Martin
Milner
("Marty" to his friends) is an actor whose career has spanned 7
decades. Though he is best known as "Officer Pete Malloy"
of Adam-12 fame and "Karl Robinson" of Swiss
Family Robinson fame to younger baby-boomers, or as "Tod
Stiles" of Route 66
fame to older baby-boomers, Milner's career has encompassed much more
than being leading man over the combined 12 years these three shows ran
on television (1960-1964 for Route 66 and 1968-1975
for Adam-12 and 1975-1976 for Swiss
Family Robinson).
Milner has done it all.
In his teens and
twenties, he acted
on
film sets with the likes of William Powell, Tyrone Power, John Wayne,
Ronald Reagan,
Richard Widmark, Dana Andrews, Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis, Orson
Wells, Elizabeth
Taylor, and Natalie Wood, to name a few. He also appeared on
numerous classic television shows in the 1950s, including as a regular
cast member on the popular Stu Erwin Show and The
Life of Riley. Then came his
three
television series as he reached his thirties and forties, followed
by made-for-television movies, then theatre and guest appearances on
other
TV series as he reached his fifties and sixties. To date, he has
compiled
over 250 hours of television series appearances (most of which he
starred in), 40 big screen films, 17 made-for-television films,
half-a-dozen live plays (including one Broadway production), over 30
hours of celebrity television game show appearances, and numerous other
public
appearances in parades, on television talk shows, and in community
service projects. He has even been the co-host of a radio
talk
show
and co-host of a sport radio show dedicated to fishing.
Through it all, Milner
stands out as a man dedicated first and foremost
to his family -- his wife of 51 years, and his children and
grandchildren. In Hollywood and beyond, Milner has left his
mark admirably.
But in many respects, this Hollywood star is a not-so-Hollywood kind of
guy...
"Sure,
stardom is
swell, but so much depends on luck and timing, things like that. Love
and marriage don't depend on luck. Those you
have to
earn, but once earned, they're yours for life!"
--
Martin Milner, Screen Album,
October 1961
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BIOGRAPHY
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1931-1945:
Being a Kid, Weathering a Storm...
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Martin
Sam Milner was born in Detroit,
Michigan, on
December 28, 1931. He was the only child of Sam Gordon
Milner, a construction worker at the time, and Mildred E.
"Jerre" Milner
(Martin), a dancer with the Paramount
Theater
circuit. While
Milner recalled that he was
very close to his father, he remembers his mother as the disciplinarian
in the household. When
he was just 6 months old, his parents moved from Detroit to
Cleveland. He
would live in other cities, including Denver and San Francisco, as his
dad looked for work. Employment during the Great Depression was
hard to
find, so Martin's father (estranged from his own dad, a wealthy
Texan discontent with his son's marriage) moved
frequently to find work, eventually becoming an advertising
space salesman for a
national magazine. Martin would later refer to his childhood
as
"one long, violent storm" during which good-paying jobs and financial
security for his father were hard to come by.
Milner
would later recall the frequent moves during his childhood and
the impact they made upon him, "If you move around a lot, even as I did
every few years, you just have to leave your old friends and make new
friends, so you get in the habit. Gee, I can remember when I
was
a kid, moving. While the movers would be putting the stuff in
the
house, I'd be wandering up the street saying 'Hi, my name is Martin
Milner and we're moving in. I'd like to be your friend'" (Silver
Screen, February 1963).
By
the time Martin was 9, the family lived in Seattle, where he got his
first job, watering lawns for an apartment house next-door to his home.
He soon moved up to being a stock
boy,
an office boy, and a box boy in a supermarket. At the age of
10, he became enamored
with studying drama and theater in elementary school. At the age of 11,
he directed an abbreviated performance of "Robin Hood." Soon
afterwards, his
mother
enrolled him in an after-school children's theater group, the Cornish
Players, and
he
started performing
in plays at the Cornish Playhouse. By the age of 12, he had
written and produced a couple of school plays and thought he had found
his life's ambition in being a director. However, when he had
to
take over for one of his actors in an emergency, he found an
even
greater love for acting. The latter would prove to be an
ambition
which he would fulfill successfully over the course of the next seven
decades.
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Note: This is a fan site dedicated to informing the public about Martin Milner.
If there are any errors or misinterpretations in this biography, please email
me!

Route 66 Season 1 was released on DVD Aug. 5, 2008!

Adam-12 Season 2 will be released on DVD Sep. 30!
Click Here
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1946-1948:
From "The
Schnook" to "John Day"...
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Martin
was 14 when the family relocated to Los Angeles, where
his
father was now working as a film executive for Eagle-Lion. He enrolled
at North Hollywood High School. His
family's
financial situation had improved, so at his request, his parents
acquired an
acting coach to work with him after school two days a week. Next, his
father got him an agent, Stuart Stewart, to help
him pursue an acting career (Stewart
worked with Milner for over twenty years, and Milner named his first
son after him).
One of Milner's new friends in
Los Angeles was the nephew of Walt
Disney who would distinguish himself in creating Disney animation. Roy
E. Disney recalled in an interview with Pomona
College Magazine
(Summer 2000) that as a youth he had shot 16mm movies of neighborhood
kids. One such movie was entitled "The Schnook Who Was a
Thief"
and the star was none other than Martin Milner dressed as a sheik!
As to the quality of the movie, Roy said, "It was pretty
stupid."
But, it was probably a lot of fun for the two teenagers, and was
definitely starting them both on the right career paths.
Milner
had
his first real screen test and landed his first film role as the second
oldest son, "John Day," in the big
screen production Life with
Father. He appeared with lines throughout the film as he
convincingly
responded to one scenario after another in the red-headed household of
"Clarence
Day" (played by William Powell). Because of his natural red
hair,
Milner was the only cast member in the Day family who didn't have to
get his hair dyed red. Filming took more than three
months, however, and the 14-year-old's rapid growth during that span
left the film's wardrobe department in fits as they tried to keep up
with him. From the beginning to the end of the film (April to
August 1946), Milner grew three inches (Selected Film Criticism, 1941-1950). Wardrobe was
not the
only
department
the young Milner frustrated. He himself recalled that he
frequently held up production because he would be off boxing with
Mushie Callahan (the ex-middle weight boxer who ran the gym at Warner
Brothers studios) or playing
ball between scenes. As he would later confess, "I'd
sweat
all my make-up off and hold up the production twenty minutes. I
was a kid. I didn't have the discipline. If they'd
give me
two hours for lunch, I'd take off and play baseball. I'd give
'em
fits, I guess" (TV Picture Life, December 1972). Life
with
Father screenshots
When
filming of Life
with Father was completed, Milner was looking forward to
returning to his school friends. Four months working on the
film, as he later recalled, "was an awfully long time when you're a
kid. I was very bored by the end of it and was eager to get
back to school and my friends" (Photoplay Magazine,
February 1973). His return to normalcy lasted briefly. Just over a week
after the
filming of Life
with Father had ended in August 1946, 14-year-old
Milner
contracted polio. He later described
the terror he experienced when the disease struck, "One day, I was
laughing, jumping and running. The next day, I was flat on my
back and wondering if I'd ever walk again. I thought the
world
had come to an end. I couldn't move" (TV
Radio Mirror, August 1961). He
remained bed-ridden, in a 3-month-long battle with the painful,
crippling disease. Following an additional 6 months of intensive
physical
therapy, whirlpool baths, and massages (known as the "Sr. Kenny method"
of treatment), he was recovered completely
enough to soon learn to drive the "Model A" he earned from playing his
first
movie role.
He
attended the opening of Life
with Father in
August 1947 with his mother and cast members. The film and
its entire cast received rave
reviews (based on its own 1947 review, the New York
Times in 2004 listed the film in its book entitled New
York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made). By
September 1947, the high school junior was at work for a week on the
set
of
the
film Wreck of the Hesperus in a minor offstage
part; Hesperus opened in February 1948. A senior in
the Fall 1948, he worked briefly at Samuel Goldwyn Studios on the film The
Green Promise
which starred 10-year-old Natalie Wood. Milner, 16 years old
at
the time, had a bit part as "Joe," a teenager in the Millbrook
4-H
Club giving a report on a project. Aside from bit parts in Hesperus
and The Green Promise, Milner focused on his high
school education, excelled at tennis and
baseball, and sharpened his acting skills as he finished his high
school studies.
|

