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Dec 16, 2025

The Resilience of an Icon: The Career and Courage of Bill Bixby

Bill Bixby was born Wilfred Bailey Everett Bixby III in 1934, and his life unfolded in the steady, unglamorous way that builds real legacy rather than quick fame. He left UC Berkeley not in rebellion, but in quiet pursuit of what felt true, moving from modeling and commercials into acting until his warmth finally found a home on television.

His breakthrough came in My Favorite Martian, where he played reporter Tim O’Hara opposite Ray Walston. There was nothing forced about Bixby’s charm. Audiences trusted him instinctively. He felt familiar in the way good neighbors do — steady, open, and easy to root for. That natural likability carried him through a career that never needed spectacle to endure.

Yet it was in quieter, deeper roles that his gift truly settled.


In The Courtship of Eddie’s Father, he portrayed a widowed father raising his son with tenderness and humility, earning Emmy nominations not for grand emotion, but for honesty. And later, in The Incredible Hulk, he gave Dr. David Banner a humanity that transformed a comic story into something almost spiritual — a man wrestling with grief, anger, and the cost of losing control. His warning, “You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry,” wasn’t bravado. It was sorrow.

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