About Mark Harmon - InfoBarrel A quiet evening in suburban Brentwood ended when a car driven by two teenagers missed a turn, hit a tree, flipped over, and burst into flames. A neighbor ran to the car and with the swing of a sledge hammer shattered the front windshield. He dragged the driver out of the car. Then he reached back in through the flames and broken glass to rescue the trapped passenger before the car exploded. Both boys survived, thanks to the good Samaritan. The Samaritan was a hometown boy made good. Born and raised in Los Angeles (well, Burbank), he was a standout quarterback for the UCLA Bruins, then had a long, successful career in television that continues to this day. His name is Mark Harmon. To say Harmon is blessed with a good gene pool only partly explains his success at life. As for the genes, they came from his father Tom Harmon and his mother Elyse Knox. The elder Harmon was a standout football player for the Michigan Wolverines. Affectionately nicknamed "Ole 98", the versatile Harmon played offense and defense. Running, passing, kicking the football and scoring touchdowns won Harmon the Heisman Trophy his senior year (1940). Tom majored in English and Speech and began a career in broadcasting. Then he met Elyse Knox, a fashion designer so beautiful she modeled her own creations and had a side career as an actress. The two became engaged, but broke off the relationship when Harmon enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942. Harmon survived two plane crashes and being lost in Japanese occupied China, returning to America in 1944 with a wedding gift for his fianc?e. The silk parachute that saved Tom's life became the material for Elyse's wedding dress. Tom and Elyse settled in Los Angeles and raised a family. Kristin was born in 1945, Kelly in 1948, and Mark in 1951. Mark's given name is Thomas Mark Harmon, but no one ever called him Thomas, or even Tom. It was always Mark - or Marko, or Burr, or Clyde, or Flake - never Tom. And the elder Harmon, for some obscure reason, was called Sam by his family. Elyse was just "Boss," probably because she raised the three children mostly on her own, as Tom Harmon's career as a sports announcer required him to travel all over the country. Mark was raised in a female environment, and he missed his father. But when dad was home he put Mark through the wringer. "He raised me hard, and when I say hard, I mean hard," Mark Harmon told People magazine. "I was taught to fight for everything." He ended up playing football too: first at junior college, then under the bright lights of UCLA stadium. Mark had to extend himself to get out from his father's considerable shadow. He was not as successful as 'Ole 98', which is no disgrace: few have matched Tom Harmon's Heisman Trophy season. But through hard work Mark established himself as a quality college quarterback, and received the National Collegiate Football Foundation Award for All Around Excellence. Harmon's major was communications, but he wanted to be either a doctor or a lawyer. Law school didn't work out, and he bounced around from working at an ad agency to selling shoes to practicing carpentry. That last profession became a lifelong hobby for Mark Harmon, as referenced by Leroy Jethro Gibb's basement boat building in NCIS. After following his father's footsteps in sports, Mark now followed his mother's footsteps into acting. His first mentor was Jack Webb, the taciturn detective of Dragnet ("Just the facts, ma'am"). Webb