Hamid Reza Pahlavi (Persian: حمیدرضا پهلوی; 4 July 1932 – 12 July 1992) was Reza Shah's eleventh and last born child, and a half-brother of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last shah of Iran.
He studied in the United States and in Tehran.[7] While attending high school in Washington, D.C., (the Honeywell Foundation) in September 1947, he skipped school to take a train to Hollywood, California, to visit his brother, Mahmoud, who was studying at UCLA.[7] He stated that he did so because his high school did not have girl students and he was homesick.[7] He had acted similarly three months previously, leaving his high school in Newport, Rhode Island, to travel to Paris and Provincetown.[7]
Personal life
Hamid Reza married three times and had four children.[8] He first married Minou Dowlatshahi (daughter of Shahzada ‘Abdu’l Fath Mirza, of the Dowlatshahi family, Governor-General of Fars) in Tehran in March 1951.[8] Of this marriage he got a daughter, born 1953. In 1959 he married Homa Khameneh, by whom he had two children.[9] In 1974 Hamid Reza married Houri Khameneh, by whom he had one child, born 1975. Hamid also adopted her only son Mohammad Reza larijani, born 1961, from a previous marriage
One of his sons lived in the United Kingdom for a while, but he was brought by Shah Mohammad Reza to Iran and attended a military school in Tehran.[10]
Due to his scandalous lifestyle, Hamid Reza's title of prince was removed and the Shah banned him from the court.[10] In the 1960s he became known as a leading figure in opium trafficking business.[11]
Later years and death
After the Iranian Revolution that overthrew Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Hamid Reza stayed in Iran and changed his name to FaFar Islami.[10] However, he was arrested as a vagrant in 1986.[9][12] He received a sentence of ten years in Evin prison on drug charges.[12] In an interview held in prison in 1989, Pahlavi however stated that he was sentenced for his family connections.[12] He also said that he was not treated badly in prison and "things could be worse".[12] Inmates in his prison cell included a former general and senior officials of the Shah's regime.[12] In July 1992, while serving his sentence, he died of a heart attack.[13]