1   2   3   4   5  

  1. Irwin Allen

    Irwin Allen was a television and film producer nicknamed "The Master of Disaster" for his work in the disaster film genre. He was also notable for creating a number of memorable and popular television series. Allen was born in New York City. In 1952, he won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for "The Sea Around Us". Allen's film credits include "The Animal World" (1956), the critically-panned "The Story of Mankind" (1957), …

  2. Bruce Broughton

    Bruce Broughton (born March 8, 1945 in Los Angeles, California, USA) is an American composer, who writes the music in every medium, from theatrical releases and television feature films to concert tours and computer games. He is one of the most versatile composers working today. His first major film score, for the Lawrence Kasdan western Silverado, brought him an Oscar nomination. His very next project, a classically styled score for Barry Levinson's Young Sherlock Holmes, …

  3. Jonathan Harris

    Jonathan Harris (November 6, 1914 - November 3, 2002), was an American stage and character actor. In the six decades of his established career in television, two of his best-known roles were villainous characters. In the early 1960s, his first role was that of Michael Rennie's bad guy partner, Bradford Webster on "The Third Man", and as the villainous agent, Dr. Zachary Smith, in the popular 1960s sci-fi series, …

  4. June Lockhart

    June Lockhart (born on June 25, 1925 in New York City, New York) is an American television and film actress, primarily on soap operas and television. She's best known for her roles as the mothers, first as Hugh Reilly's wife, Ruth Martin, in the 1950s cult hit series, "Lassie" (a role she played from 1958 to 1964), and as Guy Williams's wife, Maureen Robinson, in the 1960s cult hit series, "Lost in Space".

  5. Bill Mumy

    Charles William Mumy, Jr., (MOO-mee), (born February 1, 1954 in San Gabriel, California) is an American actor, musician, guitarist, voice-over actor and a figure in the science fiction community, who is known primarily for his roles in movies and television. He came to prominence in the 1960s as Guy Williams's youngest TV son and Jonathan Harris's closest friend, Will Robinson, in the cult 1960s TV series, "Lost In Space".

  6. Jack Johnson

    Jack Johnson (born April 7, 1987) is an American actor whose main claim to fame is his performance as Will Robinson in the 1998 movie, "Lost in Space". Johnson was born in Los Angeles, California, where he lived, before attending Wesleyan University in Connecticut. His paternal grandparents were screenwriter Nunnally Johnson and actress Dorris Bowdon. He composes classical music which has been featured on National Public Radio.

  7. Mark Goddard

    Mark Goddard (born July 24 1936, Lowell, Massachusetts) is an American film actor who has starred in a number of television shows. He is most widely known for his role as "Major Don West" in the series Lost in Space.

  8. Guy Williams

    Guy Williams (born Armando Joseph Catalano) (January 14, 1924 - April 30, 1989) was an American actor and former male fashion model, who played swashbuckling action heroes in the 1950s and 1960s, but never quite achieved "movie star" status, despite his appearance (including hazel eyes, 6'3" height, and 190 lb. weight) and charisma, which helped launch his early successful photographic model career.

  9. Angela Cartwright

    Angela Margaret Cartwright (born September 9, 1952 in Altrincham, Cheshire, England) is an English-born American actress, primarily known for her roles in movies and television. She is best known as a child actress for her roles in the film "The Sound of Music", as Danny Thomas's daughter, Linda Williams, in the 1950s TV series, …

  10. Marta Kristen

    Marta Kristen (born Birgit Annalisa Rusanen on February 26, 1945, in Norway) is an American actress best known for her role as "Judy Robinson" in the cult television series "Lost in Space". Kristen was born to a Finnish mother and a German soldier father who was killed during World War II. She was adopted in 1949 by an American couple from Detroit, Michigan and was renamed Marta.

  11. Bob May

    Bob May (born 1939 in New York City) is an American actor best remembered for playing The Robot on the television series Lost in Space. The grandson of vaudeville comedian Chic Johnson, he has been a stage performer, stuntman, director and public speaker.

  12. Akiva Goldsman

    Screenwriter Akiva Goldsman was born in Brooklyn, NY, where his mother and father were both child psychologists. Goldsman graduated from Wesleyan University in 1983, where one of his classmates was Paul Schiff ; they lived together in a student house where the misadventures of the residents helped to inspire the campus comedy P.C.U., which Schiff produced. After graduating from Wesleyan, Goldsman studied creative writing at New York University, and later took up screenwriting.

  13. Dick Tufeld

    Dick Tufeld (born 1927) is an American actor, announcer, narrator, and voice actor from the 1950s onward. He is perhaps best known as the voice of the Robot in the TV series "Lost in Space". He has also provided voice work for the animated Fantastic Four (1978 TV series) and the Lost in Space feature film as the Robot, again. Apart from Lost in Space, Tufeld provided the narration voiceover for many other Irwin Allen productions.

