Blind Date (1950s game show)

Blind Date
Also known as ''Your Big Moment''
Created by Bernard Schubert
Presented by Arlene Francis
(1949-1952)
Melvyn Douglas
(May–June 1953)
Jan Murray
(June–September 1953)
Narrated by Walter Herlihy (1949-50)
Rex Marshall (1950-51)
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time 25 mins.
Release
Original network ABC (1949-1951)
NBC (1952)
DuMont (1953)
Picture format Black-and-white
Audio format Monaural
Original release May 5, 1949 (1949-05-05) – September 15, 1953 (1953-09-15)

Blind Date (also known as Your Big Moment) is an American television game show which aired on ABC, NBC, and then DuMont after many years on radio.

Broadcast history

Blind Date started on the stage of the Hollywood Theatre in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, as G.I. Blind Date, a radio show designed to entertain servicemen at the Army Radio Technical Training School in town. The first show was broadcast on KELO radio in January 1943. G.I. Blind Date was created by Joe Floyd, Cliff Gill and Verl Thomson as a between-movie entertainment feature. Seeing its success, Floyd peddled the idea around to other markets, eventually selling it to NBC radio where it first aired July 8, 1943, hosted by Arlene Francis.[1][2][3]

The radio show grew into a television show. This version originally aired on ABC from May 5, 1949, to September 20, 1951, moved to NBC from June 7 to July 15, 1952, then ran on DuMont from May 19 to September 15, 1953. The ABC version aired Thursdays at 8:30pm EST during the 1949-50 TV season, and Thursdays at 9:30pm EST during the 1950-51 season.

Arlene Francis was the host of the ABC and NBC versions, and had hosted the radio version since 1943. Melvyn Douglas became host when the show moved to DuMont, but was replaced after the third show by Jan Murray.

Episode status

One episode with Francis from 1950 is held among collectors, while the August 25, 1953 show with Murray is held by the Paley Center for Media.

See also

References

  1. Billboard magazine, July 7, 1943
  2. Joe Floyd A Helluva Salesman by Bob Karolevitz, 1990
  3. Billboard magazine July 10, 1943

Bibliography

External links

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