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My Favorite Martian
My Favorite Martianis an American television sitcom that aired on CBS
from September 29, 1963 to May 1, 1966 for 107 episodes (75 in black and white 1963–1965, 32 color 1965–1966).
The show starred Ray Walston as Uncle Martin (the Martian) and Bill Bixby as Tim O'Hara.
A human-looking extraterrestrial in a one-man spaceship crash-lands
near Los Angeles. The ship's pilot is, in fact, an anthropologist from Mars and is now stranded on Earth. Tim
O'Hara, a young newspaper reporter for The Los Angeles Sun, is on his way home from Edwards Air Force Base
(where he had gone to report on the flight of the X-15) back to Los Angeles when he spots the spaceship coming
down.
Tim takes the Martian in as his roommate and passes him off as his
Uncle Martin. Uncle Martin refuses to reveal any of his Martian traits to people other than Tim, to avoid
publicity (or panic), and Tim agrees to keep Martin's identity a secret while the Martian attempts to repair his
ship. Uncle Martin has various unusual powers: he can raise from his head two retractable antennae and become
invisible; he is telepathic and can read and influence minds; he can levitate objects with the motion of his
finger; he can communicate with animals; and he can also speed himself (and other people) up to do
work.
An inventor by trade, Martin also builds several advanced devices,
such as a time machine which can transport Tim and the Martian back to Medieval England and other times and
places, such as St. Louis in 1849, the early days of Hollywood, or bring Leonardo da Vinci and Jesse James into
the present. Another device he builds is a "molecular separator" which can take apart the molecules of a
physical object, or rearrange them (a squirrel was made into a human). Another device can take memories and
store them in pill form to "relearn" them later. Another device can create temporary duplicates, and another
item which can levitate himself and others without the need of his finger.
Tim and Uncle Martin live in a garage apartment owned by a
congenial but scatterbrained landlady, Mrs. Lorelei Brown, who often shows up when not wanted. She and Martin
have a awkward romance from time to time but Martin never gets serious for fear of going home to Mars. She later
dates a vain, cold-hearted, plain-clothes police officer, Detective Bill Brennan, who dislikes Uncle Martin and
is highly suspicious of him.
The first two seasons were filmed in black-and-white (at Desilu),
but the final season was shot in color (at MGM), resulting in minor changes in the set and the format of the
show. In addition to the extraterrestrial powers indicated in the first two seasons, Martin seemed to be able to
do much more in the final season, such as stimulating facial hair to provide him and Tim with a quick disguise,
and levitating with his nose. Brennan's boss, the police chief, was involved in many episodes in the third
season, generally as a device to humiliate the overzealous detective.
"Martin O'Hara's" real name is Exigius 12½. Revealed in "We Love
You, Mrs. Pringle," it was heard again when his real nephew, Andromeda, crash-landed on Earth in the show's
third season. Andromeda, originally devised to bring younger viewers to the aging show, disappeared without
explanation after a single episode and was never referred to again in the two episodes filmed after it, or six
episodes already filmed, but aired afterward (Andromeda was, however, a regular on the later animated series My
Favorite Martians). He had a single antenna, which Martin explains was because his baby antennae had fallen out
and only one adult antenna had come in, so far. Ironically this is the reason for the series cancellation, in an
interview Ray Walston gave to Starlog magazine, he states once CBS heard that Andromeda was to be a regular in
the series fourth season they soon announced the series cancellation.
Produced and shown at the time when other situation comedies
featuring characters who could do things that were out of the ordinary, likeBewitchedandI Dream Of
Jeannie, were initially being produced and shown, My Favorite
Martian could be said to be an example of science fiction comedy, differing from Bewitched and I Dream Of
Jeannie in that the character with comedically unusual abilities was a man rather than a woman, and relied
not on magic but instead on science and advanced technology