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RIP Merv Griffin


hamilton

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Thank you Merv, for Jeopardy!, the greatest TV game show ever. I can remember watching the talk show back in the 80s, too - fond memories indeed.

Entertainer Merv Griffin, 82

August 12, 2007

BOB THOMAS

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Merv Griffin, the big band-era crooner turned impresario who parlayed his "Jeopardy" and "Wheel of Fortune" game shows into a multimillion-dollar empire, died Sunday. He was 82.

Griffin died of prostate cancer, according to a statement from his family that was released by Marcia Newberger, spokeswoman for The Griffin Group/Merv Griffin Entertainment.

From his beginning as a $100-a-week San Francisco radio singer, Griffin moved on as vocalist for Freddy Martin's band, sometime film actor in films and TV game and talk show host, and made Forbes' list of richest Americans several times.

His "The Merv Griffin Show" lasted more than 20 years, and Griffin said his capacity to listen contributed to his success.

"If the host is sitting there thinking about his next joke, he isn't listening," Griffin reasoned in a recent interview.

But his biggest break financially came from inventing and producing "Jeopardy" in the 1960s and "Wheel of Fortune" in the 1970s. After they had become the hottest game shows on television, Griffin sold the rights to Coca Cola's Columbia Pictures Television Unit for $250 million (all figures U.S.) in 1986, retaining a share of the profits.

"My father was a visionary," Griffin's son, Tony Griffin, said in a statement issued today. "He loved business and continued his many projects and holdings even while hospitalized."

When Griffin entered a hospital a month ago, he was working on the first week of production of a new syndicated game show, "Merv Griffin's Crosswords," his son said.

In recent years, Griffin also rated frequent mentions in the sports pages as a successful race horse owner. His colt Stevie Wonderboy, named for entertainer Stevie Wonder, won the $1.5 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile in 2005.

Griffin started putting the proceeds from selling "Jeopardy" and "Wheel" in treasury bonds, stocks and other investments, but went into real estate and other ventures because "I was never so bored in my life.''

"I said 'I'm not going to sit around and clip coupons for the rest of my life,'" he recalled in 1989. "That's when Barron Hilton said 'Merv, do you want to buy the Beverly Hilton?' I couldn't believe it.''

Griffin bought the slightly passe hotel for $100.2 million and completely refurbished it for $25 million. Then he made a move for control of Resorts International, which operated hotels and casinos from Atlantic City to the Caribbean.

That touched off a feud with real estate tycoon Donald Trump. Griffin eventually acquired Resorts for $240 million, even though Trump had held 80 per cent of the voting stock.

"I love the gamesmanship," he told Life magazine in 1988. "This may sound strange, but it parallels the game shows I've been involved in."

In 1948, Freddy Martin hired Griffin to join his band at Los Angeles' Coconut Grove at $150 a week. With Griffin doing the singing, the band had a smash hit with "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Cocoanuts," a 1949 novelty song sung in a cockney accent.

Doris Day and her producer husband, Marty Melcher, saw the band in Las Vegas and recommended Griffin to Warner Bros., which offered a contract. After a bit in By the Light of the Silvery Moon, starring Day and Gordon MacRae, he had a bigger role with Kathryn Grayson in So This Is Love. But after a few more trivial roles, he asked out of his contract.

In 1954, Griffin went to New York where he appeared in a summer replacement musical show on CBS-TV, a revival of "Finian's Rainbow," and a music show on CBS radio. He followed with a few TV game show hosting jobs, notably "Play Your Hunch," which premiered in 1958 and ran through the early 1960s. His glibness led to stints as substitute for Jack Paar on "Tonight.''

When Paar retired in 1962, Griffin was considered a prime candidate to replace him. Johnny Carson was chosen instead. NBC gave Griffin a daytime version of "Tonight," but he was cancelled for being "too sophisticated" for the housewife audience.

Westinghouse Broadcasting introduced "The Merv Griffin Show" in 1965 on syndicated TV. Griffin never underestimated the intelligence of his audience, offering such figures as philosopher Bertrand Russell, cellist Pablo Casals and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer-philosopher-historians Will and Ariel Durant as well as movie stars and entertainers.

He was also a longtime friend of former U.S. President Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy. When the Reagans returned to California in 1988 after eight years in the White House, Griffin and Hilton threw a $25,000-a-table homecoming gala for the couple.

