Garry Moore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Garry Moore smoking as he often did while hosting I've Got A Secret
Garry Moore smoking as he often did while hosting I've Got A Secret

Garry Moore (January 31, 1915November 28, 1993) was born in Baltimore, Maryland as Thomas Garrison Morfit. He was a friendly, smiling television host on several programs during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, particularly game shows and variety shows.

Starting in 1937, he worked for Baltimore radio station WBAL as an announcer, writer and actor/comedian. He used his birth name until 1940 when, following a radio contest to find him a more easily pronounceable name, "Garry Moore" became the winning choice. In the years that followed, Moore appeared on numerous network radio shows, first as an announcer, then as support for various broadcast personalities, including Jimmy Durante, on whose radio show he worked as a straight man for six years. Impressed with his ability to interact with radio audiences, CBS offered him his own show. Starting in 1949 the one-hour daytime variety show The Garry Moore Show became one of radio's most popular programs.

Moore dealing with the aftermath of an empty armadillo on To Tell The Truth
Moore dealing with the aftermath of an empty armadillo on To Tell The Truth

During television's earliest years, between 1947 and 1950, he made tentative steps into the new medium as a panelist and guest host on quiz and musical shows and by June 26, 1950 was rewarded with his own 30-minute CBS early evening talk-variety program The Garry Moore Show, which was basically a shorter version of his radio show transferred to TV. Until September it was also simulcast on radio. The program then moved to daytime TV where it ran until June 27, 1958. During the summers of 1950 and 1951 he also hosted prime-time variety hour summer replacements for Arthur Godfrey and his Friends. Concurrently he enjoyed a 12-year run as the host of CBS' very popular weekly primetime TV quiz show I've Got a Secret, which premiered on June 19, 1952. Within three months of the end of the daytime show, he and his longtime sidekick Durward Kirby moved the revived Garry Moore Show into prime time as a Tuesday night comedy/variety hour which ran from September 30, 1958 to June 14, 1964. The show gave many performers their break in show business, including Alan King, Carol Burnett and Dorothy Loudon. By the summer of 1964, after having been on radio and television for 27 uninterrupted years, Garry Moore passed the hosting duties on I've Got a Secret to Steve Allen and gave up his high-rated variety show. Moore, like other successful stars during the infancy of television, such as Ed Sullivan, Jack Paar and Arthur Godfrey, was neither a comedian nor a musical performer, but rather a "personality," just being himself in front of the camera.

The Garry Moore Show was considered one of the better variety shows of the 1950s and 1960s. Regular supporting cast members included Durward Kirby, Denise Lor, and Ken Carson. The show featured a mixture of song and dance routines, and comedy skits. In the last few years, Garry Moore introduced the public to comedian Carol Burnett, who after the show ended, became a star in her own right, hosting The Carol Burnett Show for many years. He took over as host on the syndicated revival of To Tell the Truth (1969 to 1977), but became sick in 1976. He left the show shortly before Christmas 1976 to undergo surgery for throat cancer, turning the show over to temporary host Bill Cullen. In June 1977, he returned to host the opening show of the 1977 to 1978 season of To Tell the Truth only to announce his retirement and to turn over the remaining episodes to host Joe Garagiola. Retiring to Hilton Head, South Carolina, he died of emphysema in 1993. He is buried at Forest Hill Cemetery in his summer home of Northeast Harbor, Maine.

Preceded by
First Host
Host of I've Got a Secret
1952–1964
Succeeded by
Steve Allen
Preceded by
Bud Collyer
Host of To Tell The Truth
1969–1977
Succeeded by
Joe Garagiola

[edit] External links

[edit] References