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MARK GODDARD PHOTO GALLERY #3 |
Updated: September 12, 2008
By Bruce Fedow:
Mark Goddard was born Charles Goddard on July 24, 1936 in Lowell, Mass. but
moved to Scitiuate Mass. where his father owned a five-and-ten store. In
high school Mark was the captain of the baseball and basketball teams, but
when he went to Holy Cross College he was told by the coach that he'd never
make the Varsity basketball team. Crushed, he was ready to drop out when he
wandered in on a campus production of one of Shakespeare's plays and was
instantly bitten by the acting bug.
Mark left Mass. to enroll in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in
New York, but upon completion of his courses there found he could not get
any promising roles in the Big Apple. Undaunted, he drove west to California
and wrote an impassioned letter to movie director Joseph Anthony asking
advice on the best way to break into films. Impressed, Anthony invited
Mark to Hollywood, and Goddard was signed by the prestigious William Morris
Agency and got his first TV role just three weeks later! Small roles in shows
like "The Rifleman," "Gunsmoke," "The Beverly Hillbillies," "Perry Mason,"
and "The Fugitive" led to co-starring parts in "Johnny Ringo" and "Many
Happy Returns".
One year later he was offered the role of Dr. (later changed to Major)
Donald West in the pilot episode of Irwin Allen's Lost in Space. While Mark
was not a big science fiction fan he tried out for the part at the urging of
his agent, who was certain this was a one-shot one paycheck deal as the
series would obviously never make it to the television screen. He did,
and the rest is history-for three years fans watched Major West fight aliens,
crash land the ship and never get to kiss anything but chaste Judy Robinson's
(Marta Kristen's) hand in the pilot.
After Lost in Space, Mark appeared in TV movies like "The Death Squad" and "A
Reason to Live" and had recurring roles in TV soaps "One Life to Live" and
"General Hospital".
Goddard is no stranger to the silver screen either, having been featured in
"The Monkey's Uncle," "A Rage to Live" and "The Love-Ins". Later in his career
he was in "Roller Boogie," "Strange Invaders" (with June Lockhart his former
Space co-star) and of course the "Lost in Space" film along with June, Angela
Cartwright and Marta Kristen.
In between roles Mark has worked tirelessly and selflessly on behalf of children
everywhere from Head Start programs in California to the Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York as well as having taught many courses in Mass. universities.
These days Mark Goddard spends a lot of time away from home, traveling the world
to attend many science fiction conventions, always encountering a legion of fans
he's never met before who are eager to tell him how much his role in television
history is appreciated.
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