North Hollywood High
School (1927)

(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Life with Father (1947)
DVD screenshot -
14-year-old Milner with Irene Dunne

The Green Promise (1949) screenshot
- Milner, 16, standing
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1949-1951:
College,
Golf, and Gin Rummy... |
In
the Spring of 1949, Milner graduated from North Hollywood High
School, and took some courses at junior college. In July, the
filming began for Sands of Iwo Jima,
in which he had landed a
minor
part as "Pvt. Mike McHugh." He
had been offered the part in the film by John Wayne himself
when
the two met while both happened to be playing golf for the first time.
Milner's character arrived about half-way through the film.
He had only a few lines, but the most memorable of his few
scenes
included a failed attempt to throw a live grenade (he dropped it on the
wind-up causing everyone to rush for cover) and the scene in which he
was shot and killed on the beach at Iwo Jima. Despite the
brevity, it was Milner's first real performance as an adult. He later
recalled lying about his age to get the part in the film,
telling producer Herbert Yates he was 18 when in fact he did
not turn 18 until December 28,
1949,
two weeks after the film premiered in Los Angeles.
Sands
of Iwo Jima screenshots
After filming for Sands
of Iwo Jima
ended in
August, Milner
enrolled in
the Theater Arts program at the
University of Southern
California for the Fall semester of 1949. He also joined a fraternity,
Phi Sigma Kappa. Milner
landed a minor part in Our
Very Own,
a film about a high school girl who found out she was adopted. Filming
had
started in August 1949
and
continued through early October, but he managed to juggle
school
and acting for time being.
In
January 1950, he
continued
his education at USC while pursuing film roles. In February, he started
filming a minor role in Louisa,
a romantic comedy about a dating grandma starring Ronald Reagan as her
shocked son. Then, on March 23, he made his television debut as "Dick
McHenry"
in The
Lone Ranger episode "Pay Dirt." Louisa opened May
31.
Milner's next
project was the film Halls of Montezuma,
which was filmed from mid-May to mid-July 1950. It was on the set of this movie
that Milner
began a decades-long working relationship with future Dragnet
and Adam-12 producer Jack Webb, who was also acting
in the film. He managed to win $150 from Webb in a game of
gin rummy, which Webb wasn't able to pay at the time. As Milner later recalled, "The end
of the picture came, and Jack didn't pay up. I could have
used that hundred and a half but my father said to forget it -- that
Jack
would never settle the debt. But a couple of months later I
got a phone call. It was Jack. He said, 'Come down
to NBC Radio and pick up your check.' So, I took the bus and
went down to the studio where he was doing 'Dragnet' on Radio."
Webb then offered him a job on the radio series. "Because I
couldn't be seen, I played old guys and
middle-aged guys. One whole summer I was even Jack's police
partner in the series" (TV Guide, August 4, 1973).
According
to Milner in a 1975
interview, the amount Webb owed
him from the card game was $200. He also provided more
information about his father's advice to him at the time: "my father
was worried about my going on location in a big movie. He
gave me
some stern advice: 'Don't fool around with girls, don't drink, and
don't gamble,' he lectured. So I met a marvelous girl I
fooled
around with, I drank a little, and I got in pretty deep
playing
gin rummy with Webb and when the picture ended he owed me $200" (Boston
Globe, December 1975).
Our
Very Own
opened in theaters on July 27, 1950. Milner enrolled in
college again
in the Fall, but when he landed a role in the film Operation
Pacific (filmed in September-October 1950), he decided to
quit school and pursue an acting career full-time. He then had but a month's rest before he got a
part
in Fighting Coast Guard which began filming in mid
December.
On
December 23, 1950, he appeared as "Drexel Potter" (the boyfriend of
Stu's oldest daughter "Joyce") on the popular comedy, The
Stu Erwin Show (aka Trouble with Father),
in an episode entitled "Problem Party." Over
the
course of the next two years, Milner would return to the show and
appear as
"Drexel" in several episodes before becoming a regular
cast member (playing "Jimmy Clark") on the television show during the
1954-1955 season.
The Stu Erwin Show page
On January 4, 1951, Halls
of Montezuma hit the box
offices. Milner
appeared as Private Whitney, a green soldier seeing battle for
the
first time. Although his lines were limited, he
appeared frequently
throughout the film, from beginning to end. He
distinguished
himself in
two
compelling scenes. In the first, he broke
down in tears
at
the
death of another young soldier (played by Robert Wagner). In the second, he recited the prayer "Our Father" in response to the reading
out loud (by Jack Webb) of a letter written by the recently killed
doctor in the
outfit (played by Karl Malden). Halls
of Montezuma screenshots Click Here to watch Halls of Montezuma
|

Sands of Iwo Jima (1950)
DVD screenshot - Milner at 17

Our Very Own (1950)
screenshot
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Martin Milner
and Jack Webb carrying Karl Malden in The
Halls of Montezuma (1951) DVD
screenshot

Operation Pacific (1951)
screenshot
- With John Wayne

I Want You (1951)
screenshot
- With Dana Andrews
|
The first
of two additional World War II movies for the year, Operation
Pacific, opened in theaters on January 27, 1951. Milner played a young ensign aboard
the submarine Thunderfish, "Mr. Caldwell"
as "Captain Duke Gifford" (played by John Wayne)
called him. Milner was in scenes throughout the film,
including
several with John Wayne alone. In one, he and Wayne were
swimming to rescue a downed pilot under enemy fire. Operation
Pacific screenshots
Shortly
after the opening of Operation Pacific -- on February 5, 1951 -- Milner's father died at the age of 45. Years
later, he recalled
that his father was disappointed when
he chose to quit college and pursue acting in the Fall of 1950. "My dad
was concerned (and with good reason), that this
wasn't a stable business, but he needn't have worried. He
died when I was 19, but I think he knew that I would never have stayed
in unless I was making good money" (Photoplay
Magazine, February 1973). Milner
expressed regret that his father had
died before he
could really witness his success as an actor.
On June 1, 1951, the
second
World War II film for the year, Fighting Coast Guard,
came out in theaters. Milner played "Al
Prescott." He
spent his summer filming I Want You,
in which he played "George Kress Jr.," a young man drafted
into
the Army for the Korean War whose father wanted to keep his son home. In late August, he began filming Belles
on Their Toes, a sequel to Cheaper by the Dozen, in
which he played the obnoxious college football-star suitor of
"Ernestine," one of the twelve siblings in the family. In late
September 1951, he started filming Captive City in
which he played "Phil Harding," a young newspaper photographer working
with a reporter (played by John Forsythe) who was investigating
organized crime. Milner's character was beaten up by the mob in the
film, which was reflective of the actual investigations of organized
crime that were underway at the time, led by Senator Estes Kefauver. In
October 1951, he starred in the
television show The Bigelow Theatre in an episode
entitled
"T.K.O." as a boxer who was told to take a dive in a fight. Co-starring in the episode with Milner was
James Dean in his first television appearance. He ended the year with
another appearance as "Drexel" on The Stu Erwin Show
in the episode "Jackie Knows All" on December 7. Also in the episode as "Randy," a
friend of "Drexel," was James Dean in his second appearance
on television. Belles
on Their Toes screenshots
|
1952-1956:
Uncle Sam
Calls--Wild Bill Hiccups & Leads the Life of
Riley... |
1952
was a busy year. My
Wife's Best Friend started filming in early April and Springfield Rifle started
later that month. Milner had minor parts in both films. Battle
Zone and Torpedo
Alley both filmed in June/July. Milner had a major role in
the former, a film about a Marine motion picture unit in the Korean
War, and a bit part in the latter World War II film. Captive City was released in
April and Belles
on Their Toes hit theaters in May. Milner also appeared in two television
episodes of the show Dragnet (which had begun
airing on
television in December 1951): "The Big
Speech" (February 28) and "The Big Trial" (April 24).
In the Spring, however, his
acting career was somewhat derailed when he was drafted into the Army
and
sent to work in the
Special
Services Division at Fort
Ord, California, located on the Monterey Bay peninsula. Over
the
next two years, he directed 20
military
training films at the fort, which served as a training facility for
basic combat and advance infantry training at the time for troops being
sent over to Korea. While at Fort Ord,
Milner befriended another
soldier in Special Services, David Janssen, who had also begun an
acting career before being drafted. The two worked on weekly
variety shows and plays at the fort's Central Service Club to
entertain both the troops as well as local
civic groups. Milner and Janssen also spent their off-duty
time
together, occasionally obtaining passes to drive to Los
Angeles on weekends to
visit their families and do their laundry ("The David Janssen Archive").
While
in
the Army,
Milner supplemented his military income by
continuing to perform alongside "Sgt. Friday" (Jack Webb) in the radio
series Dragnet. He recalled in a 2001 Route
66 Magazine interview
that two radio shows were taped every other Sunday. He
would travel from Fort Ord to Los Angeles and tape two shows for about
$112, which was close to a whole month's pay from the military.
Milner played the role of
Sergeant Friday's partner, "Officer Bill
Lockwood," as well as other characters on the radio series. He
could convincingly portray Friday's partner on the radio show, but his
baby face relegated him to "the house male juvenile delinquent" roles
on the
television show. As he later put it, "Jack really saved my
sanity then. The Army drove me crazy and Jack knew it... Not
only did the work keep me from flipping out, but I needed the money.
The Army was paying me a fast $104 a month" (TV Guide,
August 4, 1973). Dragnet
Radio page
In January of 1953, Torpedo
Alley and Last
of the Comanches opened
at theaters. Destination
Gobi (which was mostly filmed in August 1952, but in which
Milner had a substantial role as "Elwood Halsey") opened in March
1953 and was shown on base at Fort Ord. One of the many skits Special Services
performed at the base was entitled
"Wild Bill Hiccup" and featured both Milner and his buddy Janssen. It
was performed on April 22, 1953, at the Central Service
Club.

