- Ray Walston
Ray Walston (December 2 1914 - January 1 2001) was a stage, television and feature film character actor who played the title character on the situation comedy "My Favorite Martian" and Judge Henry Bone on the drama series "Picket Fences". - Bill Bixby
Bill Bixby was a popular three-time Emmy Award-nominated American film and television actor, director and frequent game show panelist. His career spanned over three decades, appearing on stage, in motion pictures and starring in five TV series. His lead television roles were as Ray Walston's young reporter, Tim O'Hara, … - Donald Petrie
Donald Petrie is an American film director. He has also acted and guest-starred on television programs. His first directorial job was on the set of "The Equalizer," a private detective TV series, in 1985. Since, he has directed films such as Mystic Pizza (1988), Grumpy Old Men (1993), The Favor (1994), Richie Rich (1994), The Associate (1996), My Favorite Martian (1999), Miss Congeniality (2000), How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days (2003), Welcome to Mooseport (2004), … - Pamela Britton
Pamela Britton (March 19 1923, Milwaukee, Wisconsin - June 17 1974, Arlington Heights, Illinois) was an actress best known for appearing as "Lorelei Brown" in the television series "My Favorite Martian" (1963-1966). She also appeared in the film noir classic "D.O.A." (1950). Born Armilda Jane Owen, her mother was Ethel Waite Owen (1893-1997), a prominent stage, radio, and early television actress. - Christine Ebersole
Christine Ebersole (b. 21 February 1953) is a two-time Tony Award-winning American actress and singer. Ebersole was born in Chicago, Illinois, and graduated from MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Illinois. After appearances on "Ryan's Hope" in 1977 and 1980, … - Jeremy Hotz
Jeremy Hotz (born May 31, 1962 in Cape Town, South Africa) is a Canadian actor and stand-up comedian. He has appeared on "Comedy Central Presents", the Just For Laughs comedy festival, "The Late Show with David Letterman", and "The Tonight Show" with Jay Leno. He has also worked as a staff writer for Paramount's "The Jon Stewart Show" and has appeared in various American and Canadian motion pictures including: "My Favorite Martian", … - Marlo Thomas
Marlo Thomas (born Margaret Julia Thomas on November 21, 1937 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American actress, who first achieved fame on the TV series "That Girl" in the 1960s. She is the daughter of the late Lebanese-American comedian Danny Thomas and sister of Tony Thomas, a TV and film producer, and Terre Thomas, a former actress. Her mother, Rose Marie Mantell, was the adopted daughter of Italian Americans and died in 2000. - Jack Chertok
Jack Chertok was born July 13th, 1906 in Atlanta, Georgia – was a film and television producer, perhaps best know to modern viewers as producer for the 182 black and white episodes of "The Lone Ranger" and as executive producer of the series "My Favorite Martian". Beginning in the mid-1930's he produced a wide variety of film shorts for MGM, including comedies, documentaries and crime dramas. His comedy "How to Sleep " won the 1935 Academy Award for Short Subjects, … - James Komack
James Komack (3 August, 1924 - 24 December, 1997), was a prolific US actor, writer and producer. Komack was the guiding force behind such television hits as "The Courtship of Eddie's Father", in which he also appeared as Norman Tinker, "Chico and the Man", and "Welcome Back, Kotter". Komack is credited with discovering and launching the careers of John Travolta and Freddie Prinze. - Butch Patrick
Patrick Alan Lilley (born August 2, 1953), better known as Butch Patrick, is a former American child actor best known for his role as Eddie Munster in the television show "The Munsters" (1964-1966) for which he received $600 per episode, and the movie "Munster, Go Home". He also played the main characters Mark on the television animation series "Lidsville" (1971-1973), and Milo in the 1969 live-action/animated film, … - Charles Chun
Charles S. Chun is an American actor who has appeared in television shows such as "Scrubs" and "Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide". Chun has also appeared in motion pictures such as "Beverly Hills Cop III", "Dumb & Dumber", "Double Tap" and "My Favorite Martian". In 1996, he guest starred in the popular "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" episode "Trials and Tribble-ations", … - Albert Lewin
