The Dating Game
The Dating Game is an ABC television show that first aired on December 20, 1965 and was the first of many shows created and packaged by Chuck Barris from the 1960s through the 1980s. ABC dropped the show on July 6, 1973, but it continued in syndication for another year as The New Dating Game. The program was revived three additional times in syndication afterward. The first revival premiered in 1978 and ran until 1980, the second ran from 1986 until 1989, and the last ran from 1996 until 1999, with a subsequent season of reruns.
Jim Lange hosted The Dating Game for its entire ABC network run and for the 1973 and 1978 syndicated editions. The 1986 revival was hosted by Elaine Joyce for its first season and Jeff MacGregor for its remaining two seasons. When the show was revived with a different format in 1996, Brad Sherwood was named as its host. Chuck Woolery took over for the two final seasons, with the original format reinstated, in 1997 after he had left The Home and Family Show.
Beginning in 1966, The Dating Game was often paired with The Newlywed Game. This was especially true when the two shows entered syndication, and in 1996, the revivals of The Dating Game and The Newlywed Game were sold together as a package called "The Dating-Newlywed Hour".
The program was originally broadcast in black-and-white, but when a prime-time version began in October 1966, both versions were broadcast in color, making the daytime version the first ABC daytime series to be broadcast in color on a regular basis.
Format
Typically, a bachelorette would question three bachelors, who were hidden from her view; at the end of the questioning period, she would choose one to accompany her on a date, with expenses paid by the show. Occasionally, the roles would be reversed with a man questioning three ladies; other times, celebrities would question three players for dates for themselves, co-workers or relatives.Before becoming famous, Farrah Fawcett, Suzanne Somers, Yvonne Craig, Lindsay Wagner, Leif Garrett, Tom Selleck and Lee Majors appeared as contestants on the show in the 1960s and early 1970s. Other contestants who appeared before becoming famous included the Carpenters, Jackson Bostwick, Michael Richards, Joanna Cameron, Andy Kaufman, Steve Martin, Burt Reynolds, John Ritter, Phil Hartman, Jennifer Granholm, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Alex Kozinski. Serial killer Rodney Alcala's episodes were shown during his murder spree and after he had been convicted of assault in California.
Some contestants appeared even after they were fairly well known, including a young Michael Jackson, Dusty Springfield, Ron Howard, Maureen McCormick, Barry Williams, Sally Field, Richard Dawson, Jay North and Paul Lynde.
A trademark of the show was that at the end of each episode, the host and winning contestants would blow a kiss to the viewers.
Game play
Original version
Generally, the bachelorette would ask questions, written in advance on cards, to each of the three hidden bachelors. The same question could be asked to multiple bachelors. This continued until time ran out. The bachelorette would make her choice based solely on the answers to her questions. Occasionally, the contestant was a bachelor who would ask questions to three bachelorettes. Certain kinds of questions were "off-limits", such as name, age, occupation and income.When the original format returned to the syndicated revival in 1997, these rules were readopted but there was more of a variety between bachelors and bachelorettes.
1996–97 season
For the first season of the 1996 revival, The Dating Game used a different format. A notable change was that the prospective bachelor/bachelorette knew the first names of the three contestants at all times.Instead of asking questions of the contestants, the bachelor/bachelorette was presented with two pun-laden statements, each pertaining to one of the contestants. When chosen, a new statement replaced the old one and the potential date explained the reason why that fact pertained to him or her. Play continued until time expired, and then the bachelor/bachelorette would announce his or her choice.
In several weeks of episodes that aired at various times throughout the season, another format was used. This format had the players choose a potential date based on appearance and another based on personality. To decide the "looks" portion, the bachelor/bachelorette would observe each contestant for several seconds, with the contestants wearing noise-canceling headphones to prevent them from hearing the bachelor/bachelorette talking about them. The statement round was used to determine the "personality" portion. After the game ended, the bachelor/bachelorette would select one contestant based on appearance and one based on personality, then would be prompted to choose between the two. If the bachelor/bachelorette was to select the same contestant for both looks and personality, the contestant would win a $500 cash prize.
Episode status
Various episodes from the ABC daytime run have aired on Game Show Network. The remaining ABC versions of the show, which were made for prime-time and for syndication, are assumed to exist in their entirety.After the syndicated finale in 1980, repeats of the 1978–1980 version were seen on KHJ-TV in Los Angeles from September 26, 1983 to September 12, 1986, as well as in some other cities. In another variation of the final year in reruns, some episodes from ABC daytime, ABC primetime and weekly syndication were shown.
Guests
Some of the celebrities that appeared on The Dating Game appeared as a bachelor or bachelorette before becoming famous, or as a special guest star, include:- Willie Aames
- Rodney Alcala, subsequently dubbed "The Dating Game Killer"
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
- Famous Amos
- Judd Apatow
- Desi Arnaz Jr.
