Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Geoff Edwards

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Cause of death
  
Pneumonia

Years active
  
Early 1950s–2014


Name
  
Geoff Edwards

Role
  
Television actor

Geoff Edwards GeoffEdwardsDeadjpg

Full Name
  
Geoffrey Bruce Owen Edwards

Born
  
February 13, 1931 (
1931-02-13
)

Occupation
  
ActorGame show hostRadio personality

Spouse(s)
  
Michael Feffer (m. 1973–2014; his death)

Children
  
Todd EdwardsShawn EdwardsChess Edwards

Relatives
  
Owen Edwards, author/editor (brother)

Died
  
Nominations
  
Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Game Show Host

TV shows
  
Similar People
  

Tribute video to geoff edwards


Geoffrey Bruce Owen "Geoff" Edwards (February 13, 1931 – March 5, 2014) was an American television actor, game show host and radio personality. Starting in the early 2000s, he was also a writer and broadcaster on the subject of travel.

Contents

Geoff Edwards Game show host Geoff Edwards dies at age 83 CBS News

Remembering Geoff Edwards


Background

Geoff Edwards 3bpblogspotcomidUO2SPACagUnyUwdDqX0IAAAAAAA

Edwards began his career while in college, working for a radio station in Albany, New York. By the late 1950s, though, he relocated to Southern California, landing his first job at KFMB-AM in San Diego, hosting an evening show and co-hosting the "Don Ross/Geoff Edwards Show".

Geoff Edwards A man whose career hit the Jackpot

As a news reporter for KHJ-AM radio, Edwards was present in the basement of Dallas police headquarters when Jack Ruby shot suspected John F. Kennedy assassin Lee Harvey Oswald on November 24, 1963. Edwards was one of the witnesses interviewed by NBC television correspondent Tom Pettit on the scene.

After a few short stints at other stations, Edwards was hired at KMPC in Los Angeles, occupying the 9 a.m.-noon slot for several years beginning in 1968 until December 1979 when he resigned to focus on his TV career. He later worked at KFI from 1987 to 1989 but he ultimately resigned, as a protest against fellow KFI personality Tom Leykis, destroying Cat Stevens' (Yusuf Islam) records following Stevens' call for a fatwa on Salman Rushdie. Most recently, Edwards was a morning DJ with KSUR (now KKGO) in Los Angeles. One of the features of his radio show was "Radio's Answer Lady," in which listeners could call in with questions — some serious, some not so serious — and he would answer on the air, sometimes with serious answers, sometimes with quips.

During that time, Edwards tried his hand at acting, appearing on I Dream of Jeannie and That Girl.

In 1968 he was seen in several episodes of Petticoat Junction, as Bobbie Jo Bradley's boyfriend Jeff. From his time on the show, he met — and maintained a very close friendship with — Meredith MacRae, (who played Billie Jo Bradley).

He also guest starred on Police Woman, Diff'rent Strokes and Small Wonder.

In the early 1970s, Edwards appeared on The Bobby Darin Show as the straight man to singer Bobby Darin. After that series ended, Edwards pursued a game show career, starting with Says Who? in 1971, followed by Cop-Out! in February 1972—however, both shows eventually turned out to be unsold pilots.

Game shows

Edwards' first full-time game show hosting stint took place from March through June 1973 on Jack Barry's Hollywood's Talking, a remake of a late 1960s ABC game Everybody's Talking and the Canadian hit Eye Bet. The program featured contestants watching a video clip of a celebrity talking about a subject; their job was to guess the subject in question. The series, which aired afternoons on CBS television, did not fare well and the network cancelled it in favor of the phenomenally popular Match Game remake. Edwards also said he did not get along with Barry behind the scenes and he had no intention of continuing with the series if it made it past CBS' initial commitment.

Edwards was not out of work for very long, as Chuck Barris hired him to host The New Treasure Hunt that launched in weekly syndication in fall 1973. In January 1974, Edwards returned to daytime with the NBC show Jackpot. For the next nineteen months, ending in September 1975, Edwards would commute back and forth between California and New York as Jackpot taped at NBC's Rockefeller Center studios. He would briefly do this again in 1977 during the run of NBC's Shoot for the Stars (both it and Jackpot were produced by Bob Stewart. The New Treasure Hunt would also come to an end in 1977.

