Michael Landon Net Worth

Michael Landon Net Worth is
$13 Million

Michael Landon Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Michael Landon (born Eugene Maurice Orowitz; October 31, 1936 – July 1, 1991) was an American actor, writer, director, and producer. He is known for his roles as Little Joe Cartwright in Bonanza (1959–73), Charles Ingalls in Little House on the Prairie (1974–83), and Jonathan Smith in Highway to Heaven (1984–89). Landon appeared on the cover of TV Guide 22 times, second only to Lucille Ball.Landon produced, wrote, and directed many of his series' episodes, including his shortest-lived production, Father Murphy, which starred his friend and "Little House" co-star Merlin Olsen. In 1981, Landon won recognition for his screenwriting with a Spur Award from the Western Writers of America. Although his youngest daughter Jennifer Landon and Bonanza co-star David Canary have both won multiple Emmys, Michael Landon was never nominated for an Emmy. In 1976, Landon wrote and directed an auto-biographical movie, The Loneliest Runner, which was nominated for two Emmys.

Date Of BirthOctober 31, 1936, Forest Hills, New York City, New York, United States
DiedJuly 1, 1991, Malibu, California, United States
Place Of BirthForest Hills, Queens, New York City, New York, USA
Height5' 9" (1.75 m)
ProfessionActor, Producer, Director
EducationUniversity of Southern California, Collingswood High School
NationalityAmerican, American
SpouseCindy Landon (m. 1983–1991), Lynn Noe (m. 1963–1982), Dodie Levy-Fraser (m. 1956–1962)
ChildrenJennifer Landon, Michael Landon, Jr., Leslie Landon
ParentsLaura Louise Colby Ingalls, Landsford Whiting, Eli Maurice Orowitz, Peggy O'Neill
SiblingsHiram Lemuel Ingalls, George Whiting Ingalls, Peter Ingalls, Laura Ladocia Ingalls, Lansford James Ingalls, Lydia Louise Ingalls, "baby boy" Ingalls, Polly Melona Ingalls, Ruby Celestia Ingalls, Evelyn Landon
AwardsInternational Emmy Founders Award
NominationsGolden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama, TV Land Most Memorable Mane Award
MoviesI Was a Teenage Werewolf, The Loneliest Runner, Sam's Son, Love Is Forever, The Legend of Tom Dooley, High School Confidential, Little House on the Prairie, God's Little Acre, Where Pigeons Go to Die, Maracaibo, Little House: The Last Farewell, It's Good to Be Alive, Us
TV ShowsOne to Grow On, Highway to Heaven, Father Murphy, Little House on the Prairie, Bonanza
Star SignScorpio
#Trademark
1Always known for his jokes.
2Thick curly bouncy brown hair.
3Gravelly raspy voice
4Often played friendly roles that depend upon family values
#Quote
1I came home and found my 12-year-old daughter devouring the Laura Ingalls Wilder books. Then I discovered that my wife had devoured them too when she was a girl, and was reading them again. So I went to NBC and told them Little House was it.
2[on his messy divorce from his second wife] The relationship lasted nineteen years. I don't consider that a failed marriage. I don't think it was a disaster. We produced some terrific kids. We just didn't grow in the same direction. We became different people. We both changed. To stay with someone when you no longer have anything in common is the cruelest thing to do to a child. It's much better to divorce and have two parents happy. I don't know if Charles Ingalls would have stayed married to Caroline as long as he did, except that it was a long way to the next house in those days. I was not an aging lecher looking for a fresh young thing. You don't dissolve a relationship to go to bed with someone twenty years younger. You have to have major differences to stop a relationship, after as many years as I was married. With a wife and seven children, there's always a problem. Lynn and I fought a lot, about jealousy, about my being tied up with my work. I'd go into depressed moods, and then I'd go around screaming at people at home and in the studio - and at everyone in sight. Banging down phones, swearing and yelling. But I figure if you don't have these kind of problems, life would just come up with some other unpleasantries for you. Nobody's perfect. Not Charles Ingalls. Not Michael Landon.
3[on blaming one's boss]: When a man knows he's being wronged and that he should yell right back at his boss, but is afraid to because he fears being fired, then he had just convinced himself that he's a coward and that is one of the worst things you can do to a person. I don't blame a man for keeping his mouth shut in circumstances like that, but he will blame himself, and that is horrible.
4[In 1976]: The very worst thing you can do to a man is to make him think he is a coward. If a guy needs his job in order to feed and clothe his kids, he'll put up with a lot of abuse before he fights back. I have seen many men mentally shattered by some big-mouth who screamed and yelled in order to get his way. Most of those men did not deserve the abuse but they had to have their jobs, so they kept their mouths shut - and that made them feel like cowards.
5I feel sorry for people who have problems which are beyond their control, but most of life's problems are our own fault - and sympathy under those conditions doesn't do a bit of good.
6[When he began his directorial debut on Bonanza (1959)]: When I direct, I try to work with a minimum number of set-ups [individual scenes] possible so we have time to do certain shots you usually don't have a chance to do. In the first day of this show, for example, instead of having 15 set-ups, as is normal, we had only three in the can by noon. But they were intricate shots, and this technique pays off in the long run.
7[In 1979]: People would do themselves a great favor if they would take the blame for things that go wrong, and say to themselves, "I've got to do something about this." But you can't do anything if you always blame your problems on someone else. You have to say, "It's my fault, and I'd better do something about this.".