- Mary Arnold of Kenny Rogers and the First Edition
- Candice Bergen
- Jacqueline Bisset
- Bill Bixby
- Karen Black
- Danny Bonaduce
- Jackson Bostwick
- Julie Budd
- Joanna Cameron
- Karen and Richard Carpenter
- Angela Cartwright
- David Cassidy
- Barrie Chase
- Dick Clark
- Jeremy Clyde
- Ronald K.L. Collins
- Michael Cole
- Teri Copley
- Yvonne Craig
- Brandon Cruz
- Joey D'Auria as himself, instead of as Chicago's Bozo the Clown
- Cesare Danova
- Ann B. Davis
- Richard Dawson
- Peter Duel
- Deep Purple
- Samantha Eggar
- Cass Elliot
- Farrah Fawcett
- Sally Field
- Fannie Flagg
- Jackie Fox
- Leif Garrett
- Kathy Garver
- Maurice Gibb
- Robin Gibb
- Anita Gillette
- Cuba Gooding Jr.
- Barry Gordon
- Jennifer Granholm, former Governor of Michigan
- Luke Halpin
- Phil Hartman
- Cheryl Hines
- T. J. Hoban
- Eddie Hodges
- Ron Howard
- Iron Butterfly
- Michael Jackson
- Sam J. Jones, "Flash Gordon"
- Casey Kasem
- Andy Kaufman
- Murray Langston, as The Unknown Comic
- Peter Lawford
- Vicki Lawrence
- Peggy Lipton
- Donna Loren
- Paul Lynde
- Dave Madden
- Lee Majors
- Steve Martin
- Groucho Marx, as a prank on his daughter Melinda, who was Bachelorette #1
- Meredith MacRae
- Jerry Mathers
- Maureen McCormick
- Jed Mills
- Kathryn Minner, "The Little Old Lady from Pasadena"
- Agnes Moorehead
- Jaye P. Morgan
- Louisa Moritz
- Bill Mumy
- Tom Netherton
- Jay North
- Charlie O'Donnell
- Butch Patrick
- Freda Payne
- Paul Petersen
- Vincent Price
- H.R. Pufnstuf
- Paul Reubens as Pee Wee Herman
- Michael Richards
- John Ritter
- Nipsey Russell
- Bobby Rydell
- Bob Saget
- Arnold Schwarzenegger
- Tom Selleck
- Suzanne Somers
- Dusty Springfield
- The Standells
- McLean Stevenson
- Strawberry Alarm Clock
- Elaine Stritch
- Rip Taylor
- Robert Vaughn
- Jimmie Walker
- Lindsay Wagner
- Dionne Warwick
- Adam West
- Johnnie Whittaker
- Barry Williams
- Terry Williams of Kenny Rogers and the First Edition
- Jo Anne Worley
Theme music and cues
The series used several songs by Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass as cues for the show, including:
- "Spanish Flea"
- "Whipped Cream"
- "Lollipops and Roses"
- "Ladyfingers"
- "Lemon Tree"
- "Live"
- "Close to You"
- "Midnight Confessions"
- "I Want To Be Where You Are"
- "I Want You Back", during the prize description
- "Cheyenne"
- "Goin' Out of My Head"
- "What's It Gonna Be"
- "Fantail" by Count Basie
- "Love Sickness" by the Trumpets Ole
- "Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff
The 1980s reboot of the show used music composed by Milton DeLugg, while later editions featured a rerecording of the original theme by Steve Kaplan.