Playbill for "Wild Bill Hiccup" (Milner is in the center.)
In
addition to their regular entertainment duties, Milner and Janssen
worked on a few of their own projects together. In a letter
Janssen wrote home to his mother on July 8, 1953, he
described how he and Milner had recorded a "disk jockey
show" from
which they hoped to make some money, and planned on recording a
second show. On November 11, the pair were again performing
in a
skit for the troops at Fort Ord and sharing master of ceremony duties
for the base's Armistice Day show ("The
David Janssen Archive").
|

Battle Zone (1952)
screenshot - Milner
seated in front

Postcard of Fort Ord,
California (1950)

Postcard of Fort
Ord Central Service Club (1951)

Destination Gobi (1953)
screenshot - With
Richard
Widmark on the left
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Dial
M for Murder (1954) DVD
screenshot |
Because
of military
duty, Milner was only able to act in a few off-base productions which
he could complete while on leave. In
June, he made his third appearance on the Dragnet television
series in the episode "The Big Market." In
the early Fall of 1953, he acted in Alfred Hitchcock's film Dial
M
for Murder in
a bit part as a policeman. He appeared at the
beginning of
the
film, just after the intermission, and at the end for only about 10-15
seconds each time. He only had one line which came at the
post- intermission appearance, telling a small group of people gathered
on a street corner to move along. It was another way
to keep
his hand in Hollywood despite military duty, and make a few extra bucks
at the same time.
In January 1954,
Milner appeared
in the Schlitz Playhouse of Stars episode, "Rim of
Violence." In
the Spring of 1954, the Army granted him leave for six weeks to
participate in director John Ford's film about West Point, The
Long Gray
Line, in which Jack Webb had helped him land a part. Dial M
for Murder came out
in theaters in May. In
August, Milner made his fourth appearance on the Dragnet
television show in an episode entitled "The Big Producer"
in
which he played a 17-year-old high school student, "Steve Banner,"
accused of selling pornographic materials to minors.
Click Here to watch Dragnet - "The Producer"
He continued to spend leisure
time with his buddy from Fort Ord,
David Janssen. On August 29, he spent a weekend
with Janssen
and Janssen's mother at Big Bear Lake, an alpine vacation spot near Los
Angeles. On October 16, he took another Sunday off at Big Bear Lake
with Janssen and his family ("The David Janssen Archive").
After
his discharge from the
Army, Milner returned to his acting career full-time in the Fall of
1954. Along with a bit part in the film Mister
Roberts, he
found more regular work as "Jimmy Clark," the boyfriend and then husband of Stu Erwin's
daughter Joyce, on The Stu
Erwin Show television series (aka Trouble with
Father)
during
the show's final season (1954-1955).
The Stu Erwin Show page
|
By
1955, the 6-foot-tall, 180-pound 23-year-old with a freckled
complexion, sandy red hair, and hazel eyes had established himself as
one of Hollywood's newest young stars. He lived in an
apartment
in North Hollywood with his mother and step-father (his mother
had married Guglielmo "Bill" Cini, a jewelry designer, in
1954). He enjoyed skiing, golf, book collecting, and
book binding in his leisure time.
In 1955, he
appeared in four films at box offices: The
Long Gray Line (as "Jim
O'Carberry"), Mister Roberts, Francis
in the Navy (as Rick), and Pete
Kelly's Blues (as drummer "Joey
Firestone").
He
had
a bit part in the film Mister Roberts
as a shore patrol officer who told "Mister Roberts" (Henry Fonda) that
his ship's crew was no longer allowed to take shore leave for its
misbehavior. For the brief appearance, Milner took center
stage
as he depicted a laid-back, slow-talking
Alabamian who went into a lengthy tirade about the misadventures of
the crew of the U.S.S. Reluctant. The film
was mostly directed by John Ford (who became ill
half way through) and starred William Powell (from Life with
Father)
in his last film. Milner would later comment about the role,
"I
was just out of the Army, and I was happy to have a job. I
had
done a movie for John Ford prior to that [The Long Gray Line],
and he cast me for the role... it was a good scene, and it helped my
career" (Route 66 Magazine, Fall 2001).
In Francis
in the Navy,
Milner co-starred
with his Fort Ord Army buddy, David
Janssen, and another former Fort Ord soldier, Clint Eastwood, in a
not-so-serious war film that included a talking mule. Eastwood
had served at Fort Ord on the faculty as a swimming instructor and
lifeguard at the pool. Special Services, as Milner would
later
recall, encompassed both the entertainers (like Milner and Janssen) and
oversight of the sports programs and facilities, including the baseball
team, the golf course, and the pool. Although Eastwood was
therefore in Special Services, along with Milner and Janssen, he did
not socialize with the two, though he may have
been influenced by the two established
actors to pursue an acting career after he was discharged (Route
66 Magazine, Fall 2001; "The David Janssen Archive").
In
Pete
Kelly's Blues, he played a hot-tempered drummer in a jazz
band led by "Pete Kelly"
(played by Jack Webb). When the band refused to get involved
with
organized crime, Milner's character verbally insulted the crime boss
and
then physically assaulted one of his men. The drummer was
then
shot
down in an alley. Although Milner's character thus exited the
film
early, his performance was a memorable one.
Milner's 1955
television appearances included: The
Schlitz Playhouse of Stars episode "The Schoolmarm" (February
11), the Dragnet
episodes "The Big Key" (February 24) and "The Big Note" (May 5), and
the comedic Halls
of Ivy
episode "Changing of Professors" (May 31). He also was performing as
a regular cast member on the popular television series The
Life of Riley, playing "Don Marshall," the
boyfriend of "Babs Riley" in 1955.
1956
was a productive year for Milner. He
continued in his regular cast role as "Don
Marshall" on the
television series The
Life
of Riley. On January 20, the episode "Bab's Wedding" was seen
on
television
as Milner's character moved up a notch in the Riley family, becoming
Riley's son-in-law. Life
of Riley page
In addition, he appeared
in some
substantive roles in three films: On
the Threshold of Space, Screaming
Eagles, and Pillars
of the Sky. He also appeared in eight episodes of
different television series: The
Great Gildersleeve (February 9), TV
Reader's
Digest (May 7), The Charles Farrell Show (August
27), West Point Story (October 5),
Telephone Time (October 14),
Science Fiction Theatre (November 9), Crossroads (November
16), and Navy Log (December 5).
He landed a part as
one of the Earp
brothers in Gunfight
at the O.K. Corral
and began filming for that in the Spring. Though his part in O.K.
Corral was
brief, Milner, 24, superbly portrayed the handsome, likable
18-year-old lawman who was gunned down in the street, prompting the
showdown between "Wyatt Earp" (played by Burt Lancaster), his two
remaining brothers, and "Doc Holiday" (played by Kirk
Douglas),
and
the Clanton gang. As in many other
appearances, Milner convincingly portrayed characters younger
than
his actual age. Gunfight
at the O.K. Corral screenshots
In
the Fall, he began
filming Man
Afraid, and he ended the year 1956 by landing an
important role in Sweet Smell of Success,
which started filming in November.
Burt Lancaster, co-star
in Sweet Smell of Success and partner in its
producing company, Hecht-Lancaster Productions, recommended Milner for the romantic lead role
opposite newcomer Susan Harrison in the film.
|