With Carson ruling the late-night roost on NBC in the late 1960s, the two other networks challenged him with competing shows, Griffin on CBS and Joey Bishop (later Dick Cavett) on ABC. Nothing stopped Carson, and Griffin returned to Westinghouse.

A lifelong crossword puzzle fan, Griffin devised a game show, "Word for Word," in 1963. It faded after one season, then his wife, Julann, suggested another show.

"Julann's idea was a twist on the usual question-answer format of the quiz shows of the Fifties," he wrote in his autobiography Merv. "Her idea was to give the contestants the answer, and they had to come up with the appropriate question.''

"Jeopardy" started in 1964 and the more conventional game show ``Wheel of Fortune" was begun in 1975.

Mervyn Edward Griffin Jr. was born in San Mateo, south of San Francisco on July 6, 1925, the son of a stockbroker. An aunt, Claudia Robinson, taught him to play piano at age 4, and he soon was staging shows on the back porch.

"Every Saturday I had a show, recruiting all the kids in the block as either stagehands, actors and audience, or sometimes all three," he wrote in his 1980 autobiography. "I was the producer, always the producer.''

After studying at San Mateo Junior College and the University of San Francisco, Griffin quit school to apply for a job as pianist at KFRC radio in San Francisco. The station needed a vocalist instead. He auditioned and was hired.

Griffin attracted the interest of RKO studio boss William Dozier, who was visiting San Francisco with his wife, Joan Fontaine.

"As soon as I walked in their hotel room, I could see their faces fall," the singer recalled. He weighed 235 pounds. Shortly afterward, singer Joan Edwards told him: "Your voice is terrific, but the blubber has got to go." Griffin slimmed down, and he spent the rest of his life adding and taking off weight.

Griffin and Julann Elizabeth Wright were married in 1958, and their son, Anthony, was born the following year. They divorced in 1973 because of "irreconcilable differences.''

"It was a pivotal time in my career, one of uncertainty and constant doubt," he wrote in the autobiography. "So much attention was being focused on me that my marriage felt the strain." He never remarried.

Besides his son, Griffin is survived by his daughter-in-law, Tricia, and two grandchildren.

The family said an invitation-only funeral Mass will be held at a later date at The Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills.

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I was driving in my car today and cried some upon hearing the news of Merv's passing. The founder of my two favourite shows is gone... although I know nothing about the man, it touched me because Jeopardy! and TPIR are really tops in the gameshow world and continue to enhance my life as they have for years.

From the comforting cool technicolour bedazzlement TPIR provided when I was a toddler when my mom would leave me with gramps for the day to the times I spent, and still do now and then, with my dad throwing out wacky questions to the answers Jeopardy! offered as we sipped some aft-sup cocktails.. Merv.

Jennings' run was something wasn't it?! I would always make it a true Daily Double *bwhew bhew bhew bhew!* as I played along.

I could, from an early age, recite the mail in address for tickets to TPIR.. 90036 is my favourite number from now forth.

I'm really looking forward to the Drew Carey TPIR era. I hope for 'Cliffhanger' to become more of a staple challenge a la 'Plinko'. Everyone goes nuts for that one! Rightfully so... just that sound of the chip meandering down makes the "sick day" work week hour times well wasted; no regrets.(As I see the yodelling of 'Cliffhanger' doing if given the proper chance.)

Rset in peace Merv Griffin and thank you for provided years of knowledge, shimmering sets and feeling of envy of countless lucky contestants!

Wow, it's been a marathon of a day.

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hehe.. yeah, like two tears from each eye.. I think though there was some sort of imbalance going on from partying the night before! Plus I think I might have jammed in a quick thought of my old dead dog right around then too. :D

Is Mark Goodson dead? Now there's a game show genius!

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cheers to Merv for being one of the only people who tried to honestly report on the bullshit of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq... and standing by his beliefs when the television industry he helped build threw him off the air and out in the street

yeah the guy was rich and didn't need the money but any time you heard him talk about it he looked shaken and hurt by it all

thanks for that, the truly american style entertainments and apologies for how low some of of humanity are willing to go... a big problem with the US is there doesn't seem to be any laws against breaking a worthwhile old man's spirit

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