International versions
Country | Local name | Host | Network | Aired |
Blind Date | Graham Webb Jeremy Cordeaux Bobby Hanna Greg Evans Julia Morris | Network Ten Seven Network | 1967–1970 1974 1991 2018 | |
Perfect Match | Greg Evans Cameron Daddo Shelley Craft | Network Ten Seven Network | 1984–1989 2002 | |
:de:Herzblatt |Herzblatt | Rudi Carrell Rainhard Fendrich Hera Lind Christian Clerici Pierre Geisensetter Jörg Pilawa Alexander Mazza | ORF | 1987–2005 | |
:nl:Blind Date |Blind Date | :nl:Elke Vanelderen|Elke Vanelderen | VTM | 1991–2005 | |
:pt:Namoro na TV|Namoro na TV | Silvio Santos | Tupi SBT | 1976 1988 | |
Любовни игри Lyubovni igri | Lina Zlateva | bTV | 2009 | |
Adán y Eva | Jota Mario Valencia | Inravisión | 1987 1993 | |
? | ? | RTL Televizija | ? | |
? | ? | Prima | ? | |
? | ? | TV3 | ? | |
? | ? | Kanal 2 ETV | ? | |
:fi:Napakymppi |Napakymppi | :fi:Markus Similia|Markus Similia :fi:Kari Salmelainen|Kari Salmelainen Joanna Kantola Janne Kataja | MTV MTV3 Nelonen | 1985–2002 2017–2019 | |
:fr:Tournez manège !|Tournez Manège ! | :fr:Évelyne Leclercq|Évelyne Leclercq :fr:Simone Garnier|Simone Garnier :fr:Fabienne Égal|Fabienne Égal | TF1 | 1985–1993 | |
:fr:Tournez manège !|Tournez Manège ! | :fr:Sébastien Cauet|Sébastien Cauet | TF1 | 2009–2010 | |
:de:Herzblatt |Herzblatt | Rudi Carrell Rainhard Fendrich Hera Lind Christian Clerici Pierre Geisensetter Jörg Pilawa Alexander Mazza | Das Erste | 1987–2005 | |
:de:Herz ist Trumpf |Herz ist Trumpf | :de:Stephan Lehmann |Stephan Lehmann | Sat.1 | 1992–1993 | |
Herz sucht Liebe | Thomas Ohrner | Sat.1 Gold | 2016 | |
? | ? | RTL Klub | ? | |
Blind Date | Al Porter | TV3 | 2017 | |
? | ? | Channel 2 | ? | |
:it:Il gioco delle coppie|Il gioco delle coppie Il nuovo gioco delle coppie | :it:Marco Predolin|Marco Predolin :it:Corrado Tedeschi|Corrado Tedeschi :it:Giorgio Mastrota|Giorgio Mastrota and :it:Natalia Estrada|Natalia Estrada | Italia 1 Rete 4 Canale 5 | 1985–1992 1993–1994 | |
? | ? | LTV | ? | |
Las Andanzas de Cupido | ? | TV Azteca | ? | |
Blind Date | Dave Jamieson Suzy Clarkson | TVNZ | 1989–1990 | |
:pl:Randka w ciemno |Randka w ciemno | :pl:Jacek Kawalec|Jacek Kawalec :pl:Tomasz Kammel|Tomasz Kammel | TVP1 | 1992–2005 | |
Zmenkarije | Srečko Meh Karin Komljanec Katarina Čas | Kanal A | 1998–2001 | |
Vivan los novios | Andoni Ferreño | Telecinco | 1991–1994 | |
:tr:Saklambaç|Saklambaç | :tr:Nurseli İdiz|Nurseli İdiz | Show TV | 1992–1996 | |
Blind Date | Cilla Black Paul O'Grady | ITV Channel 5 | 1985–2003 2017– | |
The Dating Game The New Dating Game | Jim Lange | ABC Syndication | 1965–1973 1973–1974 1978–1980 | |
The All-New Dating Game | Elaine Joyce Jeff MacGregor | Syndication | 1986–1987 1987–1989 | |
The Dating Game | Brad Sherwood Chuck Woolery | Syndication | 1996–1997 1997–1999 |
Legacy
In his first autobiography, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Chuck Barris claimed that The Dating Game was a cover for his CIA activities, and was promoted by the CIA. However, his second memoir, The Game Show King: A Confession, mentions neither the CIA nor his previous book. A CIA spokesman has categorically denied that Barris ever worked for the agency in any capacity.The show's popularity in the 1960s inspired a Baskin-Robbins ice cream flavor called Dating Game. It was a pink ice cream with diced dates and butter-toasted pecans.
The Dating Game was parodied by Steve Jobs during a 1983 Macintosh pre-launch event. The three "contestants" were Mitch Kapor of Lotus Software, Fred Gibbons of Software Publishing Corporation and Bill Gates of Microsoft.
Licensed merchandise
released three home games based on the original 1965 version of The Dating Game from 1967 to 1968, while Pressman Toy Corporation released a home game based on the late 1980s version in 1987.In 1968, a 33⅓ rpm party record called The Dating Game Party Pak, narrated by Jim Lange, was released; it included postcard invitations, name tags and scorecards for six people to play.
In a 1980 Laverne and Shirley episode, Lenny and Squiggy appear as bachelors on The Dating Game.
In the late 1990s, Sony's website released an online version of The Dating Game.
A video slot machine based on the original 1965 version with an animated Jim Lange was released by IGT in 2004 in both nickel and quarter versions.
In March 2011, a new virtual version of The Dating Game was launched on Facebook, Twitter and other social media network sites. The game was developed by 3G Studios, under license from Sony Pictures Entertainment.
A recurring parody featured in the current version of Let's Make a Deal called The Dealing Game features Wayne Brady and Jonathan Mangum, but instead of a date, each represents a curtain and tries to convince the contestant to pick his curtain. Model Tiffany Coyne plays the role of the "hostess".