Jack Klugman

Jack Klugman (born April 27, 1922 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American television and movie actor.

Klugman began acting after serving in the United States Army during World War II. He starred in several classic films including 12 Angry Men and Days Of Wine And Roses. He also won an Emmy Award for his work on the television series The Defenders and appeared in four episodes of the acclaimed series The Twilight Zone.

He is best known for his starring roles in two popular television series of the 1970s and early 1980s: The Odd Couple (1970-1975) and Quincy, M.E. (1976-1983). In the early 1990s, Klugman lost a vocal chord to cancer but has continued acting on stage and on television.


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In the early 1990s, Klugman lost a vocal chord to cancer but has continued acting on stage and on television. His co-star on Little House, Melissa Gilbert, named her son, Michael Garrett Boxleitner (1995), after Landon. He is best known for his starring roles in two popular television series of the 1970s and early 1980s: The Odd Couple (1970-1975) and Quincy, M.E. (1976-1983). They married in 1983 and had Jennifer (born in 1983) and Sean (born in 1986). He also won an Emmy Award for his work on the television series The Defenders and appeared in four episodes of the acclaimed series The Twilight Zone. This marriage was believed to be very happy and different from typical "Hollywood marriages", so the tabloids jumped at the affair Landon started with a make-up artist and stand-in for one of the stars he had met at the set of "Little House on the Prairie", Cindy Clerico, who was 21 years younger than he. He starred in several classic films including 12 Angry Men and Days Of Wine And Roses. Landon treated her like his own child and had four more children with Lynn.

Klugman began acting after serving in the United States Army during World War II. A few years later he divorced Dodie to marry (Marjorie) Lynn Noe, a model in 1962 who had a little daughter from a previous marriage. Jack Klugman (born April 27, 1922 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American television and movie actor. He adopted her son Mark and together they adopted another boy. His first wife was Dodie Frasier, a legal secretary who was six years his senior. Landon was married three times.

He is buried in a Jewish cemetery. A few weeks later, Landon passed away in Malibu, California with his family, children and colleagues by his side. His last public appereance was on the "Johnny Carson Show" in June. This was meant to be another winning series for Landon, but he was soon diagnosed with pancreatic cancer that had spread to the liver.

He then went to CBS and in 1991 starred in a two hour pilot called Us. Landon had produced all three of his series for NBC, but after ending Highway he was let go. When his friend and co-star, Victor French, died of lung cancer in 1989, Landon cancelled the series. In 1984 he began his role in Highway to Heaven as Jonathan Smith, an angel who tried to save people by helping them turn their lives around.

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. Little House would later develop into a television series. 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. The show ran for 14 years, from 1959 to 1973, and spanned 461 episodes.

Late in the series, Landon asked for the direct and got permission to direct a few episodes of the series. That 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. He also gained exposure as Tom Dooley in the western The Legend of Tom Dooley (1959). Landon's first big part was as Tony Rivers in I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957).

He decided on the name by picking it out of a Los Angeles phone book. At this point he started taking small roles and bit parts, but decided his birth name was not appropriate for an aspiring actor and changed his name to Michael Landon. He earned a scholarship to UCLA, but could no longer attend after tearing a ligament in his arm. In high school, Landon excelled at track, especially with the javelin.

Landon also directed the last two series. In the 1970s and into the 1980s he starred as Charles Ingalls in Little House On The Prairie and starred in Highway to Heaven as an angel, also in the 1980s. In the 1960s he starred as "Little Joe" on Bonanza. Landon was best known for his starring roles in three TV series spanning three decades.

Landon considered himself Jewish. Landon's father was Jewish, his mother was not. Michael Landon (October 31, 1936 - July 1, 1991), born Eugene Maurice Horowitz, was an American actor and director.