Mr.
Roberts (1955) DVD
screenshot

Francis in the Navy (1955) - With Clint Eastwood in back on left
(Source:
http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

The Life of Riley (1955-1958)
screenshot
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/alcus2/riley.html)

On the Threshold of Space (1956) - With Guy
Madison
(Source
URL: http://www.briansdriveintheater.com/guymadison.html)

Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957)
DVD screenshot
- With Burt
Lancaster
|
1957-1959:
The Sweet Smell of Success...
|
Milner
has recalled that 1957 was the most important year in his life.
In February, the 25-year-old actor married Judith Beth Jones,
a
22-year-old actress
and singer from Waukegan, Illinois. The ceremony took place
in
the Waukegan home of Judy's parents, Allen and Marjory Jones. Milner's
step-father, Bill Cini, designed the engagement and wedding
rings for Judy. Milner had met Judy at a Hollywood
dinner
party hosted by a mutual friend in May
1956. She had given him her phone number, he called
for a
date a week later, and the rest was
history. He later recalled knowing after only 3 to 4
weeks of
dating
that he and Judy would be married. Once married, Judy made it
clear she did not want to work. Prior to marrying Milner, she
had
been a popular telephone girl for TV personality Tom Duggan and had a
promising career ahead of her. Her career of choice was to be
a
full-time homemaker. When film and TV series offers
were made to
Judy after they were married, she
declined. As Milner later described it, "She told me flat out
that she had no intention of working after we were married. She really
wanted to make a home and have children. She wanted six... until she
had four. I was really
pleased because that's the kind of life I had in mind too" (Photoplay
Magazine, February 1973). Marty
& Judy
Milner scrapbook
It
was also during the first three months of 1957 that Milner completed
a major role ("Steve Dallas") in Sweet Smell of Success.
As he said in a 2001 interview with Route 66
Magazine,
"It was a challenging role with very well written dialogue. I
think it was one of the best performances of my career." His
character, a jazz guitar player named "Steve Dallas," was in love with
a gal whose powerful
brother (played by Burt Lancaster) did not approve of the relationship.
So, he sent his hatchet man (played by Tony Curtis) to ruin
the
musician. He first smeared him in the newspapers by
getting a
columnist to brand him a marijuana user and communist. Then,
he
planted marijuana on him and got a corrupt police detective to beat him
up and arrest him. Milner's performance was top-notch. Lancaster's and
Curtis' characters were so despicable that
Milner's character, who got the girl in the end, came off as the
audience favorite. In 1993, Sweet Smell of Success
was named to the National Film Registry. Sweet
Smell of Success screenshots
It
was roughly at the same time as Sweet Smell of Success was
in production that Milner filmed a
bit part in Desk Set, which starred Spencer
Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. In an interview a year later, he
listed the two as his
favorite actors -- so working with them, no matter the size of his part
in the film, must have been a personal thrill.
Soon after his
February wedding, Milner appeared on the television series West
Point
Story for a second time (April 26), and shortly thereafter,
the films Desk
Set, Gunfight
at the O.K. Corral, Man Afraid, and Sweet Smell of Success
were released at the box offices. Still working on
the
cast of The Life of Riley, he ended the
year filming substantial
roles in Marjorie Morningstar and Too
Much Too Soon.
1957 was
also a challenging year for Milner and his
wife when they bought their first house which was old and
needed a lot of repair. By
November,
they knew a baby was on the way in 8 months. A film in which
he
was to have a part was canceled before production started. He
was working on a pilot for a new TV series, Starr, First
Baseman, which would be completed early in 1958, but it
didn't sell. (In the prospective show, he played a
New York Yankees ballplayer who was hit in the head with a pitch and
struggled back to recovery. It
would not be publicly aired until 1965.) So, he learned
how
to
do carpentry and repaired the house on his own. He would
continue
to use his new carpentry skills in future homes as well.
Milner
started off
the year 1958 with two television series appearances: The Millionaire (March
19) and Wagon Train
(April 9), and two films: Marjorie
Morningstar (opened April 5) and Too Much Too Soon (opened May 31). The former film was a
starring role for him opposite Gene
Kelly and Natalie Wood that won widespread acclaim.
Wood
played "Marjorie," a young woman who fell in love with an older man,
"Noel Airman," (played by Kelly) while
working at a summer camp.
Milner's character, "Wally Wronkin," was in love with her, while
Kelly's character was uninterested. A few months after the release of
the Marjorie
Morningstar, Martin and
Judy had their first child, Amy Elizabeth, on July 2, 1958. In October, he began filming for Compulsion
in
which he had landed another major part. In November, he appeared in the
television show Westinghouse
Desilu Playhouse
to end the year's performances. In
an October 17,
1958, interview with Screen News,
Milner
reported that he still enjoyed book binding, golf, and attending
ballet in his leisure, and could boast of such skills as tap dancing,
juggling, and knife throwing. He
also enjoyed playing
Scrabble, completing crossword
puzzles, buying new clothes
(especially sports clothes), and driving his car, an Austin-Healey. He indicated
that he worked out three times a week at the Hollywood Athletic Club
and very much enjoyed taking steam baths. He expressed a
musical preference for
Dixieland jazz; classical works by Ravel, Tchaikovsky, and Borodin;
and popular tunes by Frank Sinatra and June Christy. His
favorite actors, he said,
were Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy, David
Wayne, and Paul Muni, and he hoped someday to be able to play in a
comedy with Rosalind Russel and Cary Grant. A Methodist, he
said
he attended church every Sunday, and enjoyed his quiet time, preferring
to avoid a lot of noise or "noisy people." He considered
himself
very systematic -- for example, he read the newspaper every day from
column to column. He added, "I don't know how many room-mates
I've driven to distraction because I'm neat to the point of sickness."
In 1959, Milner
appeared in seven television
series episodes: Rawhide, Clint Eastwood's series,
(January 23), Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse (March
23),
Playhouse 90 (April 16), Steve Canyon (June
2), The
Millionaire (September 16), Hotel de Paree (October 16),
and U.S. Marshall (October 31).
He
also starred on the
big screen as "Sid Brooks" as the murder courtroom drama Compulsion
hit theaters in April. Set in 1924 Chicago and based on a real-life
thrill killing
of an adolescent boy, Compulsion
starred Orson Wells as the attorney defending the two law students
responsible for the murder. Milner's character, a fellow law
student working as a reporter, assisted the prosecution by helping
discover a clue to the
murderers' identities. Shortly after the release of Compulsion,
Milner began filming of The Private Lives of Adam and
Eve in July and August. He ended the year
filming Sex Kittens Go to College.
|


Mr. & Mrs. Martin
Milner
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Sweet Smell of Success (1957)
DVD screenshot
- With Tony
Curtis, Burt Lancaster, Sam Levene