In January 1980 Edwards debuted as the host of the new Barry & Enright show Play the Percentages, which he hosted until the end of the television season when it was cancelled. He also hosted his last daytime network show when he substituted for Bill Cullen (then filling in on Password Plus for an ill Allen Ludden) on two weeks of NBC's Chain Reaction, another Bob Stewart show. Edwards also briefly tried his hand at producing when he teamed with Mark Smith to form Smith-Edwards Productions in 1980. The duo signed a deal with Warner Brothers to produce the game show pilot Pot of Gold for NBC, but the series never sold. They also worked on a talk show based on the magazine Ladies Home Journal, but that series also failed to sell and Smith-Edwards Productions folded in 1981. Later that year, Edwards returned to television to host a daily revival of Treasure Hunt for syndication that was cancelled at the end of the 1981-82 season.

In 1983 Edwards began hosting Starcade, a new show centered around video games. He took over the show from previous host Mark Richards, who hosted from December 1982 until the summer of 1983. The show initially aired on Superstation WTBS and went into national syndication from September 1983 to September 1984. Richards was fired for the reasoning that he did not know much or was very enthusiastic about video games; determined not to repeat what his predecessor did, Edwards studied the video games utilized on the show and the industry in general and consequently became so fascinated with video games that he became an avid player. Edwards kept up the hobby until his death.

Except for a week of substituting for an ill Monty Hall on Let's Make a Deal in early 1985 and an unsold Bob Stewart pilot for ABC called $50,000 a Minute, Edwards remained largely inactive on the national television scene. This changed with his next two hosting gigs, which were his longest. In November 1985, Edwards replaced Chuck Woolery as the host of the California Lottery's weekly game show The Big Spin, which he would host for ten years from the lottery's Sacramento headquarters. Then, in 1986, Edwards was called on by Stewart yet again, this time to replace Blake Emmons as host of its Montreal-based revival of Chain Reaction (which aired in the US on the USA Network). He would do this until the series was cancelled in 1991 and would commute between the United States and Canada during this time. During this time, Edwards would also take the job as host of a revival of Jackpot for syndication in 1989.

Edwards was also one of four game show hosts to have emceed a game show in the United States and another in Canada concurrently (the other three were Howie Mandel, Alex Trebek and Jim Perry). Edwards, like Perry, commuted back and forth between and Canada between 1986 and 1991, hosting The Big Spin and the 1989 revival of Jackpot! in Sacramento, California and Glendale and the USA Network version of Chain Reaction in Montreal, Quebec. However, Edwards was required to have a Canadian co-host on Chain Reaction, due to the fact that he had no ties to the country, unlike Trebek, Mandel and Perry (Trebek and Mandel are native Canadians; Perry had blood ties to Canada and lived in Toronto, Ontario during the first several years of Definition). His commuting days ended after Chain Reaction left the air in 1991.

Edwards was famous for his catch phrase — "Right you are!" — which he frequently exclaimed after a correct answer.

Other television work

Edwards was also co-host of the Los Angeles news program Mid Morning L.A. on KHJ-TV (now KCAL-TV), replacing Bob Hilton in the early 1980s and paired with co-host Meredith MacRae. Edwards and MacRae won Emmy Awards for best host and best hostess respectively for a news magazine series. The two also emceed an unsold Bob Stewart-produced game show pilot, $50,000 a Minute, in 1985 for ABC.

In 1985, Edwards became host of The Big Spin, the game show of the California Lottery, and would remain host of that program until his retirement from television in 1995. In an interview with Blog Talk Radio, Edwards said he helmed the pilot of Fun & Fortune, the lottery game show in Missouri (before Rick Tamblyn became the permanent host). In another interview, he said he was offered the host role for Family Feud but had to turn it down because he was already committed to Shoot for the Stars.

Family

Edwards and his first wife, Suzanne, co-hosted a talk show, The His and Her of It. The program was broadcast on television stations owned and operated by ABC. In 1970, the couple also served as honorary co-chairmen of the organization California Association of Parents of Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children.

Later years

In his later years, he traveled extensively, hosting traveling programs on both radio and television, and writing about travel. His travel book, Going All The Way humorously chronicles his around the world cruise adventures. He appeared as a guest on GSN Live on May 16, 2008.

During his tenure on Starcade, as a result of his extensive studying about video games to avoid what his predecessor did, he became a video game fan; he would often give his own hints to help contestants on the show when they selected a particular game to play, and one "Starcade Hotline" segment showed him beating the notoriously-difficult arcade game Sinistar (he and other crew members would often play the arcade games between tapings).

Death

Edwards died of complications from pneumonia at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California, on March 5, 2014, less than a month after his 83rd birthday.

