Bill Bixby
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Image:Hulkbixby.jpg Bill Bixby (January 22, 1934 – November 21, 1993), was an American actor, director and frequent game show panelist who starred in three popular American television series that spanned nearly two decades, as Tim O'Hara in My Favorite Martian (1963–1966), as Tom Corbett, the title role in The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1969–1972); and as Dr. David Banner in The Incredible Hulk (1978–1982) with Lou Ferrigno. He also starred in The Magician (1973) and in a short-lived comedy, Goodnight Beantown with Mariette Hartley in 1984.
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Early life
He was born Wilfred Bailey Bixby, a fourth-generation Californian, in San Francisco, California where his father, Wilfred Everett Bixby, was a store clerk and his mother, Jane Bixby, was a department store owner. In 1946, his mother encouraged him to take ballroom dance lessons and from there, he started dancing all around the city. While dancing, he attended Lowell High School where he perfected his oratory and dramatic skills as a member of the Lowell Forensic Society. He competed in high school speech tournaments regionally. After graduation, against his parents' wishes, he majored in drama at San Francisco City College and attended the University of California, Berkeley, the same university his parents went to. He did not graduate. [1]
He then moved to Hollywood where he had a string of odd jobs that included bellhop and lifeguard. He organized shows at a resort in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. In 1959, he was hired to work as a model and to do commercial work for General Motors and Chrysler.
Stage/Character actor
In 1961, Bixby went to Detroit, Michigan, where he was in the musical, "The Boyfriend," at the Detroit Civic Theater. He then returned to Hollywood where he made his acting debut on an episode of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. As his name became popular, Bixby became one of the well-known and highly regarded character actors of the 1960s, where he guest-starred in many other situation comedies and TV series such as Ben Casey, The Twilight Zone, The Andy Griffith Show, Dr. Kildare, Hennessey, among many others. He also joined the cast of The Joey Bishop Show in 1962. Also during the 1970s, he made many more guest-appearances on TV series such as Ironside, Insight, Barbary Coast, The Love Boat, Medical Center, four episodes of Love, American Style, Fantasy Island, two episodes of The Streets of San Francisco, on which he was nominated for an Emmy Award in 1976 for Outstanding Lead Actor for a Single Appearance in Drama or Comedy, among many others.
My Favorite Martian
Bixby auditioned in 1963 for a new sitcom, My Favorite Martian on CBS, where he received a co-starring role as young news reporter, Tim O'Hara, who befriended an extraterrestrial played by Ray Walston. The show was a ratings winner in its first year, and it was ranked #10 for primetime programming. Also, Bixby often had the knack of comedic timing. But by 1966, bad scripts and high production costs forced the series to come to an end after 107 episodes.
Film work
After the cancellation of Martian, Bixby starred in four box-office movies: Ride Beyond Vengeance (1966), on which he played the evil, Johnsy Boy Hood, You've Got to Be Kidding (1967), and two of Elvis Presley's movies, Clambake (1967), and Speedway (1968). Bixby turned down the role as Marlo Thomas's boyfriend in That Girl and starred in two failed pilots.
The Courtship of Eddie's Father
In 1969, it became obvious to most viewers that the second of Bixby's best-known roles to date was that of Tom Corbett in the successful dramedy show, The Courtship of Eddie's Father for ABC, about a widowed father who wants to spend more time with his young son while dating women. It was based on the popular 1963 movie, starring 1950s screen icon, Glenn Ford and Ron Howard. His co-star on the show was child actor turned drummer, Brandon Cruz, and the chemistry clicked together, and even developed a close relationship on the set. In addition, he also rounded out the cast by adding veteran character actress, Miyoshi Umeki, playing the role of Tom's maid, Mrs. Livingston, who arrived with Bixby on occasion and actor/producer James Komack came in as Norman, as Bixby wanted to have a second family. Unlike his previous role on Martian, this proved to be a much better hit during the first two seasons and became one of Hollywood's most reliable bachelors. On one episode of the show, he even invited (Brenda Benet) to play one of Tom's girlfriends, when Bixby would actually marry her, the following year. He was nominated for a Emmy Award for Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in 1971, but did not win. The following year, he won the Parents Without Partners Exemplary Service Award for 1972. He also made his directorial debut on the show in 1970, and would occasionally lost his cool when orders were not followed. By its final season, Courtship had a very complicated season, the ratings were low, the scripts became really bad and Bixby even feuded with producer, James Komack, which caused more friction. ABC had decided to pull the plug on the sitcom in 1972 after 73 episodes, but Bixby enjoyed playing a wonderful role as a father. Two years after Courtship, was off the air, Bixby called series star (Brandon Cruz) on the phone, and told him that he and Benet had Christopher that Autumn. After his real-life son's, Christopher's death in 1981, Bixby confided in Cruz about this and stayed connected together for the next decade, just before Bixby's own death.