Marjorie
Morningstar (1958)
screenshot - With Natalie Wood
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Rawhide (1959)
screenshot - With
Clint Eastwood
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Compulsion (1959)
DVD screenshot - With Edward
Binns
|
1960-1964:
The Route
66 Years...
|
1960
marked the
beginning of Milner's career as a leading man in popular television
shows that would keep him in the weekly public eye for most
of the
next 15 years. He began the year with an appearance on The
Twilight Zone (February
26). He also had
major roles in two films, 13
Ghosts
(opened in July) and Sex Kittens Go to College
(opened in October). In addition to playing a leading role in Sex
Kittens, he was also Associate Producer with Robert Hill who
wrote the
screenplay.
Twilight
Zone screenshots
|
LEFT: Twilight Zone (1960)
DVD screenshot; CENTER: 13
Ghosts (1960) DVD
screenshot - With Charles Herbert; RIGHT: Sex
Kittens Go to College (1960) - With Mamie Van Doren
|
Next,
Milner turned his attention toward the
hour-long television
series Route
66 that appeared on
CBS on Friday nights at 8:30 beginning on October 1, 1960.
Route
66
ran for four seasons (116 episodes), with its final airing
on March 13, 1964. The series focused on "Tod Stiles,"
(Milner's
character) who, following the death of his father, drove
around the country in his Chevy Corvette in search of adventure.
Milner's traveling companion was played by George Maharis
("Buz
Murdock," 1960-1963) and Glenn Corbett ("Lincoln 'Linc' Case,"
1963-1964). When the show began to air, Milner told an
interviewer, "This is the first series in which I've starred and we
think it has a good chance of success. There is great variety
in
the scripts and situations, and we don't try to beat one idea to death
by repetition" (Chicago Daily Tribune TV Week,
August 27, 1960). Eleven episodes of Route 66, including the pilot, appeared on TV in 1960. Route
66 page
The show was the brainchild of
producer Herb Leonard and writer
Stirling Silliphant, who created it in the Spring of 1959 and
tried it out on a show they were producing called Naked City.
The idea was to pair up a wealthy preppy kid with a poor
street-wise kid. They did so in a Naked City
episode, a sort of "mini-pilot," and when it worked, they set out to
produce a real pilot. They decided that Maharis, who had
worked
on Naked City, would fit the bill for the street
kid. For
the preppy kid, Leonard had narrowed it down to two candidates: Robert
Redford and Martin Milner. Milner got the part because of his
television and film experience; Redford only had stage experience.
|
Milner
later
summarized the show's focus, "It
represented the spirit of movement and adventure in the
country. It was
a natural. From the very beginning the show had a great
following and
became very popular. I tried to talk them out of using a
Corvette in
the show. I did my best to convince them to use something really
exotic. I said, 'Let's get a Ferrari. A Corvette is too ordinary.'
Remember, I'm a Californian and I was used to seeing
'vettes. To me a
Ferrari was really something special. But we went with
Chevrolet and
used Corvettes. It was the perfect vehicle ("A Route
66 Portrait").
The pilot episode,
"Black November" introduced "Tod Stiles," a
Yale-educated rich kid whose father had died leaving him nothing but
his car, a stylish 1960 Corvette. "Buz Murdock," who worked
for
Tod's father, was left without a job when the father's shipping
business
died with him. So, the two hopped in the car and started
driving,
literally looking to start a new life. The first episode
supposedly took place in the fictitious town of Garth, Alabama, but
when a town could not be located in Alabama to fit production needs,
Concord, Kentucky, was chosen instead. To this day, the small
town points to the filming of the first episode of Route 66
there as its claim to fame.
|

Route 66 (1960-1964) screenshot
|
Route
66,
though filmed in black and
white because CBS did not yet have color technology, was unique because
it was
the first television show to be shot entirely on location throughout
the country
at a time when most series were
shot in studio back lots. The first season alone brought
Milner to
New Orleans, Louisiana; Kanab, Utah; Port Hueneme, California; Grants
Pass, Oregon; Merlin, Oregon; Page, Arizona; and Carlsbad, New Mexico.
According to a TV Guide article the week
of July 22, 1961, Milner and the Route 66
crew had traveled over 19,000 miles and filmed in 36 different
locations in 11 states, having finished its first season and having
been renewed for its second. Despite the challenges of
filming
around the country, the company of between 35 and 50 cast, crew, and
management was able to turn out Season 1 episodes of the show in just
3-1/2 weeks after filming (the normal lag time for producing a show was
6 weeks).
In a December 1989
interview, Milner recalled that what made Route
66 unique,
in addition to the locations for filming, was the content,
dealing with controversial subjects. "I thought we were
breaking
new
ground." He gave the example of the episode "The Thin White Line" in
which "Tod" inadvertently took LSD at a time when the general public
didn't know too much about it. That episode, according to Milner,
was his personal favorite of the series because it was the most
challenging for him as an actor, having to exhibit a wide range of
emotions over a short period. He credited the director of
that
episode, David Lowell Rich, for helping him get through the
performance. As
far as memorable episodes were concerned, the
production manager of the show, Sam Manners, recalled that the most
memorable episode for him was the one in which Milner "accidentally
splattered Lee Marvin's nose wide open." According to
Manners, "It
wasn't funny for Lee, but at the time it was funny for us.
Unfortunately, Lee zigged instead of zagged and Marty hit him flush on
the nose with his right hand. The doctor had to put 20
stitches in
Marvin's nose to patch him up and then we couldn't shoot anything but
long shots until his nose healed"
(Corvette Quarterly, Summer 1990). According to the New York Times
(August 16, 1961), 27 stitches were needed to sew up Marvin's nose at
Allegheny Hospital in Pittsburgh
on the evening of August 15 when the accident occurred while cameras
were rolling as Milner and Marvin acted out a fight scene in a
restaurant. Milner has also recalled some unique moments in
filming the
series, "We were filming on a boat off the coast of Louisiana and were
shooting on an actual boat in a terrible rainstorm. Our
electricity for the lights and everything charged the boat, so every
time we touched a piece of metal we got an electrical shock, but we had
to keep going. I also remember crashing the car a couple of
times
as well" (Route 66 Magazine, Fall 2001).
Because
filming was
done on location
around
the country, Milner spent much of his time away from his home in
Sherman Oaks, California, where his wife Judy
and 1-1/2-year-old daughter Amy remained when the series started
filming. On location in New Orleans for a month, he recalled
phoning his wife. Judy informed him that their daughter had
told
her playmates that she did not have a father. As Milner put
it in an
interview with Silver Screen
in February 1963, "she couldn't understand why I wasn't around. I
had been gone for a month, and she figured I was gone for keeps."
It was then that he and Judy decided the family would stay
together on this Route 66
adventure. Judy and Amy joined him for the remainder of
filming
for the season.
Despite the challenges of taking his family on the road, Milner thought
Route 66 was doing the right thing filming
on location. He told a TV Guide
interviewer in July 1961 that , "We're doing it the way it should be
done and it would be very easy to have done it all at Hollywood. I
figure to give it four more years. By that time I
will
have had an education on the road and my daughter Amy will be starting
in school. I want to be home for that. Furthermore,
I'll
have enough in the bank by then to be able to do what I want to do,
maybe even take a year off and go around with Judy and the girls."
By 1962, his yearly intake for the show was $125,000, plus a
new
automobile each year from Chevrolet (Milner asked for a station wagon,
not a Corvette like his acting partner George Maharis).
In
late
1960, Judy and Amy took a
respite from traveling with the Route 66
crew during Judy's last few months of pregnancy
with
her second child. Milner
later recalled in a March 1962 interview with TV Picture Life
that, despite the difficulties of traveling, he wouldn't
change a thing. When Judy and Amy went home to the San
Fernando
Valley so Judy could give birth to Molly,
Milner recalled,
"It was awful. I don't function as well without her. As tough as it
is moving a family about the country every eight or ten days, it's
worse not having them along."
|
In
January 1961, after
long delays, the film The
Private Lives of Adam and Eve was released at box offices. It
had mostly been
filmed in July and August of 1959, with some additional scenes
completed in May 1960, but the controversial nature of the film (a
comedy/science fiction fantasy that featured a dream in which Milner's
character was the scantily-clad Biblical Adam in the Garden of Eden)
delayed final release. The film was rated "Condemned" by the Catholic
Legion of
Decency
for its sexuality and nudity, and co-director Mickey Rooney had to
leave more film on the cutting floor than he would have preferred.
Milner
flew
home from Phoenix, Arizona, to visit Judy and Amy,
arriving late in
the afternoon on January 20, 1961. He recalled being
exhausted and, when he finally got home, told Judy (kiddingly) not to
have the baby that night because he was "too pooped" to drive her to
hospital. When Judy went into labor that night, he managed to
get her
to St. Vincent Hospital just in time for the 2 am arrival of his second
child, Molly Bess, on January 21. As he later put it,
"God got
us there... I wasn't in any shape to." For the remainder of
the
season, Judy stayed home with Amy and Molly. They would join
the Route 66 caravan once again the Fall 1961,
going home again just before Judy gave birth to their third child. On March 4,
1962,
the Milner clan once
again increased in size with the arrival of the first boy in the
family, Stuart Martin (Milner flew home from Dallas just in time for
Stuart's
birth). The females would still have the advantage,
however, for almost the next two years.
|

