Playwright Neil Simon came up with “The Good Doctor,” built on the
foundation of writings by legendary Russian Anton Chekhov, in 1973.
Frances Hussy Sternhagan (know-it-all, know-nothing mailman Cliff’s
mother in “Cheers”) and Rene Auberjonois (later, Odo in “Star Trek”) won Tony
Awards for their performances.
In 1978 Edward Asner, the formidable Lou Grant and, in real life,
formidable union leader; Richard Chamberlain, king of miniseries; and Marsha
Mason, Simon’s wife and in the 1973 stage premiere as all 3 of the Three
Sisters, resurrected “The Good Doctor” for a TV movie.
In 1981 Mark Dawidziak and Sara Goodman were cast in a Tennessee
production of “The Good Doctor.”
A year later, Mark and Sara were married in Johnston City, Tennessee, where
Mark was working on the Kingsport Times-News. Or, as Mark calls
it, “a run-of-the-play contract.”
Two
years later, the kid who grew up on Long Island brought his bride from
Tennessee as he came to the BJ to fall under the excellent tutelage of – ahem! –
me!!! I was Mark’s TV Editor. As Humphrey Bogart said to Claude Raines in “Casablance,” “It
was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.” He have stayed in touch ever
since, 22 years after my retirement from the BJ, including reunions with fellow
BJ escapees at Primo’s Deli.
He
succeded David Bianculli, who took off for fame at the New York Post after
never meeting a deadline he didn’t ignore at Ol’ Blue Walls. David and I gave
birth to Channels, the BJ’s television guide which since has disappeared after
a technology tsunami overwhelmed it.
Today, the PD and former BJ culture critic Mark and still his
co-star Sara are celebrating their 36th wedding anniversary and are
co-CEOs of their Largely Literary Theater Company.
Mark is superb on stage doing Edgar Allan Poe (the family cat is
named “Poe,” Mark Twain and Charles Dickens but his best role is with Sara and
their daughter Becky and the animals that find their way into their home in
Cuyahoga Falls. Paula and I have witnessed Mark and Sara’s performances
at libraries in Akron, Cuyahoga Falls, Massillon and Hudson.
And, to keep from resting on his laurels, Mark has
written more than a dozen books about Columbo, Twain, The Twilight Zone,
Dracula – you name it.
Before the
BJ & the PD, Mark's career took him to the Kingsport Times-News in Tennessee,
the Bristol Herald Courier in Virginia, the Associated Press’ Washington bureau and Knight-Ridder Newspapers’ Washington bureau.
the Bristol Herald Courier in Virginia, the Associated Press’ Washington bureau and Knight-Ridder Newspapers’ Washington bureau.
Mark was born in Huntington, New York (think Long Island), on September 7, 1956, a son of World War II
Army Air Corps captain/navigator Joseph Walter Dawidziak, buried after his 2016
passing away in Calverton National Cemetery on Long Island, and Claire
Dawidziak. Later, Joe married Bernie Dawidziak.
So were siblings Joe, Jr., Jane,
Aileen and Michael.
Mark’s email address -- hlgrouch@sbcglobal.net -- includes tributes to humorist H.L. Mencken and
comedian Groucho Marx.
Mencken’s most
famous quote seems Nostradomas-like today with Donald Trump in the White House:
“On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their
heart's desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright
moron.”
Mark is justifiably in
the Cleveland Press Club’s Journalism Hall of Fame. And forever in my memories
and heart. Right alongside the supreme Sara.
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