Bill Mumy
Bill Mumy | |
---|---|
Mumy at Phoenix Comicon in May 2013 | |
Born |
Charles William Mumy Jr. February 1, 1954 San Gabriel, California, U.S. |
Residence | Hollywood Hills, California |
Occupation | Actor, musician, pitchman, instrumentalist, voice actor |
Years active | 1960–present |
Spouse(s) | Eileen Joy Davis |
Children |
Seth Mumy (b. 1989) Liliana Mumy (b. 1994) |
Website |
billmumy |
Charles William Mumy Jr. (/ˈmuːmi/; born February 1, 1954[1]) is an American actor, musician, pitchman, instrumentalist, voice actor, author and a figure in the science-fiction community. He came to prominence in the 1960s as a child actor, when he was credited as Billy Mumy, an era which included memorable appearances in The Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock Presents television shows, as well as co-starring in Dear Brigitte with James Stewart and Brigitte Bardot, followed by an iconic three-season role as Will Robinson in the 1960s CBS sci-fi series Lost in Space.
He later appeared as lonely teenager Sterling North in the Disney film Rascal (1969), with Steve Forrest. He was cast as Teft in the film Bless the Beasts and Children (1971).
In the 1990s, he performed the role of Lennier in all five seasons of the syndicated sci-fi TV series Babylon 5, and narrated A&E Network's Emmy Award-winning series Biography.
Mumy is also known for his musical career as a guitarist, singer, songwriter and composer: he is an Emmy nominee for original music in Adventures in Wonderland (1991). As a musician Mumy performs as a solo artist, an occasional guest performer, and as half of the duo Barnes & Barnes.
Early life and career
Mumy was born in San Gabriel, California to Charles William Mumy, a cattle rancher, and Muriel Gertrude Mumy (née Gould).[2] He began his professional career at age six, and has worked on more than four hundred television episodes, eighteen films, various commercials, and scores of voice-over projects.[3] He has also worked as a musician, songwriter, recording artist, and writer.[4]
Television and film career
Among Mumy's earliest television roles was six-year-old Willy in the "Donald's Friend" (1960) episode of the NBC-TV family drama series, National Velvet, starring Lori Martin. He starred in three episodes of CBS-TV's original Twilight Zone: "It's a Good Life" (November 1961), as a child who terrorizes his town with psychic powers (a role he later reprised along with his daughter Liliana in the It's Still a Good Life episode of the second revival series); "In Praise of Pip" (September 1963), as a vision of Jack Klugman's long-neglected dying son; and "Long Distance Call" (March 1961) as Billy Bayles, who talks to his dead grandmother through a toy telephone.
In 1961, Billy was cast on CBS-TV's Alfred Hitchcock Presents series in "The Door Without a Key", featuring John Larch, who played his father in "It's a Good Life". The same year, Mumy starred as little Jackie in the episode "Bang! You're Dead", featuring Marta Kristen, who would later play his sister Judy on Lost in Space. Mumy was cast as Mark Murdock in the "Keep an Eye on Santa Claus" (1962) episode of the ABC-TV drama series Going My Way, starring Gene Kelly. His fellow guest stars were Cloris Leachman (who played his mother in "It's a Good Life"), Steve Brodie, and Frank McHugh.[5]
At age eight, Mumy appeared in Jack Palance's ABC-TV circus drama The Greatest Show on Earth (1963); he was cast as Miles, a parentless boy, in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Shifty Shoebox" 1963); and he portrayed Freddy in the "End of an Image" (1963) episode of NBC-TV's modern Western series Empire, starring Richard Egan.
In 1964, he was cast as Richard Kimble's nephew in ABC-TV's The Fugitive episode, "Home Is the Hunted"; as Barry in the NBC-TV medical drama The Eleventh Hour episode "Sunday Father"; as himself three times in the ABC sitcom The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet; in the Disney film For the Love of Willadena; and as a troubled orphan taken in by the Stephenses in the Bewitched fantasy sitcom episode "A Vision of Sugarplums" (December 1964), on ABC-TV.
