cinema trust One of the theaters of Bagh Kitab cinema campus was named after Morteza Ahmadi.
Coinciding with the 10th anniversary of the late actor Morteza Ahmadi’s 100th birthday, one of the theaters of Bagh Ketab cinema campus was named after this authentic narrator of Tehran’s culture.
According to the public relations of the Shahr Image Institute, the curtain call was an entry for Morteza Ahmadi’s serious entry into the world of art; A scientist who followed with thought and thought and of course artistically until the end of his life.
To categorize the different spectrums of Morteza Ahmadi’s activity in the field of art, you can flip through the books he left behind or remember his voice acting in cartoons and movies. He was also a film and television actor and appeared in films such as “Bus”, “Baba Shamal” and “Once and for all” and many others.
He, who took the first steps from stage reading and then theater, became an announcer of foreign films in 1326 and also appeared on radio and television. His activity continued in theater, radio, television, Avaz Bayat Tehran, etc., until he reached lasting points such as the dubbing of some characters, including the sly fox in the cartoon “Pinocchio”.
Compiling and compiling a book on Tehran folk culture was one of the other activities of this artist. The books “Always New Old Ones”, “Culture and Children of Teron”, and “Wandering in the Conditions of Teron and Teronia” are his works. In order to preserve the oral history, Ahmadi re-read some of the oldest songs of Tehran’s street market in the form of percussion.
Morteza Ahmadi died on December 30, 2014.
Bagh Kitab cinema campus belonging to Shahr Image Institute with 10 modern theaters It is located on Haqqani Highway, which has named Ali Hatami, Shahid Morteza Avini, Rasool Malaqlipour, Farishte Tayerpour and Daud Rashidi as cinematographers who authored books on other occasions.