The Private Lives of Adam
and Eve (1961)
(Source URL: www.briansdriveintheater.com/beefcake5.html)
|
When
asked in
the Spring 1962 about how long he expected to be starring
in Route 66,
Milner said, "I'm fully prepared to go the length of my contract--five
years." But, he added that it would be possible for a TV
series
to be on the air too long, to the detriment of the stars involved in a
show. "Six or seven years is too long. I think
three years
is ideal. It's a difficult decision to make, however, because
if
a show runs six or seven years, you could be rich at the end of that
time. My main worry is that after a certain point, you become
so
identified with a character and a series that you might not be able to
get work when your show goes off the air. I'm not living in a
dream world. I'm preparing myself in case that happens to me"
(Detroit Free Press Weekly TV Channels, June 3,
1962).
In April 1962, Route
66
co-star George Maharis caught hepatitis and was admitted to
St.
John's Hospital in Santa Monica. Everyone on the set,
including
Milner, was immediately inoculated for the infectious disease. Maharis
was hospitalized a month before he was able to return
to
work. The Route 66 crew waited until
Maharis was ready
early in the Summer before traveling to the next film locations in
Washington and Oregon. In
mid-November 1962, Maharis again
left the show, indicating he had experienced a relapse. While
Maharis was away from the show, Milner's work load doubled.
He
ended up doing six episodes on his own. There were rumors that Maharis
was unhappy with
the
show, the travel, and even Milner. When asked by TV Guide in January 1963
about
the rumors and critical comments made by Maharis about Milner, a
self-effacing Milner praised Maharis' talent and said, "He sounds like
he's kind of mad at me. I'm sorry. We never had any
trouble
during the first years of the show. I guess this illness has
sort
of gotten to him, which is understandable." Maharis never
returned to the show, so Glenn Corbett was hired to replace him as the
character "Linc." In
Movie Screen Yearbook in 1963, Route
66
creator and writer, Stirling Silliphant gave his opinion about Maharis'
leaving the show, "I think Maharis is impatient to get on with his own
career. He has had no regard for this company, his co-star,
Marty
Milner, and the 50 or 60 other people on the show."
Milner
and Corbett developed a camaraderie that was reflected in the
characters of "Tod" and "Linc." Milner later recalled one
incident in particular, "Most of the time we worked thirteen out of
fourteen days on the road; we took every other Sunday off. So
it
was always a big deal to get a day off. Occasionally, if we didn't have
a cover set and it rained, we'd take a day off or finish
early. In Poland Springs, Maine, we had someplace we wanted to go; I
was
really hoping to get off early. It's 4 or 5 o'clock and it
was a
real cloudy day, and Glenn always joked that he could do a rain dance
and make it rain. He'd done it several times before, so the
associate producer, Lenny Katzman, who now produces 'Dallas', and I set
this joke up. We drew all the hieroglyphics on the ground
that
Glenn used to draw when he was gonna do this Indian rain dance, we drew
a big circle and put the Indian symbols in there, and we drew it right
close to a barn where we were working. And Glenn got in the
circle and started to do his rain dance. He was bobbing up
and
down and bending over and throwing his head up to the sky and Lenny and
I climbed up on the roof with two buckets of water, and then when he
threw his head up to the sky we just doused him in water!" (TV
Collector, July-August 1986).
By
the end of the
third season, Route 66 had become a winner
in
the network ratings wars. According to Producer Herb Leonard,
the
show "could have run for years... The people at Chevrolet and
I
had been discussing taking Tod and Buz to Europe after the fourth
season. Route 66 could have been the first
American series shot abroad" (Motorbrook
International, 1966). As it was, the series ended after the
fourth season, and
Robert
Culp and Bill Cosby would have the distinction of being the first
American series shot on location abroad in their 1965-68 show, I
Spy.
|
By
January 1963,
Milner's Route 66 entourage included him, his
wife,
4-1/2-year-old Amy, 2-year old Molly, 10-month-old Stuart, a
shaggy terrier named Cupcake, and a housekeeper, Mrs. Mildred Miller.
Miller had served as housekeeper for Milner's family since
1948, so she was part of the family. Cupcake
had to attend special doggy school to
learn how to spend a lot of time in a car without getting car sick.
Milner
had a huge rack built on
top of his new Chevy Green Briar sports wagon to carry luggage and
belongings and
built extra cribs or beds as needed to accommodate his growing family.
While filming went on during the daytime, Judy dropped off
and picked up Amy from preschools (a new one in each town), bought
groceries, went
to laundromats and dry cleaners, and shopped for two of her favorite
things, antiques and pewter.
In addition to the exposure to new sights and people at filming
locations around the country, the Route 66 crew
kept entertained by fielding a softball team to take on small-town
teams whenever possible. Although his co-star George Maharis
did
not play on the team, Milner relished playing shortstop. He
also enjoyed collecting antiques from across the country to decorate
his home in Sherman Oaks, California; meeting new people; and specking
out local cuisine (especially the varieties of garlic bread).
|

