$1.98 Beauty Show

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
$1.98 Beauty Show
Genre Game Show
parody
Created by Chuck Barris
Presented by Rip Taylor
Narrated by Johnny Jacobs
Country of origin  United States
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes ~78
Production
Executive producer(s) Chuck Barris
Producer(s) Paul Pompian
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Syndicated (weekly)
Original run September 4, 1978 – September, 1980
Chronology
Related shows The Gong Show (1976-1980, 1988-1989)

The $1.98 Beauty Show is an American weekly syndicated television show hosted by Rip Taylor which ran from September 4, 1978 to September 1980.

It is a parody of beauty contests featuring six female contestants (including the occasional overweight ones, not-yet-famous Sandra Bernhard, and on at least one occasion a male dressed in drag) competing for the title of "$1.98 Beauty Queen".

Chuck Barris created the series and was executive producer while veteran Barris staffer Johnny Jacobs announced.

Contents

[edit] Rules

The show consists of three rounds, during which each contestant is judged by three celebrity panelists. These include Jaye P. Morgan, Jamie Farr, Steve Garvey, Louis Nye, Marty Allen, and The Unknown Comic (Murray Langston). Emcee Taylor introduces the contestants one at a time.

Round 2 features each contestant showcasing their "abilities". Round 3 is a swimsuit competition, in which emcee Taylor ushers the contenders on stage and announcer Jacobs cracks jokes about their vital statistics and hobbies.

At the end of each show, Taylor announces the "$1.98 Beauty of The Week" (sometimes the episode's ugliest contestant); that contestant is then presented with a tacky plastic crown, rotten vegetables as a bouquet, and the titular cash prize of $1.98, which Taylor dispenses from a coin holder on his belt.

[edit] Music Cues

Music cues used on this show include "Happy Days Are Here Again" (Taylor's theme song), "Oh You Beautiful Doll", "Isn't She Lovely?", and "Ain't She Sweet". In addition, Taylor serenades the winning contestant as a parody of Bert Parks having done the same on the Miss America Pageant.

The show's bandleader, Milton DeLugg, used all the same musicians from the band heard on The Gong Show, plus two additional saxophone players for the first season only. Although the band pretty much played it straight on the show, one sketch seen in the first season featured a contestant who played the harmonica so horribly, most of her airtime was given to closeups of DeLugg and the other musicians playing their hot jazz licks.

[edit] Background

The ridiculous format was Chuck Barris' very subtle way of turning TV beauty contests upside-down - the least attractive contestant often won the "beauty" prize; The announcer told the jokes while the comedian did the announcing; And the three celebrity guests did not judge the contestants - in fact, they didn't speak at all.

The whole "contest" was a fake because the outcome was previously arranged, as was noted in the fine print of the closing credits of each episode of the show.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools