Forever associated with a heroic TV collie whom he frequently had his
arms lovingly wrapped around, blond tyke Jon Provost actually was a
veteran performer by the time he won the role of "Timmy Martin" at age
seven in the series
Lassie (1954).
Los Angeles born (March 12, 1950) and bred, Jon was just three years old when he was cast as
Jane Wyman and
Sterling Hayden's son in the film
So Big (1953). He proceeded with
The Country Girl (1954) as
Bing Crosby and
Grace Kelly's son,
Back from Eternity (1956)
starring
Anita Ekberg, and co-starred in
Escapade in Japan (1957), which
featured an unknown (and unbilled)
Clint Eastwood.
And then came
Lassie (1954). Teenager
Tommy Rettig, as Lassie's original young
master "Jeff Miller", had become too old to be romping around with his
dog after three seasons. In 1957, the producers had him moving away to college and his entire family sold
the farm to a brand new clan -- the Martins and their 7-year-old son, Timmy. Timmy's parents were played
by rangy
Hugh Reilly and the ever-wholesome
June Lockhart. For seven seasons,
audiences grew to love Timmy and his perilous adventures with the
invincible canine. By 1964, however, the Martin family decided to move
to Australia and Jon's reign was over as a child TV star.
Jon's career slowed considerably following the canine series and, aside from a few minor roles in the films
This Property Is Condemned (1966),
The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969) and Philippine-made family adventure
The Secret of the Sacred Forest (1970), found little work to sustain himself. By the time Jon
turned 19, he'd worked in film and television for 16 years. The darker
side of the 60s was beginning to take over; so, amid plentiful
high-profile job offers, he escaped from the only life he'd known -
showbiz. Jon headed for college in Northern California's wine country,
studying psychology and eventually settling to raise a family in Sonoma
County.
In 1990, Jon made a decision to return to television, performing in
The New Lassie (1989) starring
Dee Wallace. In one nostalgic episode, he appeared together with
Lassie's original master,
Tommy Rettig, who
made a guest appearance. He also received a Genesis Award for Outstanding Television in a Family
Series for a New Lassie story he wrote focusing on the inhumane
treatment of research animals.
Since his early acting days - gracing screens from not-quite-three -
Jon has seen it all: the trials of child celebrity; the social strain;
the sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll of the '60s on the Sunset Strip; and
battles with near-crippling depression and dyslexia. For a while there,
Timmy really was stuck down a well. But he got out - and these days Jon
has a different story to tell. He began directing and hosting on-line
videos about dogs and cats for a Purina website. Jon's career began
afresh and has been burgeoning in a variety of surprising directions
since.
A divorced father of two children, Jon is married to documentary writer
Laurie Jacobson. 2008 marks Jon's 50th anniversary in the role of Timmy. He is celebrating with the release of his autobiography, Timmy's in the Well
and a multi-city tour. He has done a few animated voiceovers and made an isolated film appearance in the family film drama
Susie's Hope (2013).