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MARTA KRISTEN PHOTO GALLERY #3 |
Updated: August 21, 2010
Birgit Annalisa Rusanen was born in Oslo, Norway, on
February 26 and left at an orphanage when she was two
weeks old. After four years, in 1948, she was adopted by
Professor and Mrs. Harold Soderquist of Detroit,
Michigan. She was named Marta in honor of Marta Bentzen,
the Oslo social worker who assisted the Soderquists with
the voluminous red tape attached to an international
adoption.
Marta quickly adjusted to the language and customs of
the United States. She entered Farmington Elementary
School, and as a ten year-old fourth grader starred in
an original comedy which she and two other ten year-olds
had written. A piano-playing colleague of her father's,
Professor Henry Herman, recommended Marta to the famous
Will-O-Way Theatre in Birmingham, Michigan on the
strength of her singing and dancing to ballads he played
on frequent visits to the Soderquist home. Marta was
accepted and cast in Taming of the Shrew and Little
Women at Will-O-Way in summer stock when she was
fourteen. She later took a course in drama at the
Detroit Civic Theatre.
In 1959, Professor Soderquist took his family to
California on sabbatical. Marta enrolled at Santa Monica
High School and remained in California when her parents
returned to Detroit the next year, finishing her high
school education at Hollywood Professional School at 16.
Marta was "discovered" while eating a hamburger with a
boyfriend at a drive-in restaurant in Santa Monica.
Producer/Director/Writer James B. Harris approached her
and asked if she would like to try out for Lolita. After
checking Harris' background, she read for the part.
"My mother thought the role was not for me, so I
withdrew," she says. Lolita was made with Jimmy Harris
as Producer. Starring James Mason and Shelly Winters,
the title role went to Sue Lyon instead.
Jimmy Harris can still take credit with starting Marta's
career. He made arrangements for Marta to acquire an
agent, who immediately got her a feature role in The
Loretta Young Show. During the next eighteen months,
Marta co-starred in two Alfred Hitchcock Presents
episodes (including one directed by Hitchcock himself),
two segments of the My Three Sons series with Fred
MacMurray (a third one would follow in 1964), a Leave it
to Beaver episode, and an appearance on the Shirley
Temple show.
She had just finished an episode of The Greatest Show on
Earth and was filming the role of Lorelei the mermaid in
Beach Blanket Bingo when she was called in to meet with
Irwin Allen. After meeting Marta, Allen was determined
to have her play the role of Judy Robinson in his new
series, Space Family Robinson. Marta initially refused
the part, fearing (correctly) the character would be
underutilized. Allen pitched several potential script
ideas for the character, and Marta agreed to the role of
Judy Robinson in the series, now renamed Lost in Space.
The rest is science fiction history.
When the series ended, Marta raised a family and
continued to work, making over 40 TV commercials as well
as guest starring in TV shows such as Mannix, Remington
Steele, and Trapper John. In 1996, Marta traveled to
Korea to film Pearl Buck's The Living Reed with Lee
Majors. Marta's first love however, is the theater, in
which she has been very active on the West Coast. She
received critical acclaim for her performance as Emily
Stilson in Arthur Kopit's award-winning play about a
stroke victim, Wings.
Marta loves to travel, especially in the Far East to
trek in the Himalayas, although that has been put on
hold while she is helping to raise her granddaughter,
Lena. She does make time for the occasional convention
appearance, and has appeared in such films as Hallmark
Hall of Fame's Harvest of Fire with Patty Duke, Body
Count with Alyssa Milano, and of course, 1998's Lost in
Space.
Marta now lives in California with her attorney husband,
Kevin.
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