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Name That Tune

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Name That Tune was a game show that put two contestants against each other to test their knowledge of songs. Originally premiering in the United States in the early 1950s, the show was originally produced by Harry Salter. Name That Tune ran from 1953 to 1959 on NBC and CBS in prime time. The first hosts were Red Benson and Bill Cullen, but George DeWitt became most identified with the show. George could sing well, (Bill Cullen didn't) which was vital to the show's success. The best-remembered version aired once a week in syndication (expanded to twice a week for its final season) from 1974 to 1981 with host Tom Kennedy. Another version aired Monday-Friday during 1984 and 1985, hosted by Jim Lange; this version was heavily rerun on cable TV for almost a decade. The orchestra was conducted by Bob Alberti (1974-76), Tommy Oliver (1976-79, and the entire run of the Lange version), and Stan Worth (1979-81); a second band, Dan Younger and the Sound System, was also featured from 1978-81. These versions were both titled The $100,000 Name That Tune.

NBC also aired two versions of Name That Tune in the 1970s. The first, hosted by Dennis James, began in 1974 and ran until early January 1975. The show was killed in the ratings by the CBS hit The Joker's Wild and never got off the ground. The second version was helmed by Kennedy in 1977 and was a lower-paying version of his nighttime version, and only lasted six months.

The Different Versions

1950s Version

The contestants stand across the stage from a large ship bell and the band starts playing tunes. When a contestant knows the tune s/he runs across the stage to "ring the bell and name that tune!" Four tunes were played every game.

Each tune was worth increasing dollar amounts:
Tune #1 - $5
Tune #2 - $10
Tune #3 - $20
Tune #4 - $40

The player with the most money after four tunes wins the game & goes on to the bonus game called "The Golden Medley."

1970s and 1980s Versions

These two versions allow contestants (whom were selected from the studio audience) to score points as well as cash and prizes by winning music-related games.

The Games

Regularly played sub-games on the show included:

The player with the most points at the end of the three rounds proceeded to the "Golden Medley" bonus round. If there was a tie at the end of the game, one last tune was played; the first player to buzz-in and name that tune then went to the Golden Medley.

Golden Medley (All Versions)

The Golden Medley was a bonus round where the day's winner attempted to identify seven tunes in 30 seconds or less.

1950s Version

In the 50s version, all the tunes played here were selected by home viewers. Each correct tune won money for the winning contestant as well as the home viewers. The first correct answer was worth $25 and every subsequent correct answer doubles the money. Naming all seven won $1600 and gave a home viewer a chance to come to the New York studio where the show was taped at that time, and play along with the studio contestant in a special round called the "Golden Medley Marathon".

The Golden Medley Marathon

In the Golden Medley Marathon, the winning home viewer and the winning studio contestant worked as a team. They had 30 seconds to name five tunes, and doing so won $5,000 each. They come back for up to four more weeks, meaning that five successful Golden Medley Marathons won them each $25,000.

1970s & 1980s Versions

In these versions, prizes were awarded for each correctly identified song. If the contestant gave an incorrect answer at any time during this round, the game ended immediately. However, the player could pass on a tune by buzzing in and saying "pass". If time remained on the clock after all tunes were played, the contestant could attempt the passed tune(s) again. Naming all seven tunes in 30 seconds won the entire prize package, plus the chance to return to the show in a later episode (or episodes) in an attempt to win the $100,000 grand prize.

Kennedy's Version

In the 1970's version, any contestant who named all seven tunes won $15,000 ($10,000 on the daytime version) in cash and prizes. Starting in 1976, a $15,000 winner would return at the end of the next week's show and try to identify one more "Mystery Tune" for a $100,000 cash prize (paid in ten annual installments of $10,000).

The $100,000 Mystery Tune
The contestant entered into a Gold Room backstage. Inside was a safe, which the security guard opened to reveal a wheel with manila envelopes on it. The contestant selected an envelope. The security guard then escorted the contestant onstage into an isolation booth (which was wired so that he/she could only hear Tom and the piano). Then the guard opened the selected envelope, handed a pianist the sheet music for the song, and handed Tom a sealed business-size envelope. The pianist then played the song for 20 seconds, after which the contestant in the booth guessed the song's title and then exited the booth. Tom then opened the envelope and read the background information and copyright for the song. An audio recording of the contestant's guess was played, and Tom announced the song's title. If the contestant guessed correctly, he/she won the $100,000 grand prize ($10,000 a year for the next 10 years); this was also a feature of the short-lived 1977 NBC daytime version and played exactly the same, only the payoff was $25,000 (not paid out annually).

Lange's Version

On the Lange version, Golden Medley winners qualified to return for a monthly tournament. The rules were modified for this version; the non-final games began with three or four of the month's winners competing for two spots in the main game (Melody Roulette wasn't played until the finals.) Then, Tune Topics and Bid a Note were played for 10 points each. The final round was a two-player version of the Golden Medley called the "Golden Medley Showdown" (which was also played in the last season of the Tom Kennedy version). Contestants competed to name as many tunes as possible in 30 seconds. The contestant naming the most tunes correctly received twenty points, and whoever had more points (or won a single-tune tiebreaker, if needed) advanced to the finals.

The winner at the end of the tournament won over $100,000 in cash and prizes including $10,000 in cash, a new Pontiac Fiero, a Caribbean vacation and one week a year in perpetuity at a timeshare resort in Palm Springs.

The Lange version premiered with a "Super Champions" tournament, featuring fourteen $100,000 winners from the most recent version, who competed for a second $100,000. Elena Cervantes was the winner.

Name That Video

There was a variation on Name That Tune that aired on VH-1 called Name That Video. For more on this version, see its article.

Foreign Versions

A British version of the show started on ITV in 1983 with Tom O'Connor as the host. Lionel Blair took over for O'Connor later on until the series was dropped from the ITV schedules. Maggie Moon sang the songs that contestants had to guess. In 1998 the series was revived on Five with Jools Holland as the host.

Versions also aired in Australia, Canada, Italy and Russia.

Arcade game

In 1986, a coin-operated arcade game based on the show was released by Bally Sente. The player's task was to guess the tune being played from among four choices. It also featured a two-player mode. While playable, some gamers consider the machine's difficulty to be high due to the technical limits of the very basic synthesized music the machine was capable of.

Memorable contestants

Additional notes

External links

 


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