Reflections Magazine Issue #83 - Fall 2015 | Page 21

Feature Article By Doug Goodnough Siena Heights Graduate Enjoys Distinguished Career as Director of Photography D arryl E. Smith casts a long shadow standing 6 feet, 8 inches tall. However, that shadow pales in comparison to the one he has cast as a director of photography in Hollywood. The 1985 Siena Heights graduate has an impressive list of credits and clients, including MTV, Disney, Coca-Cola, CBS, the NFL Network and HBO. The owner of his own production company, Darryl E. Smith Productions, for the past 14 years, he said his path to success was a winding one. And his starting point was Siena Heights. Originally recruited to play basketball at Siena by former coach Ben Braun, Smith said Siena Heights was the only school that showed interest in him as a student—not just as a basketball player. “(Coach Braun) basically recruited me on my interests instead of what they needed,” said Smith, who planned to study biology at Siena Heights. “He was guaranteeing my mom that I would graduate. He said, ‘Basketball is important, but so is education.’ I played basketball to get an education.” And Smith was well on his way to a biology degree when a teammate asked him to participate in a campus theater production his junior year. He called that experience a “pivotal point” in his life. Acting was OK, but it was behind the scenes that intrigued Smith. He began working with former theater professor Doug Miller on set building and lighting. It was then that the literal “light bulb” went on for Smith. “We lit a couple of small lab theater plays, then Tennessee Williams’ play ‘The Glass Menagerie,’” Smith recalled. “(Miller) allowed me to implement an idea. There was a symbol on top of the statue, and he allowed me to put a light up through it. At a certain time in the play when someone went to reach for (the statue), I pulled the lever and the light streamed out. And the whole crowd went ‘Oooohhhh.’ The hair stood up on my arms, and that was it. After that, I was over there (at the theater department) the whole time.” Reflections Fall ’15 | 21