‘Nobody Wanted To Play This Alien From Outer Space’: How Robin Williams Absolutely Crushed His Mork And Mindy Audition, According To Henry Winkler

‘Nobody Wanted To Play This Alien From Outer Space’: How Robin Williams Absolutely Crushed His Mork And Mindy Audition, According To Henry Winkler

Film

Before Robin Williams really hit it big in his film career, the late actor had some memorable TV roles and appearances, including his run as one of the titular characters in the ABC sitcom Mork & Mindy. The series ran for four seasons from 1978 to 1982, and centered on an extraterrestrial, played by Williams, who comes to Earth and befriends a human who becomes his roommate and eventual love interest, played by Pam Dawber. Henry Winkler opened up about how Williams crushed his audition for what would be one of the best sitcoms of all time.

Mork & Mindy started out as a single episode for Happy Days, in which Williams’ Mork comes down from the planet Ork and is introduced to Fonzie, Ralph, Potsie, Chachi, and Richie, who initially saw the flying saucer. It was Williams’ performance in the episode “My Favorite Orkan” that convinced producers to make a spin-off surrounding Mork. Winkler told Scrubs alums Zach Braff and Donald Faison on their podcast Fake Doctors, Real Friends that no one wanted to play Mork, and they were on quite the time crunch:

When Robin came to audition, now it’s Wednesday. We start Monday morning at 10 o’clock on the soundstage. That is at 9 o’clock, we read. 10 o’clock, we’re on the soundstage. Nobody wanted to play this alien from outer space. Wednesday, now, we’re shooting on Friday. Wednesday comes, finally, a young, very shy, very quiet man comes with the casting director. [Mimics Williams] ‘Hello, hello, hello.’

Originally Posted Here

Articles You May Like

King Ultramega Pay Tribute to Chris Cornell with Cover of “Say Hello 2 Heaven”
Halle Announces Debut Album ‘Love? or Something Like It’
Master P, Shaq Rally New Orleans Community For Emotional Hurricane Katrina Recovery
Chris Brown’s ‘Breezy Bowl XX Tour’ Scores Home Run in DC: Review
‘It Broke Our Hearts’ — Dream Theater’s Long Battle for ‘A Change of Seasons’