western Captain Apache (1971), and Glass Houses (1972), an adaptation of a book that his wife Judith Singer wrote, the bulk of Singer's credits are in television. The long list of series to which Singer has lent his directorial talents include Dr. Kildare, The F.B.I., Mission: Impossible, Alias Smith and Jones, Nakia, Police Woman, Cagney & Lacey, MacGyver, six episodes of The Monkees, and three Star Trek series: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. Description above from the Wikipedia article Alexander Singer, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directed

Star Trek: The Next Generation
Director · 1987

Star Trek: Voyager
Director · 1995

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Director · 1993

MacGyver
Director · 1985

Murder, She Wrote
Director · 1984

Walker, Texas Ranger
Director · 1993

Mission: Impossible
Director · 1966

Wonder Woman
Director · 1975

Friday the 13th: The Series
Director · 1987

Dallas
Director · 1978

The Rockford Files
Director · 1974

Hill Street Blues
Director · 1981

Quincy, M.E.
Director · 1976

Remington Steele
Director · 1982

Lost in Space
Director · 1965

Hunter
Director · 1984

In the Heat of the Night
Director · 1988

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
Director · 1964