Mumy was reportedly the first choice to portray Eddie Munster in the 1964 CBS situation comedy The Munsters, but his parents objected to the extensive makeup requirements. The role instead went to Butch Patrick. Mumy appeared in one episode as a friend of Eddie's.
Mumy guest starred in an episode of NBC-TV's I Dream of Jeannie, "Whatever Became of Baby Custer?" (1965). That same year, he also appeared in an episode of Bewitched entitled "Junior Executive" (1965), in which he played a young Darrin Stevens.
Mumy starred in Dear Brigitte (1965), a film adaptation of the novel Erasmus with Freckles, as Erasmus Leaf, a child mathematical genius who develops a crush on Brigitte Bardot (played by herself in the film). His parents, played by James Stewart and Glynis Johns, attempt to manage his obsession.[6]
Lost in Space and beyond
While notable for several historic roles as both a child and adult actor, Mumy is best-known for his iconic television role in a classic 60s science fiction series. From 1965 to 1968, Mumy portrayed Will Robinson in Lost in Space, who was the recipient of numerous warnings, (most famously "Danger, Will Robinson") from the show's robot character, voiced by Dick Tufeld.[7]
Mumy was later cast in Bless the Beasts and Children (1971) as Teft, a leader in a group of misfit teenage boys resolved to save a herd of bison from hunters. He also played a musician friend of Cliff DeYoung's character in the TV movie Sunshine (1973), and later reprised the role in Sunshine Christmas and in the TV series Sunshine.
In 1974, he played Nick Butler in the pilot episode of NBC's The Rockford Files and also made an appearance in a later episode in season 1, as a sidewalk artist. In 1996, he was a writer and co-creator of Space Cases, a Nickelodeon television show with themes similar to those of Lost in Space. He played a Starfleet officer in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "The Siege of AR-558" (November 1998), in which he assists in defeating a Jem'Hadar fleet. To Mumy's delight, his character was human this time; while playing Lennier in Babylon 5, he was required to wear prosthetic makeup. He was more recently seen in a 2006 episode of Crossing Jordan and in the Sci Fi original film A.I. Assault.[8]
Voice acting career
Mumy has narrated over 50 episodes of the Arts & Entertainment Channel's Biography series, as well as hosted and narrated several other documentaries and specials for A & E, Animal Planet network, The Sci-Fi Channel, and E!. His voice acting talents can be heard on animated shows like Ren and Stimpy, Scooby-Doo, Batman: The Animated Series, Steven Spielberg's Animaniacs, Little Wizard Adventures, The Oz Kids and Disney's Buzz Lightyear of Star Command and Doc McStuffins. He has done voice over work in national commercials for such businesses as Bud Ice, Farmers Insurance, Ford, Blockbuster, Twix, Oscar Mayer and McDonald's.
Music
Mumy is an accomplished musician who plays the banjo, bass, guitar, harmonica, keyboards, mandolin, and percussion. His various musical credits include songs he has written and recorded with America, performed on tour with Shaun Cassidy, and played with Rick Springfield's band in the film Hard to Hold. He created the band The Be Five with other Babylon 5 actors.[9]
Mumy has released a number of solo CDs, including Dying to Be Heard, In the Current, Pandora's Box, After Dreams Come True, Los Angeles Times and Ghosts, as well as nine albums with music partner Robert Haimer as Barnes and Barnes.[10] Their most famous hit is the song "Fish Heads", which Rolling Stone magazine named one of the top 100 videos of all time. He also performs with the Jenerators, a blues-rock band based in Los Angeles featuring Tom Hebenstreit on vocals, electric guitars, and keyboards; Mumy on vocals, acoustic and electric guitars, harmonica, keyboards and percussion; Gary Stockdale on vocals and bass; Miguel Ferrer on vocals, percussion and drums; David Jolliffe on guitar, percussion and vocals; and Chris Ross on drums and percussion. Additionally, Mumy released a Byrds-tribute song, "When Roger Was Jim" (2012).
