Video Village

Video Village

Jack Narz and Joanne Copeland, 1960.
Presented by Jack Narz (1960)
Fred Rowe (1960, substitute)
Monty Hall (1960-1962)
Narrated by Kenny Williams
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 12 (1960 primetime)
501 (1960-1962 daytime)
Production
Producer(s) Merrill Heatter and Bob Quigley (Heatter-Quigley Productions)
Running time 30 Minutes
Release
Original network CBS
Picture format Black-and-white
Audio format Monaural
Original release July 1, 1960 (1960-07-01) – July 16, 1962 (1962-07-16)

Video Village is an American television game show produced by Heatter-Quigley Productions which aired on the CBS network in daytime from July 11, 1960, to June 15, 1962, and in primetime from July 1 to September 16, 1960.

It was notable for the use of its unique "living board game" concept and for premiering soon after the quiz show scandals.

Personnel

Jack Narz served as the host (introduced on-air as "the Mayor") from the show's premiere until September 9, 1960, after which he departed for personal reasons. Red Rowe filled in as Mayor for the week of September 16 (including the final nighttime episode); the following Monday, Monty Hall replaced him and hosted through the remainder of the show's run.

Kenny Williams served as the announcer (the "town crier") throughout the show's run. Joanne Copeland (later to become the second Mrs. Johnny Carson) served as the show's original hostess during its time originating from New York City. Shortly after Hall joined the show and Heatter-Quigley moved the show to CBS Television City in Hollywood, California, Copeland was replaced by Eileen Barton.

Rules

Two contestants played the role of tokens on a human-size game board with three streets: Money Street, Bridge Street and Magic Mile. Players advanced according to the roll of a large six-sided die in a chuck-a-luck, rolled on the sidelines by a partner (almost always a spouse or boyfriend/girlfriend) and called out by announcer Williams. After Video Village moved to California, the die was replaced by an electric randomizer. Any time a player landed on the space their opponent was on, they could either take an extra turn or force their opponent to return to the beginning of that street.

The squares changed throughout the show's run, but some of the more notable ones included:

The first contestant to reach either of the two "Finish" spaces (they had to do so by an exact roll) won the game and the right to return to play in the next game. Both contestants kept the cash and prizes they accumulated.

Spin-offs

A spin-off, Video Village Junior (sometimes also called Kideo Village) aired on Saturday mornings from September 30, 1961 to June 16, 1962; It was essentially the same game, except with children participating as the contestants (and a parent serving as their "significant other"). Its last episode aired the day after Video Village concluded its run.

Two years following Village's cancellation, a new Saturday morning kids' show, Shenanigans, premiered with game play similar to that of Village. It aired on ABC in 1964 and 1965, and was also a Heatter-Quigley production. The host was Stubby Kaye and the announcer was Kenny Williams (appearing as "Kenny the Cop"), who had also been the announcer on Village. Like "Village", a board game based on the show was manufactured by Milton-Bradley.

Episode status

The series is believed to have been destroyed as per network practices of the era. Four episodes are known to exist the second nighttime episode, an episode guest-hosted by Rowe (also the final nighttime show), the 500th daytime episode, and the third-to-last episode of Video Village Jr.

Foreign versions

An Australian version was in production from 1962 to 1966, made by Crawford Productions for HSV-7. Hosted by Danny Webb with Elizabeth Harris and Chris Christensen (later replaced by Vic Gordon).

Each episode of the show ended with children singing a song featuring the following lyrics:

Goodbye from video village
That's it today
See you at Video Village
Next time you're this way.

A similar concept was later used in the Canadian game show The Mad Dash, which aired on CTV from 1978 to 1985. Also similar have been Italian and Spanish language game shows named for and in imitation of the Game of the Goose.

Board game

In 1960, Milton Bradley released a board game "home version" of the game. Its rules closely matched those of the television program. The game proved popular enough that Milton Bradley continued to sell copies even after the show had been cancelled. Milton Bradley's Boob Tube game was also sold as a Video Village tie-in.

Music

Music for the show was provided by a live combo led by musical director Sid Wayne, consisting of organ, drums, xylophone and bass. Additionally, when Monty Hall became host, the "Village Bus," a golf cart-like vehicle, was added to shuttle contestants from the finish line back to start at the conclusion of the game. While driving it, he and hostess Eileen Barton would sing "The Village Bus Song", added to showcase both hosts' musical abilities.

Lyrics Video Village

Oh, Video Village is the place
Where people wear a happy face
There's so many things to see and do
For you, and you, and you!

Lyrics The Village Bus Song

Oh, hop aboard the Village Bus and away we go
I lead and I will really try to drive it nice and slow
We bump, bump, bump and beep, beep, beep
But no one seems to fuss
Oh what fun it is to have them both with us
Yes, oh what fun it is to ride the Village Bus!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.