8[Who said in 1980 of Pernell Roberts's departure on Bonanza (1959)]: Pernell didn't like the show and would let you know it, but he rarely cared to do much about improving it. To say a show stinks doesn't make it better. After he left, we took one leaf out of the dining room table and we all made more money because we split the take three ways instead of four.
9[Who differentiated between his Charles Ingalls character and himself]: Ingalls had a beard in real-life, but I don't. The problem is that I can't grow a beard - it just looks like stubble. I wasn't going to play the part for six months with a beard glued to my face so I decided to play him clean-shaven.
10We each have our own miracles. I'm still hoping to beat it.
11[Who wrote the majority of the Little House on the Prairie (1974) episodes, where he had a voice in matters of the series' policy]: We're trying to stick close to the true story. The problem is the books were short and over four years - I think we can run four years - we'll need more than 100 stories. So, we have to invite some.
12I never felt I was going to make it as an actor because to me actors were tall and handsome and had great voices.
13[In 1991]: If I'm gonna die, death's gonna have to do a lot of fighting to get me.
14[In 1974]: Yes I am perfect. It's a problem I've had all my life.
15[on the cancellation of Little House on the Prairie (1974)]: I wanted to destroy the entire town, which I did. Everybody needed the catharsis on that show. We were together for nine years, and that's why we blew it up. That, plus the fact, I didn't want anybody making a trashy movie at Walnut Grove, because I like that town.
16[on his physical technique]: I didn't have the right look. Back then actors were big, muscular, terrific! And I was still 125 pounds and the five foot eleven I'd always be.
17[During his last days]: I don't mind dying if I have to, but I'm damned if I want to pay for the guarantee. I'm sorry.
18[on being so popular on television]: Boy, you gotta be real sick to get this much attention.
19[on his illness]: Well, the news shocked the hell out of me. Nothing was further from my mind, since I'm only 54 and, with rare exceptions, I'd been healthy my whole life. Not that I don't deserve to have a cancer. I'm a good athlete and I work out hard - before this happened I could bench press 300, 350 pounds, no sweat - but I've abused my body over the years. I don't want people to think that everybody is a likely candidate for cancer of this type. I think I have it because for most of my life, though I was never a drunk, I drank too much. I also smoked too many cigarettes and ate a lot of wrong things. And if you do that, even if you think you're too strong to get anything, somehow you're going to pay.
20I want people to laugh and cry, not just sit and stare at the television. Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but I think viewers are hungry for shows in which people say something meaningful.
21I felt my father's presence with me, enlightening my memories, helping me to commit to paper the feelings I had. I really heard my father speaking to me from the other dimension, filling my mind with just the right words. The story came so fast and was so right. In three days, the script was complete.
22I was grown before I realized that other mothers didn't put their heads in the oven.
23Whatever you want to do, do it now. There are only so many tomorrows.
#Fact
1His favorite drink was vodka.
2He began smoking four packs of cigarettes a day in 1961.
3Despite being one of the biggest names in television history, he never came close to being nominated for an Emmy Award, in any category.
4Had hired five of the real-life siblings on the set of Little House on the Prairie (1974), especially children of his own.
5He never practiced any religion as an adult.
6In the "Little House on the Prairie" books, Charles Ingalls wore a beard, but by the time this was turned into a series, Landon's character never wore a beard.
7He wore four-inch lifts in Bonanza (1959) and Little House on the Prairie (1974).
8He was always known to keep his friendship with Johnny Carson and his marriage to Cindy Landon private.
9He attended and celebrated his Bar Mitzvah at Temple Beth Sholom, a Conservative synagogue, then located in Haddon Heights, an area that did not allow Jews until after World War II, now in Cherry Hill. His family recalls that Landon "went through a lot of hassle studying for the big event, which included bicycling to a nearby town every day to learn how to read Hebrew and do the chanting".
10His private life was always bothered by tabloid headlines.
11His ex-Little House on the Prairie (1974) co-star, Melissa Gilbert said in an interview that when she lost her father, Landon became like a surrogate father to her.
12He was one of the four celebrities behind Bob Hope, Johnny Carson and Lucille Ball to appear on the front cover of TV Guide, 15 times.
13On an episode of Highway to Heaven (1984), he directed the episode in which young kids were being diagnosed with cancer, while attending summer camp. In real life, he had also faced the same disease he succumbed to, six years later.
14Was the very first guest on the revised version of Match Game 73 (1973).
15His future Little House on the Prairie (1974) co-star, Karen Grassle was a huge fan of Bonanza (1959), who in turn was handpicked to play his wife, Caroline Ingalls, on the series.
16Immediately jumped to Little House on the Prairie (1974) for the lead role of Charles Ingalls, primarily because of his popularity on Bonanza (1959).
17A plaque and small playground referred to as the "Little Treehouse on the Prairie" was erected in Knights Park, a central park in Landon's hometown of Collingswood. In 2011, the plaque was removed from the park by the borough and was later given to a local newspaper by an unnamed person. According to the Collingswood, New Jersey website, the plaque was removed during a fall cleanup with plans to return that to a safer location. The plaque was reinstated next to a bench in a safer location the following summer.
