Jack Narz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jack Narz (born November 13, 1922, in Louisville, Kentucky) is an American television announcer and game show host. He is the elder brother of Tom Kennedy and the brother-in-law of Bill Cullen. Narz eluded the infamous quiz show scandal to forge a respected hosting career.

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Early in his career, Narz did some voice work. In the initial (1951) episode of Adventures of Superman, he narrated at key points in the backstory of the title character. He was also very much a presence in the infancy of local Los Angeles television. He served as the announcer on one of TV's first nationally-broadcast children's shows, Space Patrol.

Narz first achieved major television fame in 1953, when he was the on-camera announcer and narrator of the sitcom "Life With Elizabeth" starring Betty White. In 1955, as he did on radio, Mr. Narz served as the announcer-sidekick of bandleader Bob Crosby on the former's daytime TV show. That same year, he also worked as announcer on "Place The Face" a game show hosted by Bill Cullen. By the end of 1957, an apparent major upturn in his career would have Narz move his family from Southern California, to the suburbs of New York City.

In January 1958, he got his own game show, presiding over CBS's Dotto. Within a very brief time, this show became as popular, with Dotto running five days a week on CBS and, beginning in the summer of 1958, weekly in prime time on NBC, with Narz hosting both versions.

Dotto turned out to be fixed, and was the first popular quiz show to be canceled as a result. Narz never knew Dotto had been fixed. Narz proved it by passing a polygraph test while testifying to a grand jury investigating the quiz scandal.

He was back on the air within a short period of time after "Dotto's" cancellation, hosting its replacement "Top Dollar" (succeeding its first host, Warren Hull, as part of an arrangement made with CBS and the ad agency representing the Colgate-Palmolive Company and General Mills, with whom Narz was under contract at the time). In 1960, he guest-hosted for a month on The Price Is Right, while regular host Bill Cullen took a vacation. Later that year, he was the host of Video Village, but asked producers to let him leave the show due to personal reasons. After relocating back to Los Angeles, he hosted Seven Keys, which was at first a local show, then went network when ABC picked it up (1961-1964), after which, it returned as a local show in L.A. until sometime in 1965. This was followed by a 13-week run on a new NBC game show entitled "I'll Bet." In 1969, Narz began hosting the syndicated revival of Beat the Clock until 1972.

In 1973, Narz started hosting Concentration, in syndication, emceeing the program until 1978. That would be his longest-lasting job as host. He also emceed Now You See It on CBS (1974-1975). {In 1979-80, he worked for a season as announcer and associate producer for the CBS revival of Beat the Clock.)

When that run ended, Narz semi-retired, spending his time since as a celebrity golfer for various charitable causes.

While the Narz brothers (Tom Kennedy is the stage name of Jim Narz) have forged successful individual careers as broadcasters, they did make occasional joint appearances. Jack Narz would appear on Tom Kennedy's You Don't Say during its NBC run, and the syndicated It's Your Bet; Tom Kennedy guested on Jack Narz's Beat the Clock, and Narz appeared on the Password Plus panel during the Kennedy era and switched with his brother to host for one round.

Like his brother, Narz appeared on To Tell the Truth as a celebrity panelist.

In 2005, Jack Narz and Tom Kennedy were co-recipients of the Bill Cullen Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Game Show Congress.

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