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The contract also would have required Johnson to give up 50% of his intellectual property rights to the show and his other animated web project, Your Favorite Martian. [14] [15] In November 2012, Johnson founded his own production studio, Equals Three Studios (then known as Runaway Planet), and continued producing Equals Three.
My Favorite Martian, which premiered in the fall of 1963, was the first of the "fantasy" situation comedies prevalent on American television in the mid-1960s featuring characters who could do extraordinary things, predating My Living Doll (1964–1965), Bewitched (1964–1972), and I Dream of Jeannie (1965–1970).
He appeared in the films South Pacific (1958), Damn Yankees (1958), The Apartment (1960), Kiss Me, Stupid (1964), Paint Your Wagon (1969), The Sting (1973), Popeye (1980), Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982), and Of Mice and Men (1992). Walston also starred as the title character on My Favorite Martian and as Glen Bateman in the miniseries The ...
From there, he moved on to star in My Favorite Martian and The Jack Benny Program impersonating Latino characters, eventually managing to branch out and do other accents. Cast of NBC series Needles and Pins, 1973. Bottom, from left: Deirdre Lenihan, Norman Fell. Top, from left: Kopell, Sandra Deel and Louis Nye.
Bixby as Tim O'Hara in My Favorite Martian, when an accident turns Uncle Martin back into a baby (season 2, episode 28) Bixby took the role of young reporter Tim O'Hara in the 1963 CBS sitcom My Favorite Martian, in which he co-starred with Ray Walston. By 1966, though, high production costs forced the series to come to an end after 107 episodes.
Skerritt played a guest part in Ray Walston's show My Favorite Martian in the 1963 episode "Mrs. Jekyll and Hyde" (Walston was a regular cast member thirty years later in Skerritt's show Picket Fences). He also guest-starred in the television series The Real McCoys (1963), as a letter carrier in the episode "Aunt Win Steps In".
The show finds the now-47-year-old star as a spy who goes by the name "Martian," one who needs to adjust after being unexpectedly yanked out of a deep undercover operation after six years.
Ray William Johnson, YouTuber, star of Equals 3 and lead singer of Your Favorite Martian; Darci Lynne, Ventriloquist, winner of America's Got Talent, Season 12; Owen Garriott, astronaut [75] Robert Harlan Henry, President of Oklahoma City University, former federal judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit [78] John Herrington ...