18Michael Landon passed away on July 1, 1991. Just two months before his death, he made his final guest appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962).
19He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 North Vine Street in Hollywood, California on August 15, 1984.
20He met Marjorie Lynn Noe on the set of Bonanza (1959). They were married for 19 years until their 1982 divorce.
21Was a commercial spokesperson for Kodak Camera in the 1970s and 1980s.
22Depression ran in his family.
23Before he was a successful actor and director, he was also a singer.
24When he married Dodie Levy-Fraser, his parents did not attend the wedding.
25Began directing at age 32.
26Longtime friends with Victor French.
27In 1993, TV Guide listed the Bonanza (1959) two-hour wedding episode, "Forever", as one of television's most memorable specials. Landon's script fondly recalled brother Hoss, who was initially the story's groom, before Dan Blocker's untimely death.
28Acting mentor was Lorne Greene.
29Acting mentor and friends with Melissa Gilbert.
30Had lived in the same area as Dick Van Dyke, Pernell Roberts and Larry Hagman.
31During childhood, he always worried about his mother's suicide attempts.
32His widow Cindy Landon is a vegetarian.
33Used to play tennis with Robert Fuller.
34Was associated with NBC from 1956 through 1990.
35Was hired to direct several episodes of Black Sheep Squadron (1976) that starred Robert Conrad. He was unavailable to do so, due to his contractual obligations working on Little House on the Prairie (1974), at the same network that Black Sheep Squadron, was on, which was NBC.
36Beat out two other actors Robert Blake and Robert Fuller for a co-starring role as Little Joe Cartwright on Bonanza (1959). This was because David Dortort had mixed feelings about the new, unfamiliar actor auditioning for the role, thinking Landon was way too young to play the role. With the encouragement of David's wife, who picked up a publicity still of Landon, her husband changed his mind, and bestowed Landon the role.
37Began his career as a contract player for Warner Bros. Pictures in 1956.
38Was diagnosed with cancer, at the very same time actor Bill Bixby was. Coincidentally, both Bixby and Landon were at the same hospital [April 5, 1991].
39When Michael and Dodie's marriage was floundering, they thought adopting another baby might help, they called him Jason. But they both realized before the final adoption papers had been signed, that it was not the answer. They gave the infant back to the agency and went ahead with a divorce. Michael moved out and got his own apartment (he was allowed visitation w/Mark and Josh). He saw Lynn Noe (second wife) on the Bonanza set and married her in 1963.
40Michael and his first wife Dodie were adopting a son named Jason in 1961. Shortly before or after their divorce in 1962, Dodie gave the child up for adoption to another couple.
41Was a commercial spokesperson for the public service message, Pharmacists Against Drug Abuse, in the early 1980s.
42Was raised near the same city as Bill Cosby.
43Almost got the lead role on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1959), which went to Dwayne Hickman.
44Encouraged by his wife, Landon quit smoking in summer 1989 following his friend Victor French's death.
45On May 21, 1991, he had a near fatal blood clot in his left leg that was successfully treated at Cedars-Sinai Hospital.
46Left an estate worth $100 million.
47Publicly supported Richard Nixon in the 1972 presidential election, and campaigned for Ronald Reagan in the 1980 and 1984 presidential elections.
48Attended Ronald Reagan's second inauguration as Governor of California on January 3, 1971, and his first inauguration as President of the United States on January 20, 1981.
49His final series Highway to Heaven (1984) was canceled at the end of the fifth season, because of low ratings.
50His adoptive son, Mark Landon, died in May 2009 at age 60.
51After his second divorce and the cancellation of Little House on the Prairie (1974), Melissa Gilbert did not keep Landon in touch at all, until she reluctantly called him, when watching her television father on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962). After the call, she went to the Landon home, where Gilbert was his caregiver until his death.
52He once invited Shirley Jones to an art exhibit.
53Had a great deal of hobbies during the prime of his life: fishing, karate, golfing, swimming, spending family time, painting, cooking, playing bridge, playing with disabled people and weightlifting.
54According to Little House on the Prairie (1974), co-star, Karen Grassle, she once said in an interview that he had a very lonely childhood as a result of his parents fighting.
55Landon had appeared in almost every episode of Little House on the Prairie (1974), from 1974 to 1982, with the exception of the final year. He appeared in 177 of the 204 episodes of the series.
56He encouraged his children, not to make the same mistake Landon had made, when he was a teenager. As a result, his children were told to study, without watching television, except only that was Little House on the Prairie (1974).
57His daughter Leslie Landon attended the same middle school as his future Little House on the Prairie (1974), co-star, Melissa Gilbert. Leslie heard Gilbert in the school cafeteria say that she was going to play Laura Ingalls.
58Was very good friends with: Shirley Jones, Karen Grassle, Robert Fuller, James Drury, Doug McClure, Larry Hagman, Bill Bixby, Michele Lee, Brian Keith, Wink Martindale, Buddy Ebsen, James Arness, Bob Hope, Milton Berle, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Don Knotts, Dick Van Dyke, Chuck Connors, Dabbs Greer, Dan Blocker, Robert Conrad, Ronald Reagan, Johnny Carson, Kent McCray, William F. Claxton, Mariette Hartley, Connie Stevens, Abby Dalton, Ruta Lee, Lorne Greene, Victor Sen Yung, Richard Mulligan, Moses Gunn, Bob Eubanks, Lew Ayres, Ernest Borgnine, Charlotte Stewart, Bonnie Bartlett, Merlin Olsen, Victor French, Mickey Rooney, William Schallert and Richard Bull.