Albert Lewin was an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. He was born in Brooklyn, New York on September 23 1894 and raised in Newark, New Jersey. He earned a Master's degree at Harvard and taught English at the University of Missouri. During World War I, he served in the military and was afterwards appointed assistant national director of the American Jewish Relief Committee. - Todd Baron
Todd Baron was a child actor from the late 1950's to the early 70's. He appeared on live television, did voice overs, filmwork, and was a consistent presence on TV. He was a guest star on such shows as Bewitched, Nanny and the Professor, My Favorite Martian, Arrest and Trial, The Danny Kaye Show, and others. He appeared in movies such as The Nutty Professor (Jerry Lewis) (the director's cut), I Love My Wife, … - Trey Stokes
Trey Stokes (born 1960 in Nashville, Tennessee) is an American filmmaker and puppeteer, best known for his "Star Wars" parody series "Pink Five", and his puppeteering work on various movie, TV, and motion-ride projects.. Stokes majored in Cinema Production at the University of Southern California. After working as a puppeteer for several years, he was hired as the head puppeteer on the 1988 remake of "The Blob". - 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, … - Kelly Mann
Kelly Mann (born July 12, 1959 in Pennsylvania) is a motion picture special effects practitioner, make-up artist and noted restorer of rubber masks and props. He is known in cult monster mask circles as "The Mask Doctor". Film and television make-up credits include "A Nightmare on Elm Street Part III" (1986), "The Dark Wind" (1991), "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York" (1992), "A Kiss Goodnight" (1994), and "My Favorite Martian" (1999). - Lynn A. Stalmaster
Father of Lincoln Stalmaster. - Oscar Rudolph
Father of director Alan Rudolph - Raymond Walston
Born in New Orleans, Ray Walston started his acting career as a spear carrier with a local stock company. When the family moved to Houston, Walston's father wanted to teach him the oil business, but Walston instead joined a traveling repertory company (selling tickets as well as acting). He went on to associate with Margo Jones at the Houston Civic Theater for six years, then spent three seasons with the Cleveland Playhouse before arriving in New York in 1945. He has won a Tony for his... - William Bixby
The son of a sales clerk and a department store owner, Bill Bixby was the sixth-generation Californian born as Wilfred Bailey Bixby, on January 22, 1934, in San Francisco, California. An only child growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, he attended schools in the same area, took ballroom dance lessons, before attending Lowell High School, where he excelled in drama. After his graduation from high school, he attended San Francisco City College where he majored in drama. He transferred to the... - Alan Everett Hewitt
Serious, firm-jawed American support actor on Broadway from the 30s through the 50s who later entered films and TV, an unsympathaetic comic foil in 60s Disney's film fluff. His best known role was as the ever-suspicious Detective Brennan on the sitcom "My Favorite Martian" (1963). - Burt Styler
- Pamela Britton
Pamela Britton was born Armilda Jane Owen in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her mother was Ethel Waite Owen, a prominent stage, radio and early television actress. Pam first used Gloria Jane Owen as her stage name, but not wanting to trade on her mother's reputation, chose Pamela from a British book, and then Britton to emphasize its source. Her father, Raymond G. Owen, was a doctor who passed away prior to 1944. She had two sisters, Virginia Owen, an actress under contract to RKO Radio and Mary... - Earl C Williman
- Marty Roth
- Tom Jo-Jo Gianelli
- Robert Martinez
- Bill Chaudet
- Lissa Charell
- Ben Gershman
- Paul Steyer
- Bill Kelsay
- Jeffrey
I am a Christian, Cancer Surviving, Parkenson's Disease "bothered", Pro wrestling Vet! I was born on Liberty, Kentucky. Moved to Russell County near my 6th Birthday. In both my travles with my family and my work in Pro Wrestling, I have gone to most of the US! I was diagnosed with Testicular Cancer in 1990 and declaired cured of it in 1995.
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