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Michael Landon (October 31, 1936–July 1, 1991), was an American actor,
producer and director. Landon's father, Eli Maurice Orowitz, was a Jewish
American and his mother, Peggy O’Neill, was an Irish American Catholic.
Landon was best known for his starring roles in three TV series spanning
three decades. In the 1960s he starred as "Little Joe" on Bonanza. In the
1970s and into the 1980s, he starred as Charles Ingalls in Little House On
The Prairie and later in Highway to Heaven as an angel, also in the 1980s.
Landon also often directed the last two series. He was also a long running
co-host (with Kelly Lange) of NBC's popular worldwide broadcast coverage of
the annual "Tournament of Roses Parade."
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Born Eugene Maurice Orowitz in the Queens suburban area of Forest Hills, New
York, he and his family moved to Collingswood, New Jersey in 1941, where his
father accepted a job in working at the eater, while his mother became a
popular comedienne of the 1940s. It was at the time while watching the 1949
movie Samson and Delilah that his own obsession with the long hair became
his fantasy. During his teens, he never had that kind of hair up until he
was getting older.
In high school, Orowitz excelled at track, especially with the javelin. He
earned an athletic scholarship to USC but could no longer attend after
tearing a ligament in his arm. At this point, he started taking small roles
and bit parts, but decided his birth name was not appropriate for an
aspiring actor, so he changed his name to Michael Landon. He decided on the
name by picking it out of a Los Angeles phone book.
Landon was discovered by producer Herman Cohen, who cast the young man in
his first big role as teenager Tony Rivers in the feature film I Was a
Teenage Werewolf (1957). Landon also gained exposure as Tom Dooley in the
western The Legend of Tom Dooley (1959).
Landon as Charles Ingalls on the long-running Little House On The
PrairieThat same year, he started starring in the then-new TV series Bonanza
as Little Joe, the youngest brother in the Cartwright family and always a
ladies man. He quickly became one of the show's most beloved characters.
Late in the series, Landon asked for permission to direct a few episodes of
the series, which was granted. The show ran for 14 years, from 1959 to 1973,
a total of 461 episodes.
Soon after the cancellation of Bonanza, Landon started a new project in
1974, a television film called Little House on the Prairie based on the
popular book by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Little House would later develop into
a television series. He not only starred in the show as the patriarch
Charles Ingalls, but served as the producer, writer, director, and executive
producer. He served mostly in these capacities for the series' eight years,
which ended in 1982.
In 1984, Landon began his role in Highway to Heaven as Jonathan Smith, an
angel who tried to save people by helping them turn their lives around. When
his friend and co-star, Victor French, died of lung cancer in 1989, Landon
cancelled the series.
Landon had produced all three of his series for NBC, but after ending
Highway, he was let go. He then went to CBS and in 1991 starred in a two
hour pilot called Us. This was meant to be another winning series for
Landon, but he was soon diagnosed with pancreatic cancer that had spread to
his liver. Landon's last public appearance was on The Tonight Show with
Johnny Carson in May 1991. A few weeks later, Landon passed away in Malibu,
California with his family, children, and colleagues by his side. He was
interred in the Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California.
Landon as Jonathan Smith on Highway to HeavenLandon was married three times.
His first wife was Dodie Frasier, a legal secretary who was six years his
senior. He adopted her son, Mark, and together they adopted another boy. A
few years later in 1962, he divorced Dodie to marry (Marjorie) Lynn Noe, a
model, who had a young daughter from a previous marriage. By all accounts,
Landon treated Noe's daughter like his own child, and he had four more
children with Lynn. This marriage was believed to be very happy and
different from typical "Hollywood marriages", so the tabloids jumped at the
affair Landon started with another woman. Cindy Clerico was a make-up artist
and stand-in for one of the stars; they met on the set of Little House.
Clerico was 21 years his junior. They married in 1983 and had two children,
Jennifer (born in 1983) and Sean (born in 1986). (Jennifer has starred as
Gwen Norbeck on the soap opera As the World Turns since 2005.)
His co-star on Little House, Melissa Gilbert, named her son, Michael Garrett
Boxleitner (1995), after Landon.
For his contribution to the television industry, Michael Landon has a star
on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 N. Vine Street. In 1998, he was
inducted posthumously into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. |
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MICHAEL LANDON PICTURES |
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MOST POPULAR
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ADDITIONS
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