59Brian Keith and Ernest Borgnine attended his funeral.
60Best remembered by the public for his role as Little Joe Cartwright on Bonanza (1959) and for his starring role as Charles Ingalls on Little House on the Prairie (1974).
61He was buried at the same cemetery as his television father, Lorne Greene (Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery, Culver City, California).
62Attended and graduated third from the bottom of his class at Collingswood High School in Collingswood New Jersey (1954). Had an I.Q. of 159.
63Michael Landon passed away on July 1, 1991, almost four months away from what would have been his 55th birthday on October 31.
64Like his Bonanza (1959) co-star Lorne Greene, Landon was a staunch supporter of the Republican Party.
65Wore lifts on Bonanza (1959) so he would not be dwarfed by considerably taller co-stars Dan Blocker and Lorne Greene.
66Despite only being given a 3-5 per cent chance of survival, Landon announced he was going to beat his pancreatic cancer. However, by the time of the diagnosis, the cancer had already spread to his liver and stomach.
67He was left-handed, and his awkward handwriting (he often hand-wrote scripts) sometimes made that difficult for his secretary to read what he had written).
68His stepdaughter, Cheryl, recalled in his biography "I Promised My Dad" that once Landon was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, he realized that all the years of smoking, drinking and eating an unhealthy diet had taken their toll. Later, despite going on a regimen that included a naturalistic approach to the cancer (coffee enemas and a healthy diet), Landon was devastated to learn that the cancer had tripled in size.
69He smoked four packs of unfiltered Menthol cigarettes a day during his lifetime, which probably contributed to the pancreatic cancer that killed him.
7012 years after his death, his eldest sister, Evelyn, died on New Years' Day, 2003.
71By most accounts, he was exactly like the kind, gentle, heroic characters he portrayed onscreen, and in fact, several people complained about working with him, something rare in Hollywood.
72Wrote and directed two movies that were semi-autobiographical: The Loneliest Runner (1976) and Sam's Son (1984).
73In 1954, he was the national high school record holder in the javelin throw.
74When he filed for divorce from Lynn, that cost him $26 million. Though he gave her his $3.5-million, 35-room Beverly Hills mansion, this bitter divorce was a devastating blow for Lynn, who stated on television that her ex-husband had become her angel (April 16, 1981).
75His second wife, Marjorie Lynn Noe, was one of the few people who refused to attend his funeral, because she told her children that the divorce had already been like a death to her.
76Had starred with Victor French on two of his successful television series: Little House on the Prairie (1974) and Highway to Heaven (1984).
77Before he became a successful actor, he worked in a warehouse and at a gas station.
78Studied karate under Chuck Norris, as did the children of his Bonanza (1959) co-star Dan Blocker.
79Charles Ingalls, Landon's character on Little House on the Prairie (1974), was ranked #4 in TV Guide's list of the "50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time" [June 20, 2004 issue].
80Grew up in the southern town of Collingswood, New Jersey.
81His last wife was former make-up artist Cindy Clerico, whom he met near the end of the "Little House" run in 1981, and married two years later.
82He was attending USC on an athletic scholarship but tore his shoulder ligaments, which would prevent him from throwing the javelin again.
83Before his death, he appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962) to talk about his brave battle against cancer and his life and this was the highest-rated show of all time.
84Comedian and ex-talk show host, Johnny Carson was a longtime friend of his and had (in private) always confided in Landon and shared his own issues with him.
85Won the freshman javelin toss at the University of Southern California-Los Angeles.
86Never legally adopted his stepdaughter, Cheryl, because of her birth father's objections.
87His father was from a Jewish family and his mother was of Irish Catholic background.
88His father, Eli Maurice Orowitz, was a studio publicist and theater manager, his mother, Peggy Kathleen O'Neill Orowitz, was a popular comedienne and dancer.
89Always claimed to have chosen his professional name by picking the name Michael Landon out of the Los Angeles telephone directory.
90Inducted (as a cast member of Little House on the Prairie (1974)) into the Hall of Great Western Performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in 1998.
91U.S. President Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy Reagan, attended Landon's memorial service the day after his death.
92His birthplace, Forest Hills, is a neighborhood area in Queens, New York.
93Actress Melissa Gilbert's son Michael (born 1995) was named after him.
94Following his death, he was interred at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California.
95Children: Mark Fraser Landon (adopted-born October 1, 1958); aka Mark Landon) and Josh Fraser Landon (adopted as newborn in 1960-born February 11, 1960) with Dodie Levy-Fraser. Leslie Ann Landon (born 11 October 1963; aka Leslie Landon), Michael Graham Landon (born June 20, 1965; aka Michael Landon Jr.), Shawna Leigh Landon (born December 4, 1971; aka Shawna Landon) and Christopher Beau Landon (born February 27, 1975; Christopher Landon) with Lynn Noe and Jennifer Rachel Landon (born August 29, 1983; aka Jennifer Landon) and Sean Matthew Landon (born June 1986) with Cindy Landon. He also had a stepdaughter, Cheryl Ann Pontrelli.

