Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Celebrity Time

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Country of origin
  
United States

Camera setup
  
Multi-camera

Production company(s)
  
World Video

Genre
  
Game show

Languages
  
English, Malayalam

5.3/10
TV

Original language(s)
  
English

Running time
  
25 minutes

First episode date
  
20 November 1948

Audio format
  
Monaural

Also known as
  
''The Eyes Have It (original title)/ Stop, Look, and Listen/ Riddle Me This/ Goodrich Celebrity Time''

Presented by
  
Douglas Edwards (1948), Paul Gallico (1948), Conrad Nagel (1948–1952)

Similar
  
Game show, Who Said That?, Lamp Unto My Feet, The Voice of Firestone, Arthur Godfrey and His F

Celebrity Time (also known as The Eyes Have It) was an American game and audience participation television series which aired originally aired on CBS and ABC from November 1948 to September 1952. The original host was Douglas Edwards.

Contents

Rules

The show began as a battle of the sexes between teams made up of audience and celebrity panelists, who would be asked questions which involved such topics as guessing names from the news, to identifying film clips.

Eventually, the show segued into a more general variety and performance show. In its later years, it was strictly a celebrity variety show.

Broadcasting history

Celebrity Time began as The Eyes Have It on CBS primetime, airing every Saturday and Sunday from November 20, 1948 to March 13, 1949.

During this time, the show's title changed when the host did – to Stop, Look, and Listen when Paul Gallico took over as host on November 28, then to Riddle Me This when Conrad Nagel took over the show on December 12; while Nagel hosted through 1952, the title was left behind after March 1949.

On April 3, 1949 ABC took the show and ran it until March 26, 1950, after which CBS ran it again from April 2 to June 27 and from October 1, 1950 to September 21, 1952. During this long period the series was known as Goodrich Celebrity Time.

Panelists

Panelists included, at various times, Sir Thomas Beecham, Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom, John Daly, Ilka Chase, Peggy Ann Garner, Kitty Carlisle, Boris Karloff, Kyle MacDonnell (1922-2004), Herman Hickman, Martha Wright, Mary McCarty (1923-1980), and Jane Wilson.

Name changes

The show had the following names during its run.

  • The Eyes Have It (November 20 – 27, 1948)
  • Stop, Look, and Listen (November 28 – December 11, 1948)
  • Riddle Me This (December 12, 1948 – March 13, 1949)
  • Goodrich Celebrity Time (April 3, 1949 – Unknown)
  • Celebrity Time (Unknown – September 21, 1952)
  • NBC version

    The Eyes Have It holds one footnote in television history – it is the only game show to debut as two unrelated programs with different formats, networks, producers, and hosts on the same day.

    On November 20, 1948 another show with the same name began on NBC with Ralph McNair as host; NBC's Eyes had actually come first, having been a local show on Washington, D.C. affiliate WNBW since September 25. This version ran until January 27, 1949, with a Sunday-afternoon version running from March 13 (the same day CBS' version, now Riddle Me This, ended) to June 19.

    Episode status

    The series (including the unrelated NBC version) is believed to have been destroyed due to network practices. No episodes are known to exist under any of the program's five distinct names.

    In 2016, a 16mm kinescope was discovered by a film archivist that contained lost footage from two live CBS television shows. In addition to a nearly complete broadcast of What's My Line?, the reel of film also featured the final six minutes of Celebrity Time. Both shows were broadcast on October 1. 1950. Conrad Nagel and Kitty Carlisle were among the celebrities seen from the B F Goodrich sponsored program.

    References

    Celebrity Time Wikipedia