  14. Michael Rennie

    Michael Rennie (25 August1909-10 June1971) was an English film, television and stage actor best known for his starring role as the benevolent space visitor Klaatu in the 1951 classic science fiction film "The Day the Earth Stood Still".

  15. Jimmy

    Jimmy Bryant (born 2 June, 1929), is a singer, bass player and composer. He is most well-known for providing the singing voice of Tony (played onscreen by Richard Beymer) in the 1960 film musical "West Side Story". He also sang for James Fox in the 1967 film musical "Thoroughly Modern Millie", and sang in "The Telephone Hour" number in "Bye Bye Birdie".

  16. Nathan Juran

    Nathan Juran (September 1, 1907 - October 23, 2002) was an Austrian-American film director, born in Gura Humorului, Romania (at the time the town was part of the Austria-Hungary). He is the brother of quality guru Joseph Juran. He began his career as an art director, winning an Oscar for his work on "How Green Was My Valley" (1941), and a nomination for "The Razor's Edge" (1946). His other credits in the field included "Charley's Aunt" (1941), …

  17. Robert Kinoshita

    Robert Kinoshita is an artist, art director, and set and production designer who worked in the American film and television industries from the 1950s through the early 1980s.

  18. Stanley Adams

    Stanley Adams was an American actor and filmwriter. Born in New York City, he came to films permanently in 1952, when he played the bartender in the movie version of "Death of a Salesman," and another conniving barkeep in "The Gene Krupa Story." He is well-known for playing Cyrano Jones in the "Star Trek: The Original Series" episode "The Trouble with Tribbles" which aired in 1967.

  19. Vitina Marcus

    Vitina Marcus (born in 1940 in New York City, New York) is an American actress who appeared in two episodes of "Lost in Space" as Athena, Dr. Smith's most persistent and verdant admirer. She also appeared in "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" including second season's "Return of the Phantom", and "The Time Tunnel". She also appeared in Irwin Allen's "The Lost World". Ms. Marcus appeared in numerous television shows throughout the 1950's and 60's.

  20. Ezra Stone

    Ezra Stone (b. December 2, 1917 New Beford, Massachusetts – d. March 3, 1994 in Perth Amboy, New Jersey) was an actor and director who worked on stage, radio, television, and in feature films who is still best remembered for having played the well-meaning but troublesome adolescent Henry Aldrich, from 1939 to 1953, on the radio series "The Aldrich Family".

  21. Shimon Wincelberg

    Shimon Wincelberg was an American television writer and Broadway playwright. Born in Kiel, Germany, he wrote for many 1960s and 1970s television shows including "Naked City", "Mannix", "Police Woman", "Star Trek" ("The Galileo Seven" and "Dagger of the Mind"), "Gunsmoke", "Have Gun — Will Travel", "The Paper Chase" and "Lost in Space". He also wrote in the 1990s for "Law & Order".

  22. Fritz Feld

    Fritz Feld was a film actor. Born Fritz Feilchenfeld in Berlin, Germany, Feld began his acting career in his native Germany in 1917, and quickly developed a characterisation that he played in virtually all of his subsequent 140 films. He often played the part of a maître d', but also a variety of artistocrats and eccentrics.

  23. Ib Melchior

    Ib Jørgen Melchior is a novelist, short story writer, film producer, film director, and screenwriter of low-budget U.S. science fiction movies, most of them released by American International Pictures. Melchior's novels include "Code Name: Grand Guignol", "Eva", "The Haigerloch Project", "The Marcus Device", "Order of Battle: Hitler's Werewolves", "Sleeper Agent", "The Tombstone Cipher" and "The Watchdogs of Abaddon".

  24. Ford Rainey

    Ford Rainey was an American movie, stage and television actor. Rainey was a familiar face in motion pictures, including his film debut "White Heat" (1949), "The Sand Pebbles" with Steve McQueen and "Two Rode Together" with James Stewart. He also appeared many times on television shows, guest starring on "Bonanza", "Gunsmoke", "Perry Mason", "The Bionic Woman" and "The Untouchables".