Mumy produces and hosts The Real Good Radio Hour, a weekly series on KSAV Internet Radio focusing on various styles of music and the artists who pioneered them.[11]
Lost in Space activities in later years
In 1996, Mumy and his Lost in Space costar Jonathan Harris were reunited at a Walt Disney convention in Orlando, Florida. Mumy worked again with Harris on the retrospective special Lost In Space: Forever (1998), where they reprised their roles in a scene written by Mumy (Harris rewrote his own lines). This occurred the year after the rest of the cast (including both Mumy and Harris) stated in a TV Guide article that the Sci Fi Channel planned to do a Lost in Space marathon while promoting a new movie. Harris was to appear in the planned TV movie, Lost in Space: The Journey Home, but died before production started in 2002, and the production was subsequently cancelled. Mumy read the eulogy at Harris' funeral and was asked to narrate an account of his longtime friend's life on A&E Biography that year.
In a 2010 interview on Blog Talk Radio's Lessons Learned, Rick Tocquigny was asked if Mumy was a Jonathan Harris fan before they appeared together on Lost in Space. Tocquigny said that at age five, Mumy was too young to watch his mentor's show The Third Man, which would have been aired late at night, but he was old enough to see The Bill Dana Show.[12]
On June 14, 2006, Mumy got to work with Harris one last time, though posthumously. Years before Harris died, he recorded voice work for the animated short The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas, narrating the film and playing the part of The Bolt. As a tribute to Harris, writer-director John Wardlaw added a scene that reunited Lost in Space cast members Mumy, Marta Kristen, and Angela Cartwright as the animated Ratchett family.[13]
In May 2013, 11 years after Harris' death in November 2002, Mumy commented on his connection with his friend and acting mentor offscreen and their onscreen connection while working in character as Will Robinson and Dr. Smith oncreen, in Lost in Space. Mumy noted: "I never really had too many uncomfortable moments working with any actor. I was comfortable working with most everybody. It’s just the more that Jonathan and I did together, the more he changed the character. He really changed the character of Dr. Smith himself. He really turned him from a snarling saboteur villain to this bumbling insulting kook. The more he played it for comedy, the more Irwin Allen liked it. The show really went the way that Jonathan led it. But we had great chemistry together, and we never had a bad day. We were always prepared, as was Bobby May who was inside the robot. When we had our work to do—and I think this is a very big reason [for] the way it went—they’d get us done in a couple of takes. Nobody screwed up. It was easier for the crew and it was easier for us, and people seemed to like it."[14]
Mumy attends Lost in Space reunions and shows, and co-authored a 2015 book, Lost (and Found) in Space with Angela Cartwright.[15]
Other work
Mumy and co-author Peter David published the short story, "The Black '59" (1992), in the anthology Shock Rock, edited by F. Paul Wilson.[16]
Personal life
Mumy, his wife, Eileen, and their two actor children, Seth and Liliana[17][18] live in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles.[18]
Television and filmography
Year | Film/Television | Role |
---|---|---|
1961 | The Twilight Zone: "Long Distance Call" (episode) | Billy Bayles |
1961 | The Twilight Zone: "It's a Good Life" (episode) | Anthony Fremont |
1962 | House Guest | Tony Mitchell |
1962 | Sammy, the Way-Out Seal (Walt Disney Productions) | Petey Loomis |
1963 | A Child Is Waiting | Boy counting Jean's pearls |
1963 | A Ticklish Affair | Alex Martin |
1963 | Palm Springs Weekend | 'Boom Boom' Yates |
1963 | The Twilight Zone "In Praise of Pip" (episode) | Young Pip Phillips |
1964 | Bewitched "A Vision of Sugar Plums" (episode) | Darrin the Boy |
1965 | "The Virginian" | Willy |
1965 | Dear Brigitte | Erasmus Leaf |
1965 | I Dream of Jeannie | Custer |
