Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Jim Lange

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

Years active
  
1965–2005


Name
  
Jim Lange

Role
  
Host

Jim Lange spyhollywoodcomweekendeditionwpcontentuploads


Full Name
  
James John Lange

Born
  
August 15, 1932 (
1932-08-15
)

Occupation
  
TV presenter/Game show presenter

Died
  
February 25, 2014, Mill Valley, California, United States

Spouse
  
Nancy Fleming (m. 1978–2014), Fay Madison (m. 1953–1975)

Children
  
Romney Lange, Nick Lange, Gavin Lange

TV shows
  
The Dating Game, Name That Tune, The Newlywed Game, Bullseye, Spin‑Off

Similar People
  
Nancy Fleming, Bob Eubanks, Chuck Barris, Chuck Woolery, Gene Rayburn

Bullseye 2 12 86 for jim lange


James John Lange (; August 15, 1932 – February 25, 2014) was an American game show host and disc jockey. He was known to listeners in the San Francisco and Los Angeles radio markets with stints at several stations in both markets, racking up over 45 years on the air. Lange was also known to television viewers as the host of several game shows, including The Dating Game.

Contents

Jim Lange Jim Lange Super Mario Wiki the Mario encyclopedia

Andy kaufman punks jim lange on the dating game


Early career

Jim Lange Jim Lange Wikipedia

Lange began his radio broadcasting career in the Twin Cities after winning an audition as a teenager. He graduated from Saint Thomas Academy, going on to the University of Minnesota on a scholarship from the Evans Scholars Foundation.

Jim Lange Jim Lange longtime Dating Game host dies at 81 TODAYcom

After graduating from the University of Minnesota and serving in the Marines, Lange moved to San Francisco. After making his Bay Area broadcast debut as "The All-Night Mayor" on KGO, he moved to afternoons on KSFO in 1960.

Game shows

Jim Lange Remembering Jim Lange YouTube

Lange's network television career began in San Francisco with The Ford Show in 1962, where he was the announcer for, and sidekick to, host Tennessee Ernie Ford. Three years later he would sign on to host The Dating Game. While still on-air at KSFO, he commuted to Los Angeles to tape the TV program.

His other game shows included $100,000 Name That Tune, The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime, Hollywood Connection, Bullseye and the ABC version of The New Newlywed Game, as well as short-lived shows including, Spin-Off, Triple Threat and Give-n-Take.

Lange also appeared as himself on Bewitched, Laverne & Shirley, The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, Parker Lewis Can't Lose and Moesha. He appeared as a celebrity player on Scrabble during their 1988 "Game Show Host Week", and on Hollywood Squares for their "Game Show Week" in December 2002.

Later work and death

Lange was introduced to Los Angeles local audiences on KMPC in 1970, in order to limit his commute while taping The Dating Game. He returned to Gene Autry/Golden West-owned KSFO by 1971 and remained there until the station was sold in 1983. He then returned to KMPC, where he did mornings and afternoons (at different times) until the end of the decade.

In the early 1990s, Lange returned to full-time radio in the Bay Area. During that period he initially worked afternoons on 610/KFRC. He eventually accepted an offer to broadcast weekday mornings on "Magic 61," by then owned by real estate magnate Peter Bedford (Bedford Broadcasting). Magic 61 was formatted as "American pop standards" (Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis, Harry Connick, Jr., Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald, et al.). After the sale of KFRC AM and FM (99.7) FM (the new owners decided to simulcast the FM "oldies" format on 610 AM), Jim and the show decamped for a run on KKSJ, San Jose.

In 1997, Lange became morning host of The Lange Gang on KABL in San Francisco. Lange retired in 2005 after KABL went off the air. He also appeared as himself in the critically acclaimed 2002 film Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. In later years, he lived in Marin County, California, with his wife, Michigan native Nancy Fleming, former Miss America 1961, whom he married in 1978.

Lange died of a heart attack at their home in Mill Valley, California on February 25, 2014. Lange is survived by his wife Nancy, three children: Sons Nick and Gavin, Daughter Romney (all from his previous marriage), two stepchildren Steig and Ingrid (from Nancy's previous marriage), and four grandchildren. He was 81.

References

Jim Lange Wikipedia