Peter Tomarken

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Peter Tomarken
Peter Tomarken, seen here emceeing the game show, Press Your Luck.
Born December 7, 1942
Olean, New York
Died March 13, 2006
Santa Monica, California

Peter David Tomarken (December 7, 1942March 13, 2006) was an American television personality known primarily as host of Press Your Luck.

Born in Olean, New York, Tomarken was the middle son of Barnet and Pearl Tomarken. Barnet and Pearl owned Dee’s Jewelry store in Olean. When Barnet died in 1957, Pearl moved the family to California. Peter was 15 at the time and later graduated from Beverly Hills High School in 1960. Tomarken graduated from UCLA with a bachelor's degree in English and married his high school sweetheart, Dana Jones, who was his first wife, and later served on the Beverly Hills Board of Education from 1985 to 1993. He worked on the magazines Women's Wear Daily and Business Week in New York City during the late 1960s before moving back to California where he and Dana started a family and he began working at various advertising agencies, including Young & Rubicam. He later started his own advertising firm, which put him behind and in front of the camera for many commercials in the late 1970s. His agent then suggested that he should try his hand at game show hosting, to which Tomarken replied, "Why would I want to do that?" His agent said, "Because you work four days a month and get paid six figures!" After at least three failed pilots, Tomarken got his first network job as host of Hit Man for NBC in January 1983, which lasted 13 weeks. Tomarken also briefly co-anchored a news show on the Playboy TV in New York City at the same time, so he had to commute from coast to coast. Tomarken was then offered the hosting job for Press Your Luck, which he hosted for three seasons.

After Press Your Luck, Tomarken hosted Bargain Hunters for ABC. After a short hiatus, he returned to host Wipeout (which he produced with his son) and was slated to host Monopoly. Merv Griffin even produced a pilot featuring Tomarken as the host; however, not enough stations signed up to launch the show, and it was eventually aired as a weekly game show on ABC with a different host. Tomarken later hosted Paranoia for Fox Family Channel from April-May 2000.

Tomarken worked with GSN during its conception and early years in the mid to late-1990s and served as host for their evening interactive telephone games, Prime Games, which featured Decades and Race for the Numbers. He also appeared on several infomercials and acted in small roles, including on the TV show Ally McBeal, during that time. He semi-retired from television to work as a real estate agent. Tomarken hosted a documentary for GSN, Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck Scandal (which focused on controversial winner Michael Larson), in 2003. As part of the special, he hosted half of an episode of Whammy! The All-New Press Your Luck which reunited the 2 contestants who competed against Michael Larson with Larson's brother, James, for a grudge match.

[edit] Plane crash

Tomarken, a private pilot, and his second wife, Kathleen, were killed when his Beechcraft Bonanza A36, N16JR [1], crashed a few hundred feet offshore in Santa Monica Bay during climb-out from the Santa Monica Airport in California on the morning of March 13, 2006.

The Los Angeles Times offers pictures of the aircraft and reported that according to the FAA, the aircraft had engine trouble shortly after takeoff and attempted to turn back to the airport before crashing into the bay. A spokesman with Angel Flight West, a nonprofit that provides free air transportation to needy medical patients, says that Tomarken was an organization volunteer pilot. He and his wife were flying to San Diego to pick up a passenger who needed treatment at UCLA Medical Center.

FlightAware shows the flight map and tracking information [2] as well as the radar track log [3] for the short flight.

Peter and Kathleen are both buried in the same plot at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, CA.

[edit] External links