After Courtship and landing a role as a game show panelist
In 1973, Bixby starred in The Magician, playing Anthony Dorian, which lasted one season. As a popular game show panelist of the 1970s, he appeared mostly on Password and The Hollywood Squares. Bixby also appeared as a panelist on a pilot of a rejected 1970s game show that never aired. He was also a panelist on the revival of Masquerade Party, that was hosted by Richard Dawson (of Hogan's Heroes and Family Feud fame). He had also appeared with Dawson on "Cop-Out." The following year, he co-starred with Tim Conway and Don Knotts in the 1975 movie, The Apple Dumpling Gang. Unlike the previous movies that Bixby starred in, this one received mediocre ratings. An accomplished amateur magician, Bixby also hosted several specials in the mid-1970s which featured other amateur magicians.
The Incredible Hulk
In late 1977, after working on two comedy series, Bixby starred in a two-hour pilot movie called The Incredible Hulk. The producers convinced CBS to turn it into a weekly science-fiction series; it began in early 1978. Bixby's character, Dr. David Banner, was a scientist/physician who turned into a green monster (played by bodybuilder Lou Ferrigno) when he became angry. A hit, the series was seen in over 70 countries. Bixby's character ripped his shirts apart while becoming the Hulk. Bixby felt that the make-up requirements for his part were onerous, however. More than a courageous move to star in a science-fiction series, he also wanted to take a risky move, after finished reading the entire script. On the pilot episode of the Hulk, his catch-phrase became popular as he uttered, "Don't make me angry, you wouldn't like me when I'm angry," as this one became one of Bixby's better hit series, and making him a pop icon of the 1980s. During the show's run, he also invited two of his long-time friends (Ray Walston from My Favorite Martian and Brandon Cruz from The Courtship of Eddie's Father) from two of his previous hit series to guest-star with him on several different episodes of the Hulk. He also invited two more of his old friends and family to guest-star with Bixby on his hit show, on one episode, Loni Anderson (of WKRP in Cincinnati fame) played a dead model whom she suspected that Dr. Banner had killed her, and Mariette Hartley (who would later star with Bixby in his last show, Goodnight Beantown) played the one-time wife of Dr. Banner who was a psychiatrist who had a problem of her own. In 1981, Bixby not only acted, but served one time as director of the show. The series was cancelled that following year. Bixby was disappointed that his character was not cured of his condition in the final episode.
After Hulk
After he starred in three successful TV series, he wanted to concentrate on directing, from his own short-lived comedy, Goodnight, Beantown with Mariette Hartley (when she guest-starred with Bixby on The Incredible Hulk), to the successful satirical police sitcom Sledge Hammer! In addition to Hulk, Bixby directed two of the three TV movie revivals which he also produced. Prior to his death he was the lead director of the TV sitcom Blossom.
Private and later life
Just one month, before the wedding Bixby had lost his father, Wilfred Bailey II, in 1971, of a massive heart attack, and scattered his ashes in the Pacific off the island of Maui. He was married three times: actress and former MISS USA Brenda Benet in 1971, who gave birth to Christopher, a few years later. Benet guest-starred with him on The Incredible Hulk, just before they were divorced in 1980. In 1981, Bixby's six-year-old son Christopher died suddenly after an accident at the actor's Brentwood, Los Angeles, CA home, and his son's ashes are also scattered in the Pacific off the island of Maui, next to his grandfather's and before his own father, a decade later. Shortly afterwards, Benet committed suicide.
Nine years later in 1989, he met and fell in love with Laura Michaels, who used to work on the set of one of his Hulk movies. The couple married a year later in Hawaii. In early 1991, Bixby was diagnosed with prostate cancer and underwent treatment for the disease. He was divorced in the same year. In late 1992, friends introduced him to an artist named Judith Kliban, the widow of B. Kliban, a cartoonist who died of cancer. He married Judith in late 1993, just six weeks before he collapsed on the set of Blossom.
In early 1993, after several rumours and true stories swirling around the actor's health, Bixby had decided to go public with his illness, as he talked about his disease and the energy in order to keep him alive. As a result, he made several guest appearances on many shows such as, Entertainment Tonight (where he made 2 guest appearances), The Today Show, Good Morning America, among many others. Also, while working on Blossom, he would occasionally visit his old friend Loni Anderson on the set of Nurses, and the two had a wonderful reunion, just before Bixby's career was over. Eventually, Bixby's cancer recurred and was diagnosed as inoperable. Six days after his final assignment, directing an episode of Blossom, Bill Bixby died from complications arising from prostate cancer in Century City, California on November 21, 1993. His wife and another longtime friend of Bixby's, Dick Martin were both by his side, and were both very devastated by the loss. After his death, Bixby's ashes were scattered in the Pacific off the island of Maui, next to that of his father's and his son's.
External links
Categories: 1934 births | 1993 deaths | American actors | American film directors | American magicians | American musical theatre actors | American television directors | American television personalities | American television producers | Character actors | Deaths by prostate cancer | Entertainers who died in their 50s | American film actors | Hulk actors | Phi Delta Theta brothers | San Franciscans | American stage actors | American television actors | College dropouts