Filmography

Actor
1997
Drive as
Game Show Host
1995
Sliders (TV Series) as
Geoff Edwards
- Luck of the Draw (1995) - Geoff Edwards
1988
Small Wonder (TV Series) as
Guy Dwyer
- Togetherness (1988) - Guy Dwyer
1988
The Oldest Rookie (TV Series) as
Geoff Edwards
- Luck, Be a Lady (1988) - Geoff Edwards
1986
Trapper John, M.D. (TV Series) as
TV Lottery Host
- Elusive Butterfly (1986) - TV Lottery Host
1984
The Outlaws (TV Movie) as
Roger Demarest
1984
Double Trouble (TV Series) as
The Host
- Dueling Feet (1984) - The Host
1983
The Paper Chase (TV Series) as
Jeffers
- Spreading It Thin (1983) - Jeffers
1982
Madame's Place (TV Series) as
Biff Willis
- This is Her Past (1982) - Biff Willis
1981
Treasure Hunt (TV Series) as
Host (1981-1982)
1980
Diff'rent Strokes (TV Series) as
TV Reporter
- The Bank Job (1980) - TV Reporter
1978
Police Woman (TV Series) as
Andrew
- Murder with Pretty People (1978) - Andrew
1978
Three on a Date (TV Movie) as
Emcee
1973
The New Treasure Hunt (TV Series) as
Host (1973-1977)
1973
The Bobby Darin Show (TV Series) as
Cast Member
- Episode #1.1 (1973) - Cast Member
1970
WUSA as
Irving - Disc Jockey
1969
How We Feel About Sound (Short) as
Narrator (voice)
1969
The Comic as
Late Night Movie Host (uncredited)
1968
Petticoat Junction (TV Series) as
Jeff Powers
- First Night Out (1968) - Jeff Powers
- Only a Husband (1968) - Jeff Powers
- Bad Day at Shady Rest (1968) - Jeff Powers
- Mae's Helping Hand (1968) - Jeff Powers
- The Power of the Press (1968) - Jeff Powers
1967
Good Morning World (TV Series) as
Patrolman Nichols
- Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, Maybe (1967) - Patrolman Nichols
1967
I Dream of Jeannie (TV Series) as
Bank Teller
- Jeannie and the Great Bank Robbery (1967) - Bank Teller
1966
That Girl (TV Series) as
T.V. Announcer
- Soap Gets in Your Eyes (1966) - T.V. Announcer
Soundtrack
1968
Petticoat Junction (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- Mae's Helping Hand (1968) - (performer: "So Long Mae Belle" - uncredited)
Self
2008
Stu's Show (Podcast Series) as
Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards 2013 (2013) - Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards and Mark Maxwell-Smith (2010) - Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards, and Mark Maxwell-Smith (2010) - Self - Guest
- Burton Richardson, Geoff Edwards, Betty White, Johnny Gilbert, Randy West, Frank Bank, Ron Greenberg, Mark Maxwell Smith and Tom Kennedy (2009) - Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards 2009 (2009) - Self - Guest
- Wink Martindale and Geoff Edwards (2009) - Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards and Ronnie Greenberg (2009) - Self - Guest
- Geoff Edwards (2008) - Self - Guest
1989
Jackpot (TV Series) as
Host (1989-1990)
1989
Talk About (TV Series) as
Self - Celebrity Contestant
- Sneak Preview (1989) - Self - Celebrity Contestant
1985
$50, 000 a Minute (TV Special short) as
Self - Host
1985
The Big Spin (TV Series) as
Self - Host (1985-1995)
1984
The All-New Let's Make a Deal (TV Series) as
Sub-Host (1984)
1983
Starcade (TV Series) as
Self - Host / Host
1980
Chain Reaction (TV Series) as
Self - Guest Host
1980
Play the Percentages (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Pilot (1980) - Self - Host
1978
The Love Experts (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode dated 2 October 1978 (1978) - Self
1975
The $10,000 Pyramid (TV Series) as
Self - Celebrity Contestant
1977
Shoot for the Stars (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Lynn Redgrave and Wayne Rogers (1977) - Self - Host
- June Lockhart and David L. Lander (1977) - Self - Host
- Debralee Scott and David Doyle (1977) - Self - Host
- Adrienne Barbeau and Peter Lawford (1977) - Self - Host
- Barbara Feldon and Bill Cullen (1977) - Self - Host
- Lois Nettleton and Peter Bonerz (1977) - Self - Host
- Pat Carroll and Clifton Davis - Day 5 (1977) - Self - Host
- Pat Carroll and Clifton Davis - Day 4 (1977) - Self - Host
- Pat Carroll and Clifton Davis - Day 3 (1977) - Self - Host
- Pat Carroll and Clifton Davis - Day 2 (1977) - Self - Host
- Pat Carroll and Clifton Davis (1977) - Self - Host
- Anita Gillette and Tony Randall (1977) - Self - Host
- Mackenize Phillips and Nipsey Russell (1977) - Self - Host
- Loretta Swit and Michael McKean (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and George Maharis (1977) - Self - Host
- Peggy Cass and John Schuck (1977) - Self - Host
- Adrienne Barbeau and William Christopher (1977) - Self - Host
- Debralee Scott and William Shatner (1977) - Self - Host
- Lynn Redgrave and Jack Carter (1977) - Self - Host