Judy, Stuart, Molly, Amy,
& Martin (1963)
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)
|
In
a February 1963 interview with Silver Screen,
Milner
reflected on married life, his career, and himself. He
clearly
believed his wife Judy was what kept him going each day. He
knew
that soon after they started dating, "it seemed to me after three or
four weeks we just knew we were going to get married. I knew
that
I was in love with Judy, and I didn't figure I could get along very
well without her." The two shared a philosophy of life from
the
beginning. As Milner put it, "She's kind of an old-fashioned
girl, I guess... she wasn't too interested in a lot of frills, a lot of
fancy things. Her tastes were a lot like mine, simple. And
she was interested in real things." According to Milner, Judy
was
not the typical Hollywood girl, "Compared with the average Hollywood
girl, Judy was quite a contrast, quite a breath of fresh air" --
someone who would just as soon spend a quiet evening at home or seeing
a movie as opposed to going out drinking on the town. Judy
also
shared Milner's view of married life. "Judy's used to the kind of home
where the man had a great deal to say," Milner explained. At
the
same time, he fully expected to share responsibilities with his wife.
As he put it, "I guess maybe I'm the last of the breed of man
that doesn't mind taking responsibilities. You know, in many
cases, women have taken over a lot of the male responsibilities, but I
think the males surrendered it willingly, to get out of the bother of
it. You know--'Don't bother me with the household problems. You pay the
bills. Don't bother me with the
children.'
I never felt that way. I want to have my say-so."
Milner's "say-so" was that he wanted his family kept
together, no
matter what.
When Route 66
came along, then, it was no surprise
that Judy and
the kids were along for the ride. "When I was first offered
the
show, I was offered a couple of others at the same time, but I felt
this one had the best chance to be successful, and would do the most
for me if it were. So Judy and I discussed it. I
knew
exactly what the show would entail and I went into it with open eyes.
And Judy said, 'Well, do whatever you think would be best for
you, the only provision being that if you're going to travel a lot, I
want to come along...'. Her feeling is that she would prefer
to
be at home, but not without me. She would prefer to come
along on
the road, get along as best she can with the children rather than stay
home alone." Life on the road was not easy, he admitted, but
by
the same token, he and Judy didn't need too much to keep them happy. "I
think I'm a pretty sensible type fellow, not too
frivolous. I like to do ordinary things. We don't live an
exciting
life by Hollywood standards or by New York standards. But
it's
very pleasant. We enjoy it," Milner said (Silver
Screen, February 1963).
In
the Spring of
1964, as Route 66 came
to the end of its
run, Milner switched gears again. On May 31, he appeared
on The
Dupont Show of the Week
in a comedy-drama about an average married man who
became
rich overnight and began leading a life of extravagance. He
then
took a
few months
to
settle back into a more sedentary lifestyle with his wife, daughters
Amy
(5-1/2) and
Molly (3), son Stuart (2), and newborn Andrew William (who had entered
the world on
January 5, the day before his dad was supposed to return to Florida to
finish filming Route 66).
|
1965-1967:
Between "Tod" and "Pete"...
|
As
1965 rolled
around, Milner was in high gear, appearing on ten
television shows: Slattery's People
(January 8), Kraft
Suspense Theatre (February 25), four
episodes of Bob Hope Presents Chrysler Theatre (March
5, April 2 & 9, June 4), The Virginian
(March 10), Vacation Playhouse (July 23),
Gidget (September 29),
and Laredo (September 30). Two of the Chrysler
Theatre episodes featured parts I and II of a TV movie, Memorandum
for a Spy (aka: Asylum for a Spy). The
Vacation Playhouse episode was the first airing of the old
pilot, Starr, First Baseman that had been
filmed back in
1957-1958.
In addition to his
TV appearances in 1965, Milner was also part of the first
stock company that played the
Broadway comedy "Any
Wednesday" on the
Florida circuit of Palm Beach and Coconut Grove under the direction of
Howard Erskine. Also starring were Zachary Scott and Ruth Ford in the
performances at the Royal Poinciana Playhouse on February 22-27,
and again at Miami's Coconut Grove Playhouse in March. Written
by
Muriel Resnick, the enormously popular play was about a New York executive's mistress, "Ellen
Gordon," who fell for the executive's handsome young associate (played
by Milner) when he was inadvertently sent to use the apartment where
the executive and his mistress met on Wednesdays.
In June, he starred
in the big screen release of Zebra
in the Kitchen as
"Dr.
Del Hartwood," a veterinarian at a zoo in the family-oriented comedy
about a boy who released
all the animals at the zoo. Zebra
in the Kitchen screenshots
His
guest appearance as "The Great Kahuna" on Gidget in
September 1965 was a memorable one. A youthful
34-year-old, he played a 28-year-old surfer who lived in a hut on
Malibu Beach. Nicknamed "The Great
Kahuna" and revered by the adolescent beach-goers as the world's
greatest
surfer, Milner's character was a man free of all cares in life except
hitting the waves when
someone yelled "surf's up!" The much younger "Gidget"
(played by Sally Field) became infatuated with
him until her father conspired with "Kahuna" to persuade her otherwise.
Gidget
screenshots
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Zebra in the Kitchen (1965)
screenshot

Gidget (1965)
screenshot
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In
1966, Milner resumed
his role in the play "Any
Wednesday"
with a new lead actress, Connie
Stevens. The
play was performed January
11-23 at
MelodyLand, a brand-new 3,200-seat theatre-in-the-round in
Anaheim, California. He appeared as a guest star
in episodes on four television
series in 1966: Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
(February 2), A Man Called Shenandoah
(May 2), The Virginian
(November 2), and 12 O'Clock
High (December 16). He also
traveled to Europe to star in the film Liebesspiele im Schnee
(aka: Ski Fever
in the U.S.). He played a girl-chasing American music student
teaching skiing at a resort in the Alps to pay for tuition.
Although the film was released in Europe in December 1966, it
would take another 3 years for American audiences to see the movie.
Filming for another movie, Sullivan's Empire,
was also completed in 1966.
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Milner's
TV appearances in 1967 were on Run for Your Life
(two episodes as "Col. Mike Green" on February 13 and April 18), The Rat
Patrol (February 27), Felony
Squad (October 26), and Insight (November
12). On the episode of Rat Patrol,
Milner made his
only guest
appearance on the World War II television show, playing "Sgt. Roberts,"
a German spy who had infiltrated the U.S. Army
and was plotting to disrupt the Allied command. The Rat
Patrol screenshots
He appeared
in two films in 1967: Sullivan's
Empire which was released in January, and Valley of
the Dolls
which opened in theaters in December. In the former, he
played
the leading role as the oldest of three brothers who went in search of
their missing father in the Brazilian jungle. Filmed as a
pilot
for a proposed TV series in which Milner would have starred, it was
released at theaters but the series never came to be.
In the Fall of
1967, he was rehearsing in Paramus, New Jersey, and at the Bucks County
Playhouse in New Hope, Pennsylvania, for the Broadway
sex comedy "The 90 Day Mistress" when he was contacted by his old
friend, Jack Webb. Webb wanted him to do a pilot for a new TV
series. Milner had a week's break in rehearsals, so he flew
out
to Los Angeles to film the pilot.
He then returned for the
November 6 opening of "The
90 Day Mistress" at the
Biltmore Theatre on
Broadway, playing the male lead, "Danny Liken." As Milner later
recalled, "I was sure that the play was gonna be a big hit and didn't
really think too much of the chances of the pilot. And the
play
was just an awful failure, just went into the toilet, and fortunately
I'd done the pilot and the pilot sold, so once again I was lucky and
not smart!" (The
TV Collector, May-June 1995).
The play ended its run on November 25, and Milner
headed back to Los Angeles to work on the set of a new show based on
the pilot, Adam-12.

Cast
of "The 90 Day Mistress"
from left to right:
Martin Milner, Dyan Cannon, Ruth Ford, Walter
Abel. New
York Times (November
5, 1967) p. D3.
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The Rat Patrol (1967)
screenshot

Poster: Sullivan's Empire (1967)