1965 | The Munsters: "Come Back Little Googie" (episode) | Googie Miller |
1965–68 | Lost in Space | Will Robinson |
1968 | Wild in the Streets | Boy |
1969 | Rascal | Sterling North |
1971 | Bless the Beasts and Children | Teft |
1973 | Papillon | Lariot |
1983 | Twilight Zone: The Movie | Tim (Segment #3) |
1984 | Hard to Hold | Keyboard Player |
1991 | The Flash | Roger Braintree |
1991 | Captain America | Young General Fleming |
1994 | The Ren & Stimpy Show | Dr. Brainchild |
1994–98 | Babylon 5 | Lennier |
1995 | Batman: The Animated Series | Warren Lawford |
1997 | The Weird Al Show | UPS guy |
1997 | Space Ghost Coast to Coast | Himself |
1998 | Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | Kellin |
2002 | The Twilight Zone: Series 1, Episode:
'It's Still A Good Life' |
Anthony Fremont (as an adult) |
2004 | Comic Book: The Movie | Himself |
2005 | Holly Hobbie and Friends: Surprise Party (Direct to DVD) | Voice of Bud (Amy's father) |
2009 | The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas (Theatrical Short) | Voice of Tiny Tap / Knob Ratchett |
2013–14 | Bravest Warriors (Web Series) | 4 episodes; Voice of Beth's father |
References
- ↑ Miller, John Jackson (June 10, 2005). "Comics Industry Birthdays". Comics Buyer's Guide. Archived from the original on October 30, 2010.
- ↑ "Bill Mumy profile". Retrieved February 15, 2015.
- ↑ Erickson, Hal Erickson. "Bill Mumy: Biography". allmovie.com. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
- ↑ Ankeny, Jason. "Bill Mumy: Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
- ↑ ""Keep an Eye on Santa Claus", Going My Way, December 12, 1962". Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ↑ Mark Deming, Mark. "Dear Brigitte (1965)". AllMovie. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
- ↑ Noland, Claire (January 25, 2012). "Dick Tufeld dies at 85; actor who intoned 'Danger, Will Robinson!'". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
Besides warning young Will Robinson of impending danger, Tufeld's Robot uttered other lines that became catchphrases for faithful viewers — including "That does not compute" — and needled the antagonistic Dr. Zachary Smith with barbs like "Dr. Smith is a bubble-headed booby."
- ↑ Erickson, Hal. "Bill Mumy". Biography. The New York Times. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
- ↑ "Bill Mumy's Return Trip". People. June 3, 1991.
- ↑ Lapka, Larry. "Barnes & Barnes: Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
- ↑ Profile Archived March 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine., ksav.org; accessed February 15, 2015.
- ↑ "Bill Mumy of Lost in Space fame shares his life lessons 09/22 by Lessons Learned". Blog Talk Radio. 2010-09-22. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
- ↑ Profile, miaminewtimes.com; accessed February 15, 2015.
- ↑ Profile, popcultureaddict.com; accessed February 15, 2015.
- ↑ King, Susan (September 14, 2015). "Warning! Warning! 50th anniversary 'Lost in Space' Blu-ray and book approaching!". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Ashley, Michael; Contanto, William (May 30, 1995). "The Black'59"&f=false The Supernatural Index: A Listing of Fantasy, Supernatural, Occult, Weird, and Horror Anthologies. Greenwood. p. 196. Archived at Google Books. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
- ↑ David, Peter (2009). More Digressions. Second Age, Inc. p. 193.
- 1 2 "Biography". Bill Mumy. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
Bibliography
- Holmstrom, John. The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995. Norwich, Michael Russell, 1996, p. 303-304.
- Dye, David. Child and Youth Actors: Filmography of Their Entire Careers, 1914-1985. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 1988, p. 166.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bill Mumy. |
- Official website
- Bill Mumy on IMDb
- Bill Mumy at the TCM Movie Database
- Bill Mumy interviews on Outsight Radio Hours
- Bill Mumy interview video at the Archive of American Television
- Bill Mumy at SBV Talent
- Bill Mumy speaks about the character Will Robinson