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The Ad-Libbers

American TV game show (1951) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Ad-Libbers is a CBS comedy sketch game show that began on August 3, 1951, and ended on September 1, 1951, as a summer replacement for Mama.[1]

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Format

Home viewers were invited to send in story ideas. The host would read the story outline to the performers, who would then attempt to ad-lib dialogue to fit the story.[2]

Cast

The show was hosted by Peter Donald. Regulars included Jack Lemmon, Charles Mendick, Patricia Housley, Joe Silver, Earl Hammond and Cynthia Stone.[3]

Background

The series was based on a similar program titled What Happens Now? The program aired on local New York station WOR-TV in 1949 and was hosted by Nelson Olmsted.[4] Regulars on the 1949 program included Ross Martin, Carol Ohmart and Larry Blyden.[5]

Production

Ted and Hal Persons produced the show, and Hal Persons directed it. Maxwell House was the sponsor.[3] It was broadcast on Fridays from 8 to 8:30 p.m. Eastern Time.[2]

Critical response

A review in the trade publication Billboard said that the program "comes off as fitfully interesting but hardly strong enough to stand the rigors of strong audience competition."[3] It said that because the actors were not trained in performing spontaneously the demands of the show's format were unrealistic.[3]

References

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