Bill Leyden
William "Bill" Leyden (February 1, 1917[1] —March 11, 1970) was a World War II veteran serving in the Marine Corps and a television game show host and announcer who emceed six game shows, including It Could Be You (1956–61), Your First Impression (1962–64, with Dennis James), and You're Putting Me On (1969). In addition, he hosted movies on KTTV, and in fact played small roles in a handful of films, including Jerry Lewis' The Patsy (1964).
After returning home following the war, Leyden worked as a radio announcer on stations KMPC and KFWB in Los Angeles and later served announcer for the syndicated radio series The Liberace Program (1954–55) before moving over to television, where he hosted several game shows, the most successful of which was It Could Be You.
During his run on It Could Be You, Leyden was touted by announcer Wendell Niles as "the man who will amaze you with what he knows about you", partly because Leyden was often helped onstage and in the audience by well-concealed TelePrompters and "a team of spies and operatives" who investigated potential contestants.
Although he was extremely popular, both in front of the camera and behind the microphone, Leyden's chronic health problems limited his on-screen work in the latter half of the 1960s (Bill Cullen and Larry Blyden filled in for Leyden on You're Putting Me On, with Blyden becoming the permanent host of the show when Leyden suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in September 1969). For his television work, Leyden received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Game shows
- You're Putting Me On (1969) - NBC
- Super Bingo (1967) - syndicated
- Let's Face It (1967) - syndicated
- Call My Bluff (1965) - NBC
- Your First Impression (1962-1964) - NBC
- It Could Be You (1956-1961) - NBC - had both daytime and nighttime versions
- Musical Chairs (1955) - NBC -summer series
References
- ↑ Born in 1917 per Social Security Death Index under name William Leyden
External links
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