| Down You Go | |
|---|---|
| Created by | Polly Cowan |
| Presented by | Bergen Evans (1951–1956) Bill Cullen (1956) |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| Production | |
| Camera setup | Multi-camera |
| Running time | 24–26 minutes |
| Original release | |
| Network | DuMont (1951–1955) CBS (1955) ABC (1955–1956) NBC (1956) |
| Release | May 30, 1951 (1951-05-30) – September 8, 1956 (1956-09-08) |
Down You Go is an American televisiongame show originally broadcast on theDuMont Television Network. TheEmmy Award-nominated series ran from 1951 to 1956 as aprime time series primarily hosted by Dr.Bergen Evans. The program aired in eleven different timeslots during its five-year run.
Down You Go is one of only six series — along withThe Arthur Murray Party,Pantomime Quiz,Tom Corbett, Space Cadet,The Ernie Kovacs Show, andThe Original Amateur Hour — shown on all four major television networks of theGolden Age of Television (ABC,NBC,CBS, and DuMont).[1]
Down You Go was similar to "Hangman", with a group of four celebrity panelists who were asked to guess a word or phrase submitted by a home viewer. The host would give awordplay-laden clue to the panel, who could then ask a question of any sort about the phrase, for which the host would have toad lib an answer. After two questions, the second panelist would begin calling out a letter. Guessing a letter in the puzzle kept the panelist alive; if the panelist guessed a letter not in the puzzle, they would be eliminated and would pull down a lever on their lectern replacing their name with the phrase "DOWN YOU GO." Once two of the four panelists went down, the remaining panelists could ask another clue. At any time, a panelist could solve the puzzle and, if correct, end the game.[2] The panel and host would then lightheartedly discuss the phrase for a minute or so before the next round began.
Home viewers received a $5wire transfer and an encyclopedia set valued at $25 if their puzzle was used on-air, plus an additional $50 bonus if the puzzle was sent in along with aboxtop from one of the show's presenting sponsors and an additional $5 for each panelist they eliminated.
Among the regular panelists were comedianFran Allison, journalistPhyllis Cerf, editorFrancis Coughlin, actressPatricia Cutts, actressCarmelita Pope, actorBoris Karloff, authorJean Kerr, and athletePhil Rizzuto.
On DuMont:
Down You Go has been described as "one of the wittiest, most intelligent panel shows on television".[1] The popular series was nominated for a "Best Audience Participation, Quiz, or Panel Program"Emmy in 1953.[3]
AfterWestern Union canceledDown You Go on DuMont, the show moved toCBS as the summer replacement forMy Favorite Husband in 1955. Whitehall Pharmacal andProcter & Gamble were alternate sponsors.[4] Host Bergen Evans and some of the panelists stayed for the new version, which aired from June 11 to September 3. After twelve days,Down You Go returned to network television, this time on ABC, where it aired until June 4, 1956.
NBC picked up the program on June 16 and madeDown You Go more comedy-oriented, with new hostBill Cullen and a regular celebrity panel ofJayne Mansfield,Jimmy Nelson,Hildy Parks, andArthur Treacher. The series ended on September 8, 1956.[2]
TheBBC aired their own version from January 1, 1953, to 1954. Originally hosted by Marcus Dick, Roy Rich took over the position beginning in April 1953, coinciding with a "refreshing" of the programme.[5] Notably, Evans-era regular Patricia Cutts was a regular on this version as well.
One episode is known to exist. The panel for the episode was Francis Coughlin, Patricia Cutts,Jerome Weidman, andLaraine Day. The only indication of the date of the program was a brief and unusual promo advising viewers to tune in "onanother network" to watchThe Loretta Young Show the following night; as that show was only known by that name after 1954 and aired on Sunday nights, the promo sets this episode ofDown You Go during the summer 1955 run on CBS, the only time the show ran on Saturdays. This episode is held by theMuseum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago, circulates among collectors, and is available for viewing at theInternet Archive (albeit mistakenly dated September 26, 1951).
No episodes are known to have survived of the British version.