Bert Parks
Bert Parks | |
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Parks in 1956.
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Born | Bertram Jacobson December 30, 1914 Atlanta, Georgia |
Died | Error: Need valid death date (first date): year, month, day La Jolla, California |
Bert Parks (born Bertram Jacobson;[1] December 30, 1914 – February 2, 1992) was an American actor, singer, and radio and television announcer, best known for hosting the annual Miss America telecast from 1955 to 1979.
Early life
Parks was born in Atlanta, Georgia, to Aaron Jacobson, a Jewish merchant who had immigrated to the United States in 1900 from Latvia (then part of the Russian Empire), and his wife Hattie (Spiegel) Jacobson, the daughter of immigrants from Austria-Hungary.[2][3] He had one older brother, Allen Jacobson.[2]
Radio
Parks entered radio broadcasting at age 16, for Atlanta's WGST. Three years later, he moved to New York City and was hired as a singer and straight man on The Eddie Cantor Show, then becoming a CBS Radio staff announcer. Parks was the host of Break the Bank, which premiered on radio in 1945 and was telecast from 1948 to 1957, as well as Stop the Music on radio in 1948 and television from 1949 to 1952.
With other celebrities, he hosted NBC radio's Monitor during the 1960s.
Television
Parks' first game show was Party Line on NBC (broadcast from New York City NBC flagship station WNBT), which involved viewers calling in to answer questions and win $5 prizes; Party Line ran from June 8 to August 31, 1947, making its one surviving episode the oldest known game show and one of the oldest surviving television shows to have been recorded. Commercial kinescopes did not come out until fall 1947 (co-sponsored by NBC, DuMont, and Kodak), and the only kinescopes known to predate Party Line are a few episodes of Kraft Television Theater from February and June 1947.[4]
Other games that Parks hosted in early television include Stop the Music (1949-52/1954-56), Double or Nothing (1952–54), Balance Your Budget (1952–53), Two in Love (1954), Giant Step (1956–57), Hold That Note (1957), Bid 'n' Buy (1958), County Fair (1958–59), Masquerade Party (1958–60), The Big Payoff (1959), Yours for a Song (1961–63), and the pilot for The Hollywood Squares (April 21, 1965). His last game show hosting job was in 1968, on the pilot for a revival of Heatter-Quigley's The Celebrity Game; the show did not sell.
He also helmed a daytime variety show in 1950, simply called The Bert Parks Show, as well as appearing in an episode of the comedy WKRP in Cincinnati. In addition, he also starred in a syndicated series, on NBC, called "Circus!" (featuring various circus acts from around the world) in the early 1970s.
Parks is most famous, however, for hosting the Miss America telecast from 1955–79, after which he was unceremoniously fired by the Organization in an attempt to attract a more youthful audience. Tonight Show host Johnny Carson led an on-air campaign to get Parks rehired, but was unsuccessful. In 1990, for the 70th anniversary of the Miss America pageant (during which Miss America 1991 was crowned), Parks was brought on by host Gary Collins to sing "There She Is" to the new Miss America, Marjorie Judith Vincent. It was the last time Parks performed the song live.
Parks' last known TV appearance, a Pepsi commercial, first aired in June 1991.
Recordings
A recording of "There She Is, Miss America" as sung by Parks was used each year in the Miss America scholarship pageant until 2012[5] as the new reigning titleholder takes her walk down the runway in her newly earned crown. On September 13th, 2015 the recording was reused for the 95th Anniversary of the Miss America scholarship pageant.
Parks did a take-off of his hosting role in The Freshman (1990), starring Marlon Brando, Matthew Broderick, and Bruno Kirby. He played the emcee of a Gourmet Club dinner where guests supposedly eat a Komodo dragon, singing a spoof of "There She Is" in a salute to the soon-to-be-deceased dragon.
Parks appeared on WKRP In Cincinnati in the 1980 episode "Herb's Dad", playing Herb Tarlek Sr. (father of series' regular Herb Tarlek Jr.). In 1988, Parks appeared on an episode of 227 as himself, and in 1991, Parks appeared on an episode of Night Court as himself.
Death
Bert Parks died of lung cancer at La Jolla, California on February 2, 1992 at the age of 77. He was survived by his wife of 49 years, Annette (Liebman) Parks (June 28, 1921 – December 19, 2013), and their three children.
References
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External links
Preceded by | Miss America host 1955-1979 |
Succeeded by Ron Ely |
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 US Census 1930, Atlanta, GA, Supervisor's District 4, Sheer 24A.
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- ↑ Library of Congress online archives
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- Pages with reference errors
- Age error
- Articles with hCards
- 1914 births
- 1992 deaths
- Beauty pageant hosts
- American male actors
- American game show hosts
- American male singers
- Deaths from lung cancer
- Miss America
- Male actors from Atlanta, Georgia
- Cancer deaths in California
- 20th-century American male actors
- 20th-century American singers