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Us1991TV MovieJeff Hayes
Where Pigeons Go to Die1990TV MovieHugh as an Adult
Highway to Heaven1984-1989TV SeriesJonathan Smith
Little House: Bless All the Dear Children1984TV MovieCharles Ingalls (voice, uncredited)
Sam's Son1984Gene Orman
Little House: The Last Farewell1984TV MovieCharles Ingalls
Little House: Look Back to Yesterday1983TV MovieCharles Ingalls
Little House on the Prairie1974-1983TV SeriesCharles Ingalls / Narrator
Love Is Forever1983TV MovieJohn Everingham
Little House Years1979TV MovieCharles Ingalls
The Loneliest Runner1976TV MovieJohn Curtis as an Adult
The Special London Bridge Special1972TV MovieTennis Player
The Red Skelton Hour1970TV SeriesRichest Boy in the World
Swing Out, Sweet Land1970TV MoviePeter Minuit
The Errand Boy1961Little Joe Cartwright - Cameo (uncredited)
Johnny Staccato1959TV SeriesFreddie Tate
The Legend of Tom Dooley1959Tom Dooley
The Rifleman1958-1959TV SeriesBilly Mathis Will Fulton
Playhouse 901958-1959TV SeriesArthur Doner / Victor Gordon
Tombstone Territory1958-1959TV SeriesChris Anderson / Barton Clark, Jr.
Wanted: Dead or Alive1958-1959TV SeriesClay McGarrett / Carl Martin
Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse1959TV SeriesAitchinson
Frontier Doctor1959TV SeriesJim Mason
Zane Grey Theater1957-1959TV SeriesVance Coburn / Dan Overton
U.S. Marshal1958TV SeriesDon Sayers
Trackdown1958TV SeriesJack Summers / Jed Daws
The Texan1958TV SeriesNick Ahearn
God's Little Acre1958Dave Dawson
Studio One in Hollywood1958TV SeriesRafael Martinez
Alcoa Theatre1958TV SeriesJohnny Risk
Schlitz Playhouse1957-1958TV SeriesDon Burns / Sandy
High School Confidential!1958Steve Bentley
Maracaibo1958Lago Orlando
Goodyear Theatre1958TV SeriesKarl Wallace
Cheyenne1956-1958TV SeriesAlan Horn / Trooper
Tales of Wells Fargo1957TV SeriesTad Cameron / Jackson
Matinee Theatre1957TV Series
Suspicion1957TV SeriesHoward
The Court of Last Resort1957TV SeriesThomas Forbes
I Was a Teenage Werewolf1957Tony Rivers
State Trooper1957TV SeriesWillie Losada / Joe Durando
General Electric Theater1957TV SeriesDixon / Claude Duncan
Fight for the Title1957ShortKid Lombard
Telephone Time1956-1957TV SeriesLombard / Caspar Hauser
Crossroads1956-1957TV SeriesRace Stevens / Johnny Rico / Danny
Cavalcade of America1957TV SeriesFrank
The 20th Century-Fox Hour1957TV SeriesEddie
Dr. Christian1957TV Series
The Restless Gun1957TV Series
Wire Service1956TV SeriesPietro
Crusader1956TV SeriesDick Manning
The Adventures of Jim Bowie1956TV SeriesArmand De Nivernais / Jerome Juventin
Studio 571956TV Series
The Loretta Young Show1956TV Series
The Sheriff of Cochise1956TV SeriesDon Sayers
These Wilder Years1956Boy in Poolhall (uncredited)
Luke and the Tenderfoot1955TV SeriesClyde Meacham