  25. Gordon Purcell

    Gordon Purcell is an American comic book artist, perhaps best known for his "Star Trek" work, in particular his photorealistic renditions of the actors who play that franchise’s characters, as well as those of similarly licensed books, such as "X-Files", "Xena", "Lost in Space", "Godzilla", "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles", "Barb Wire", and "The Terminator". Purcell grew up reading Marvel Comics and DC Comics, …

  26. William Todd-Jones

    William Todd-Jones, sometimes William Todd Jones, is a British puppet designer, performer, director, and writer. He has designed and performed creatures for various films, television series, and commercials in the UK and abroad. He played Aslan the lion, as well as a centaur, …

  27. Janos Prohaska

    Janos Prohaska (October 10, 1919 - March 13, 1974), born in Budapest, Hungary, was an actor and stunt performer on American television from the 1960s until his untimely death. He usually played the roles of animals or monsters. He is best-remembered for his recurring comic role as "The Bear" on the "The Andy Williams Show" from 1969 to 1971. Prohaska also appeared more than once in such TV series as "The Outer Limits", "Lost in Space", …

  28. Edy Williams

    Edy Williams aka Edwina Beth Williams, is an American actress. She was born July 9, 1942, in Salt Lake City, Utah. She is sometimes credited as: Edie Williams or Edythe Williams. Edy Williams has starred on television and in motion pictures. Signed as a contract player by 20th Century Fox, she later became the third wife of film director Russ Meyer, and appeared in several of his films.

  29. Lamar Lundy

    Lamar J. Lundy, Jr. (April 17 1935 - February 24 2007) was an American defensive end with the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League for 13 seasons, from 1957 to 1969. Along with Deacon Jones, Merlin Olsen, and Rosey Grier, Lundy was a member of the Fearsome Foursome, often considered one of the best defensive lines in NFL history.

  30. Jack Martin Smith

    Jack Martin Smith (1911 - 1993) was a highly successful Hollywood art director with over 130 films to his credit and nine Academy Award nominations which ultimately yielded three Oscars. He made his debut in 1937 and two years later found himself working as a production designer on "The Wizard of Oz". Smith spent most of his working life at MGM where he worked on such films as "Easter Parade" (1948),"On the Town" (1949), …

  31. Ronald Long

    Ronald Long (January 30, 1911-October 23, 1986), was a British actor who appeared principally in American television shows of the 1950s and 1960s. He was born in London and performed at the Old Vic Theatre there before coming to America in the late 1940s. His longest-running role was as the character "Evans Baker" on the CBS daytime soap opera "Love of Life" from 1951 to 1957. He had roles in various Broadway shows, including the Police Inspector in the drama, …

  32. Mickey Manners

    Mickey Manners (born 1925 in New York, New York) is an American actor, singer, dancer and stand-up comedian. He was a regular panelist on the game show "Pantomime Quiz". He also appeared on "Murphy Brown", "Here's Lucy", "The Ghost & Mrs. Muir", "Hogan's Heroes", "Lost in Space", "Get Smart", and "Perry Mason".

  33. Melinda O. Fee

    Melinda O. Fee (b. October 7, 1942 in Los Angeles, California, USA) is an American actress who has starred in films and on television. Her first starring role was in the 1950s TV series "Love of Life". Most of Melinda's other TV roles were on soap operas like "Guiding Light" as Charlotte Waring Fletcher Bauer from 1970-1973, "Days of Our Lives" as Mary Anderson from 1981-1982, and "Santa Barbara" as Olivia Welles from 1987-1988, …

  34. Alex Rutterford

    Alex Rutterford is a British director and graphic designer working mostly on music videos. He studied graphic design at the Croydon School of Art and graduated in 1991, and is a member of the design team lost in space and the video production company "Black Dog", the promo division of RSA. His most well-known works include the videos for "Gantz Graf" by Autechre, "Verbal" by Amon Tobin and "Go to Sleep" by Radiohead.

  35. Bob Ingersoll

    Robert "Bob" Ingersoll (October 13, 1952 -) is an American lawyer and writer. Ingersoll's full time occupation is as a Lead Attorney with the Cuyahoga County Public Defender Office in Cleveland, Ohio. However he is more widely known for his writing, in particuliar his work in comic books. Comic series he has written for include "Donald Duck", "The Green Hornet", "House of Mystery", "Justice Machine", "Mickey Mouse", …

  36. James Hannigan

    James Hannigan (born July 23, 1971) is a BAFTA-celebrated composer and writer of incidental music. He has scored many titles, including, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix", "Freelancer", "Brute Force", "Catwoman", "Evil Genius", "Republic: The Revolution", "Sim Theme Park", "Sim Coaster", "Grand Prix 4", "Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat", "F1 2000", "F1 Manager", …

  37. Cyril J. Mockridge

    Cyril J. Mockridge (August 6, 1896 - January 18, 1979) was a film music composer who worked on such films as "Nightmare Alley" and "Road House". Cyril Mockridge was nominated for an Academy Award for the 1955 film "Guys and Dolls" and also composed the music for television's "Lost in Space".

  38. Solo Avital

    Solo Avital’s Filmography: 2003 – “Keep On Dancing” 24MIN 2004 – “Art Liberates” 54MIN 2006 – “...More Than 1000 Words” CV highlights, …

  39. Lost In Space
  40. Walter M Scott

1   2   3   4   5