- Sandy Duncan and Mike Farrell (1977) - Self - Host
- Peggy Cass and Robert Hegyes (1977) - Self - Host
- Vicki Lawrence and Tony Randall (1977) - Self - Host
- Carol Ita White and Rick Hurst (1977) - Self - Host
- Jo Anne Worley and Soupy Sales (1977) - Self - Host
- Adrienne Barbeau and Bill Cullen (1977) - Self - Host
- Anita Gillette and LeVar Burton (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and John Schuck (1977) - Self - Host
- Lynn Redgrave and Max Gail (1977) - Self - Host
- Debralee Scott and Peter Lawford (1977) - Self - Host
- Barbara Feldon and William Shatner (1977) - Self - Host
- Rita Moreno and Peter Bonerz (1977) - Self - Host
- Lynn Redgrave and Tony Randall (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Nipsey Russell (1977) - Self - Host
- Peggy Cass and George Maharis (1977) - Self - Host
- Debralee Scott and Rick Hurst (1977) - Self - Host
- Adrienne Barbeau and Mike Farrell (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and Bill Cullen - Day 5 (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and Bill Cullen - Day 4 (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and Bill Cullen - Day 3 (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and Bill Cullen - Day 2 (1977) - Self - Host
- Penny Peyser and Bill Cullen (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Soupy Sales - Day 5 (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Soupy Sales - Day 4 (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Soupy Sales - Day 3 (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Soupy Sales - Day 2 (1977) - Self - Host
- Anne Meara and Soupy Sales (1977) - Self - Host
1974
Dinah! (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.207 (1976) - Self
- Episode #2.127 (1976) - Self
- Episode #1.91 (1975) - Self
- Episode #1.22 (1974) - Self
1976
Tattletales (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #3.129 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Mike)
- Episode #3.125 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Mike)
- Episode #3.124 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Mike)
- Episode #3.123 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Mike)
- Episode #3.122 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Mike)
- Episode #3.121 (1976) - Self (as Geoff & Michaela)
1975
Rhyme and Reason (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.86 (1975) - Self
1974
Jackpot (TV Series) as
Self - Host
1974
Celebrity Sweepstakes (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode dated 2 June 1975 (1975) - Self
- Episode dated 27 January 1975 (1975) - Self
- Bill Bixby/Brenda Benet/Anne Meara/Jerry Stiller/Pat Carroll/Carol Wayne (1974) - Self
1974
The 1st Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (TV Special) as
Self - Presenter of Emmy Awards
1973
Hollywood's Talking (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Final Show (1973) - Self - Host
- Episode #1.6 (1973) - Self - Host
- Premiere Show (1973) - Self - Host
1973
The Bobby Darin Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.12 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.11 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.10 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.8 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.7 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.6 (1973) - Self
- Episode #1.4 (1973) - Self
1972
Cop Out! (TV Special) as
Self - Host
1972
Dean Martin Presents: The Bobby Darin Amusement Co. (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.5 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.7 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.6 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.4 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.3 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.2 (1972) - Self
- Episode #1.1 (1972) - Self
1971
Says Who? (TV Movie) as
Self - Host
1969
The His and Her of It (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Episode dated 5 December 1969 (1969) - Self - Host
1967
Dream Girl of '67 (TV Series) as
Self - Bachelor Judge
- The Dream Girl of 1967 (Show No. 225) (1967) - Self - Bachelor Judge
- The Dream Girl of 1967 (Show No. 224) (1967) - Self - Bachelor Judge
- The Dream Girl of 1967 (Show No. 223) (1967) - Self - Bachelor Judge
- The Dream Girl of 1967 (Show No. 222) (1967) - Self - Bachelor Judge
- The Dream Girl of 1967 (Show No. 221) (1967) - Self - Bachelor Judge
Archive Footage
2009
A Mime's Life as
Self
1998
Faux Pause (TV Series) as
Self

References

Geoff Edwards Wikipedia