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Us1991TV Movie executive producer
Where Pigeons Go to Die1990TV Movie executive producer
Highway to Heaven1984-1989TV Series executive producer - 111 episodes
Little House: Bless All the Dear Children1984TV Movie executive producer
Little House: The Last Farewell1984TV Movie executive producer
Little House: Look Back to Yesterday1983TV Movie executive producer
Father Murphy1981-1983TV Series executive producer - 34 episodes
Little House on the Prairie1974-1983TV Series executive producer - 205 episodes
Love Is Forever1983TV Movie executive producer
Little House Years1979TV Movie executive producer
Killing Stone1978TV Movie producer
The Loneliest Runner1976TV Movie producer
The Jackie Robinson Story1974TV Movie producer

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Us1991TV Movie
Where Pigeons Go to Die1990TV Movie
Highway to Heaven1984-1989TV Series 94 episodes
Sam's Son1984
Little House: The Last Farewell1984TV Movie
Little House on the Prairie1974-1983TV Series 90 episodes
Father Murphy1981TV Series 2 episodes
Where Have All the Children Gone1980TV Special
Little House Years1979TV Movie
Killing Stone1978TV Movie
The Loneliest Runner1976TV Movie
The Jackie Robinson Story1974TV Movie
It's Good to Be Alive1974TV Movie
Love Story1973TV Series 1 episode
Bonanza1968-1973TV Series 14 episodes

