Celebrity Charades

Celebrity Charades
Presented by Jay Johnson (1979)
Chad Lowe (2005)
Narrated by Dick Patterson (1979)
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Release
Original network Syndicated (daily, 1979)
AMC (2005)
Original release January 1979 (1979-01) – June 24, 2005 (2005-06-24)
External links
Website

Celebrity Charades is a series which originally aired from January to September, 1979 as a syndicated series throughout the United States.[1]

Original version

The original version was hosted by Jay Johnson, along with his dummy Squeaky, and Dick Patterson was the announcer. The series was modeled after the 1962-1964 TV show Stump The Stars, which itself is a successor of the long-running Pantomime Quiz of the 1950s.[2]

Much like the earlier versions, the show consisted of two teams of four celebrities attempting to act out comedic phrases, with the team who manages the better time by the end of the show receiving $500 for their favorite charity.

The series was produced by Fein-Schwartz Productions, in association with Columbia Pictures Television. Music was provided by Score Productions, and would be recycled for other game shows: a re-arranged version of a commercial cue later became the theme to Mindreaders, while a re-arranged version of the main theme with a faster tempo was used during the pricing game Switcheroo on the Tom Kennedy version of The Price Is Right.

AMC version

The second (and most recent) version aired five episodes from June 20 to 24, 2005 on the AMC television network in America.[3] The show stemmed from a private series of parties hosted by actor Chad Lowe and his wife, actress Hilary Swank.

Gameplay

On the show, celebrity teams of five were sent into two separate rooms. In each round of play, a set of five movie titles to be guessed are predetermined by the producers. One person from each team is given the first title; then each must run to a section of the house where his/her teammates are waiting, then pantomime the title. The team member who guesses correctly subsequently runs to the central location where someone is waiting with the second answer to be guessed. This goes on for five answers. When all answers are guessed, the team must come up with the common theme that chains the answers together. The first team to do so wins the round.[4]

There is no prize awarded to the winner. Instead, all participants agreed to donate their appearance fee to a charity of their choice.

Episode status

The status of the original version is unknown; the first three episodes (all with the same celebrities) were aired by GSN in the fall of 1997, after which the show was pulled off the schedule for unknown reasons, although a random episode from later in the show's run was aired as a GSN Game of the Week in 1999.

The AMC version exists in its entirety.

References

  1. Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present ISBN 0-345-45542-8
  2. TV Guide Guide to TV (2006) ISBN 0-7607-7572-9
  3. Sponsorship announcement for Celebrity Charades from thefutoncritic.com
  4. AMC Celebrity Charades webpage including link to Chad Lowe explaining the rules of the game. Archived June 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
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