Theater Poster (1967)
|
1968-1975: "The
Strawberry Fox" Drives a Patrol Car Now...
|
Milner
began the year 1968 filming another pilot for a proposed television
show starring Rory Calhoun, Land's End, which aired
on April 21. In June, a 1965 episode of the TV show Laredo
in which he had appeared was pieced together with other episodes and
released as a feature film entitled Three Guns for Texas.
Then, life changed dramatically.
From the Fall 1968 to Spring
1975,
Milner starred as
"Officer Peter Joseph Malloy" in the half-hour-long NBC television
series Adam-12. His partner throughout
the 7-year series was Kent
McCord who played "Officer James Reed." Milner (11 years
older
than
McCord) played an experienced officer in the Los Angeles Police
Department (LAPD) who took on training the rookie probationer. "Pete
Malloy" (nicknamed "The Strawberry Fox") was the consummate bachelor, a
lady's man whose various dating experiences and rants against marriage
contrasted to the younger officer, "Jim Reed," who praised the settled
married life. "Reed" and his wife "Jean" welcomed "Malloy"
into their
family, which included a newborn son to whom they asked "Malloy" to be
godfather. Adam-12 page
Click Here to Watch
Adam-12
Milner's
long-standing friendship and working relationship with the show's
producer, Jack Webb, was not the only reason he was tapped for the
starring role in the show. As Milner told TV Guide
in
November 1968, "I'm probably the best in the business at hitting camera
marks while driving. With all my experience, I can pull right
into a close-up." All that driving around the country for Route
66 had paid off. Milner's part was actually
filled after
that of
the rookie officer in the police duo. Kent McCord, like
Milner,
had worked for Jack Webb on the Dragnet series, but
by himself in the episode "The Big Interrogation."
Because of that performance, Webb had
already decided to cast McCord as "Officer Jim Reed" before a decision
was
made on who would play "Officer Pete Malloy." For the role of
"Malloy," according to
producer Robert A. Cinader, Martin
Milner
was
the natural choice: "The guy
had to be physically right, and he had to have the range and facility
as an actor to project the totally credible illusion of a cop, and do
it in an attractive way. As soon as Milner's name came up,
everybody said 'that's the guy.' Along with his experience
and
maturity, there's this wholesome and still youthful quality about him."
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Adam-12 (1968-1975)
screenshots
Bottom: with Kent McCord.
|
One of the main goals of the producers of Adam-12
was to
depict
the daily life of LAPD patrol officers. Consequently, both
Milner and McCord spent six months sitting in the
back of real LAPD patrol cars on duty so they could get a feel for the
job they were to portray. Milner rode around South Los
Angeles
and McCord around Hollywood. Writers for the show had to do
the
same. The episodes themselves were based on actual LAPD case
histories
and
criminal records. Each of the 16 divisions of the LAPD had to
take turns sending a sergeant as a technical adviser during the filming
of each episode. The badges used by the actors were actual
LAPD
badges delivered to the set on a daily basis. Realism and authenticity was essential. Scenes involving
Milner and McCord sitting inside the patrol car talking while on patrol
were shot using cameras mounted on the hood (or the trunk in later
episodes) as the car was towed or driven through the streets of Los
Angeles. The film crew even had to devise a canopy system for
the
hood of the car to prevent glare on the windshield during filming.
Filming itself went on three to four days a week, but on
those days,
Milner often
skipped lunch to watch daily screenings in order to improve his
performance.
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On
the home front, the Milner family by the Fall of 1968 lived in a
mock-adobe house on a dead-end street in Van Nuys, California. Judy was
occupied taking care of the home, the kids, and her husband. She drove
their kids, who now ranged in ages from 10 to 4,
along
with some of the neighborhood kids, to school each day in a 6-door
airport bus. Milner proudly drove the other car in the
family, a
restored 1953 Bentley Sedan de Ville that once belonged to Frank Lloyd
Wright. He spent his
leisure time at home, often working
on
projects in his small woodworking shop in the furnace room. He
repaired pieces of primitive American furniture to use in the house,
and made miniature doll houses for his wife and daughters, complete
with
electrical wiring and furniture. He became obsessed with
completing the first doll house, according to his wife Judy. Milner
said, "She says I've got a completely one-track mind,
and
I guess she's right. While I was working on it, I was called
about doing a Tarzan guest spot. I didn't
want to go to
Acapulco and the part didn't sound very exciting, but the real reason I
turned it down was that I couldn't leave the doll house right then" (TV
Guide, November 23, 1968).
On December 12,
1968, Milner appeared on an episode of Dragnet
with Kent McCord. The two played their Adam-12
characters being interviewed in an internal affairs investigation about
another officer. "Sergeant Friday" (Jack Webb) and his
partner (Harry
Morgan of MASH fame) were the
interviewers.
In March 1969, Milner's last big screen
production, Ski
Fever, opened
at the box offices in the
U.S. In the romantic comedy, he
played Brian Davis, an American music student at a
European university who taught skiing at an
Austrian resort to pay
for
tuition. The film had been produced in and released
in
western Europe in 1966 as Liebesspiele
im Schnee, and
was the last film directed by German-born
Curt Siodmak. It was shelved in the U.S. until 1969, when
Milner's popularity in Adam-12 convinced the film's
distributor to release it to American audiences.
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At home with his Bentley
(c.1968)
(Source: http://www.geocities.com/martin_milner/)

Dragnet (1968)
screenshot - Martin Milner,
Jack Webb, Harry Morgan, Kent McCord |
At
home, Milner revealed in
an interview with TV News in July 1969, that he had
a couple of new hobbies, fishing and water skiing. A few months later, he
said he
spent much of his free time working on his house, having just remodeled
two rooms. "We live in a big old house with six bedrooms and
lots
of acreage. So, we have ample room in which to entertain
friends,
but we seldom do. And we're not entertained by the 'in'
group -- very few of our friends are in the industry. We're not
the way
Hollywood people are supposed to be. We're just ordinary. Sometimes I
wonder if we shouldn't be more flamboyant!
But
the fact is, Judy and I don't like to run with the crowd. For
example, if everyone rushed out to buy a Mustang, then we don't seem to
want one. I drive a Bentley that's several years old, and
Judy
has a Checker elongated airport bus. It's painted white with
a
blue racing stripe -- and it's her only car" (Inside TV,
October 1969).
According to Milner, he and his
family tried to be ordinary folks.
"There's just my wife and our kids. We don't belong
to any
group. Sometimes I worry because we're such an ordinary
family
and live such a completely ordinary life" (Inside TV,
October
1969). While the family Rottweiler, 150-lb. "Hector" as they
named him, might have been rather ordinary, the Milner family also had
an alligator as a pet. Among the other ordinary aspects of
Milner's life was the fact that, despite a rigorous schedule working on
Adam-12, he made it to every one of his kids'
graduating
ceremonies, clearing his schedule of everything to ensure he could be
the gloating parent.
Milner's
popularity increased dramatically as Adam-12
rose in the ratings. On September 28, 1970, he and his Adam-12
co-star Kent McCord appeared on the popular Tonight Show hosted by
Johnny Carson. Then, in
July 1971, he appeared on his first game show, Hollywood
Squares. He would go on to appear on
a number of episodes of gameshows in the 1970s: Hollywood
Squares, Password, To Say the Least, and
Tattletales, the latter on which his wife Judy
would join him. In September 1971, he had the distinction of being the
first murder victim, "Jim Ferris," on the Columbo
television movie series starring Peter Falk as a homicide detective
with the Los Angeles Police Department. He also served as guest host on November 2,
1971, on The
Golddiggers, a
popular variety spin-off from The Dean
Martin Show. Gameshows page
In 1971, Milner
moved his family from the Los Angeles area to a 24-acre ranch with
about 2,500 avocado trees in Fallbrook, California, over 100 miles away
from the city. All
four
of Milner's kids had been hospitalized for respiratory problems when
the family lived in Van Nuys. The increasingly poor air
quality
in Los Angeles in the late 60s and early 70s was taking its toll on
many. In a February 1973 interview with Photoplay
Magazine,
Milner explained the move so far from the city,
"Judy and I talked it over very thoroughly before we made the big move.
We'd been looking for a ranch, a real working one, for
several years and then we found this one with acres of avocado trees.
There was only one problem: it was 100 miles from Hollywood.
Judy felt that if I wanted it, fine. I was in a
good series, it was a good move, so we made the big decision: I would
commute." Production for Adam-12
only
went on for 24 weeks of the year, so, according to Milner, "the rest
of the time is my family's. I'm not the kind of guy who goes
bowling with the 'boys.' When I'm home, I'm home."
So, the family took advantage of the benefits of country
living--a simpler lifestyle, less peer pressure on the kids, lots of
space to ride
motorbikes and horses, and plenty of fresh air. With four
bedrooms, two baths, the entire second floor of the house for the kids,
and an attic converted into a game room, the family was more than
comfortable. Outdoors, the hills, valleys, and playhouse on
the property gave the kids room to roam. Milner himself used
his
tried and true carpentry skills to expand the home to fit everyone's
needs: "I constructed an entire room and bathroom by myself, and that
includes the plumbing and electricity. When you work your
knuckles to the bone putting in the pipes for a sink, then turn on the
faucet and the water comes out without dripping at the joints--well
there's real satisfaction there. There are other things in
life
besides making-believe in front of a camera" (Boston Globe,
December 21, 1975).
For
the 3 days a week that Adam-12 was filmed,
Milner stayed in his dressing room on the Universal Studios lot. Then
he drove 100 miles to his ranch and home, an
authentic reproduction of a New England colonial with high-beam
ceilings, fieldstone fireplaces, and wide-plank pegged floors. The
house was adorned with antique hutches, framed "Gilbert
Stuart" type ancestor paintings, and copper pots hanging throughout the
kitchen. In addition to himself, his wife, and four kids, the
house was home to three dogs and three cats. "We also have
two horses," according to Milner, "but they're not allowed in the
house" (TV Guide, August 4, 1973).
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Milner's
popularity from the Adam-12 show continued
to get him plenty of work outside the series. In 1972, he appeared
twice with Kent McCord on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
(September 11 and December 18) and by himself on The Wacky
World of Jonathan Winters (December 16). Milner and McCord
were on a publicity tour for Adam-12 in December
1972, promoting a public safety program for the Department of
Transportation,
when Milner came down with a case of blood poisoning and was rushed to
a
Cincinnati hospital. Doctors were perplexed as to the cause
of
the illness, but he responded to medication and was able to leave after
five days in bed. He resumed his tour with McCord along with
his Adam-12 schedule, much to the relief of
him, his family, his friends, and his fans.
In 1973, Milner was at the height
of his popularity. Although he was
constantly busy, he could foresee a time whe
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