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Us1991TV Movie written by
Where Pigeons Go to Die1990TV Movie teleplay
Highway to HeavenTV Series written by - 21 episodes, 1984 - 1989 teleplay - 1 episode, 1985
Sam's Son1984screenplay
Little House: The Last Farewell1984TV Movie written by
Father MurphyTV Series creator - 34 episodes, 1981 - 1983 writer - 5 episodes, 1981 - 1982 written by - 1 episode, 1981
Little House on the PrairieTV Series writer - 33 episodes, 1978 - 1983 written by - 13 episodes, 1974 - 1978 teleplay - 2 episodes, 1975 - 1977 story - 1 episode, 1975
Little House Years1979TV Movie
Killing Stone1978TV Movie
The Loneliest Runner1976TV Movie written by
Love Story1973TV Series writer - 1 episode
BonanzaTV Series writer - 12 episodes, 1969 - 1973 teleplay - 4 episodes, 1962 - 1967 written by - 3 episodes, 1968 - 1972 story - 2 episodes, 1962 - 1966

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Michael Landon: Memories with Laughter and Love1991Video documentary performer: "Shenandoah" American folk song
Hullabaloo1965TV Series performer - 1 episode

Stunts

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Town Tamer1965stunt performer - uncredited

Miscellaneous

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Highway to Heaven1984TV Series developer

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Idols1991TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson1964-1991TV SeriesHimself / Himself - Guest / Himself - Guest Host
The American Dream Contest1990TV MovieHimself
The 42nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1990TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
Live with Kelly and Michael1989-1990TV SeriesHimself
Entertainment Tonight1986-1989TV SeriesHimself
The 15th Annual People's Choice Awards1989TV SpecialHimself - Host
Later with Bob Costas1989TV SeriesHimself
Lou Rawls Parade of Stars1988TV SeriesHimself
Happy Birthday, Bob: 50 Stars Salute Your 50 Years with NBC1988TV SpecialHimself
Desperate Passage1987DocumentaryHimself - Host
NBC Investigates Bob Hope1987TV SpecialHimself
The Wil Shriner Show1987TV SeriesHimself
NBC 60th Anniversary Celebration1986TV Special documentaryHimself
All-Star Party for 'Dutch' Reagan1985TV SpecialHimself
Bob Hope Buys NBC?1985TV SpecialHimself
53rd Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade1984TV SpecialHimself - Grand Marshal
The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast: Michael Landon1984TV Special
Hollywood '841984TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
This Is Your Life1984TV SeriesHimself
95th Tournament of Roses Parade1984TV MovieHimself
Here's Television Entertainment1983TV MovieHimself
Breakaway1983TV SeriesHimself
The Chemical People1983TV MovieHimself
The 35th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1983TV SpecialHimself - Co-Presenter: Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy or Variety or Music Series and Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy or Variety or Music Series
The 25th Annual Grammy Awards1983TV SpecialHimself
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color1981TV SeriesHimself
The 33rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1981TV SpecialHimself - Performer
92nd Tournament of Roses Parade1981TV MovieHimself
Where Have All the Children Gone1980TV Special
Stars en Campagne1980TV Movie documentaryHimself
Today1979TV SeriesHimself
The 5th Annual People's Choice Awards1979TV SpecialHimself - Accepting Award for Favourite Television Drama Series
General Electric's All-Star Anniversary1978TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Barbara Walters Summer Special1978TV SeriesHimself
The Stars Salute Israel at 301978TV MovieHimself
TV: The Fabulous Fifties1978TV MovieHimself - Host of Westerns Segment
The 4th Annual People's Choice Awards1978TV SpecialHimself - Accepting Award for Favorite Television Dramatic Program
The Mike Douglas Show1975-1977TV SeriesHimself - Actor
Good Morning America1977TV SeriesHimself
88th Annual Tournament of Roses Parade1977TV MovieHimself - NBC Host
Doug Henning's World of Magic1976TV MovieHimself - Host
The Hollywood Squares1966-1976TV SeriesHimself - Panelist / Himself - Center Square / Himself
Dinah!1976TV SeriesHimself
Donny and Marie1976TV SeriesHimself
The Rich Little Show1976TV SeriesHimself
The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast: Michael Landon1975TV SpecialHimself
Mitzi and a Hundred Guys1975TV SpecialHimself
The 1st Annual People's Choice Awards1975TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Favourite Oustanding Sports Figure
Dinah's Place1974TV SeriesHimself
NBC Follies1973TV SeriesHimself
A Couple of Dons1973TV SpecialHimself
Match Game 731973TV SeriesHimself - Panelist
All-Star Baffle1973TV SeriesHimself
The Electric Company1972-1973TV SeriesHimself
Laugh-In1972TV SeriesHimself - Guest Performer
Monsanto Presents Mancini1971/IIITV SpecialHimself - Host
V.I.P.-Schaukel1971TV Series documentaryHimself
Jerry Visits1971TV SeriesHimself
Amateur's Guide to Love1971TV MovieHimself
The Pet Set1971TV Series documentaryHimself
The Don Knotts Show1971TV SeriesHimself
Sesame Street1970-1971TV SeriesHimself
You Don't Say1964-1970TV SeriesHimself
The Merv Griffin Show1967-1970TV SeriesHimself
The Dean Martin Show1968-1970TV SeriesHimself
Name Droppers1969TV SeriesHimself
Allen Ludden's Gallery1969TV SeriesHimself
The Storybook Squares1969TV SeriesHimself
Rowan & Martin at the Movies1968Documentary shortHimself (as Mike Landon)
The Jerry Lewis Show1968TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Pat Boone Show1968TV SeriesHimself
P.D.Q.1967TV SeriesHimself
Crossword1966TV MovieHimself
Hullabaloo1965TV SeriesHimself - Host & Performer / Himself - Host
I'll Bet1965TV SeriesHimself
What's This Song?1964TV SeriesHimself
Chevrolet's Bewitching Bonanza1964ShortHimself
The Match Game1963TV SeriesHimself - Team Captain
Stump the Stars1963TV SeriesHimself - Guest Panelist
Your First Impression1962TV SeriesHimself
The Jack Paar Tonight Show1962TV SeriesHimself
Here's Hollywood1961TV SeriesHimself

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Best of the Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts1998TV Movie documentaryHimself - Roastee
E! True Hollywood Story1997TV Series documentaryHimself
Michael Landon1997TV Movie documentaryHimself
Larry King Live: 10th Anniversary Volume One1995Video documentaryHimself
Back to Bonanza1993TV MovieLittle Joe Cartwright
Monsters & Maniacs1988Video documentaryHimself
Horrible Horror1986VideoTony Rivers, In clips from 'I Was a Teenage Werewolf'
Monsters, Madmen & Machines: 25 Years of Science Fiction1984TV Movie documentaryactor 'I Was a Teenage Werewolf' (uncredited)
Quincy M.E.1979TV SeriesJoseph 'Little Joe' Cartwright
Sesame Street1971-1975TV SeriesHimself
Let the Good Times Roll1973DocumentaryTony Rivers (uncredited)
Luke and the Tenderfoot1965TV MovieTough
Home & Family2015TV SeriesHimself
Pioneers of Television2011TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself / Joe Cartwright from Bonanza
Banda sonora2010TV SeriesLittle Joe Cartwright
Entertainment Tonight2010TV SeriesHimself
Lost2010TV SeriesCharles Ingalls
TV Land Confidential2007TV Series documentaryHimself - Interviewee
La tele de tu vida2007TV SeriesJonathan Smith
Weekend Today2007TV SeriesCharles Ingalls
¿Cómo están ustedes?2006TV MovieCharles Ingalls
Corazón, corazón2006TV SeriesCharles Ingalls
A Little House Conversation2006Video documentaryCharles Ingalls
La imagen de tu vida2006TV SeriesCharles Ingalls
Brilliant But Cancelled2002TV Movie documentary
El informal2000TV SeriesEl Encasillao
Television: The First Fifty Years1999Video documentaryJoe Cartwright
A Bing Crosby Christmas1998Video documentaryHimself

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1984Golden BootGolden Boot Awards
1984Star on the Walk of FameWalk of FameTelevisionOn 15 August 1984. At 1500 N. Vine Street.
1981Spur AwardWestern Writers of AmericaBest TV ScriptLittle House on the Prairie (1974)
1975Bronze WranglerWestern Heritage AwardsFictional Television DramaLittle House on the Prairie (1974)
1970Bronze WranglerWestern Heritage AwardsFictional Television DramaBonanza (1959)
1969BambiBambi AwardsTV Series InternationalBonanza (1959)
1969Bravo Otto GermanyBravo OttoBest Male TV Star (TV-Star m)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2004TV Land AwardTV Land AwardsMost Memorable ManeLittle House on the Prairie (1974)
1979Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Actor in a Television Series - DramaLittle House on the Prairie (1974)

3rd Place Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1965Bravo Otto GermanyBravo OttoBest Male TV Star (TV-Star m)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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