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IMDbPro

Beat the Clock

  • Série de TV
  • 1950–1961
  • TV-G
  • 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
126
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Bud Collyer in Beat the Clock (1950)
FamíliaGame Show

Um clássico game show onde casais e famílias competiam para ganhar prêmios completando acrobacias dentro de um limite de tempo.Um clássico game show onde casais e famílias competiam para ganhar prêmios completando acrobacias dentro de um limite de tempo.Um clássico game show onde casais e famílias competiam para ganhar prêmios completando acrobacias dentro de um limite de tempo.

  • Artistas
    • Bud Collyer
    • Bern Bennett
    • Dolores Rosedale
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    126
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Artistas
      • Bud Collyer
      • Bern Bennett
      • Dolores Rosedale
    • 10Avaliações de usuários
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Episódios100

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    Fotos

    Elenco principal16

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    Bud Collyer
    Bud Collyer
    • Self - Host
    • 1950–1958
    Bern Bennett
    • Self - Announcer…
    • 1950–1958
    Dolores Rosedale
    • Self…
    • 1950–1953
    Bill Shipley
    • Self - spokesman for Sylvania HaloLight Golden Jubilee Television Sets
    • 1951
    John Reed King
    • Self - Substitute host
    • 1952
    Kay Francis
    Kay Francis
    • Self
    • 1950
    Bess Myerson
    Bess Myerson
    • Self
    • 1952
    John Jakes
    • Self - Contestant
    • 1952
    Rachel Jakes
    • Self - Contestant
    • 1952
    Beverly Bentley
    • Assistant (1955-1958)
    Dirk Fredericks
    • Announcer (1958-1961)
    Bob Shepard
    • Announcer - substitute
    Dick Noel
    • Announcer - substitute
    Henry Casso
    • Self
    • 1956
    Lee Vines
    • Announcer - substitute
    Hal Simms
    • Announcer - substitute
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários10

    7,3126
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    10lstolz-18869

    I was a contestant in 1961

    I was a contestant in 1961and was picked out of the audience to do a trick by myself....I had to wear a jumpsuit which I put on backwards by mistake and was holding it closed in front...Bud asked me if I had butterflies I did not beat the clock so I got only a Polaroid camera,which I used for quite a few years...at the end of the show he asked my son who was 8 years old at the time and was in the audience with my husband to come on stage and asked him if he wanted to be a policeman like his father...he said no that they work too hard and he wanted to become a teacher...I wish I could get a copy of that episode it would be so nice seeing it again...bud was so nice to talk to...I do have a lovely 8X10 photo that was sent to me some time later,of Bud and me...I love it....
    6redryan64

    "Next Time Might Be Your Time.............

    ...............To Beat The Clock!"

    WEEKLY DOSE OF humorous situations created by obstructing otherwise simple tasks with silly complications. We don't know how else we could describe it!

    HAVING VETERAN RADIO Actor Bud Collyer (he voiced the Man of Steel on THE ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN Radio Show) as the Host/MC, this mark Goodson-Bill Todman Production was a very popular series for over a decade; first ob CBS and later on ABC. There were no pretensions of its being High Art or PBS pseudo classy stuff. Fun of the participating contestants and the amusement of the viewers were paramount.

    AFTER COMPLETING THE assigned task(s) within the allotted time limit, the in-studio folks chosen to compete would receive whatever prizes for which they were eligible. A typical stunt would be introduced by MC Mr. Collyer with something like this:

    "Yes, Mr. Schultz, all you have to do is carry six eggs one at a

    time up this ladder and put them in that bucket. You have 45

    seconds to do. Ha, ha, ha, ha! But we didn't tell you that you

    have to wear a pair of roller skates and be blindfolded!"

    WELL, WE DO exaggerate, but you get the picture!

    OVER THE YEARS we know that the show had many $ponsor$; but for some inexplicable reason we remember that Sylvania Light Bulbs was one of their early commercial advertisers.

    IT IS TRULY strange how we can remember things like this, yet we cannot recall what our spouses told us this morning! Isn't tat right, Schultz?
    7patrickfilbeck

    Like a pleasant fellow who has never tried to stand out great

    This original version of the Beat the Clock franchise is also the best version at the same time. Simply charming and in a beautiful classic, contemporary style, sympathetically moderated and just wonderfully innocent. A beautiful show, which is not one of the best of its time, but has more or less co-invented a genre on which many great programs were based.
    bigboy1069

    Wonderful show

    A truly wonderful 50's era show. In addition to Sylvania, this show was also sponsored by Fresh deodorant makers and also by Hazel Bishop, a cosmetics line manufacturer. When the husband/wife teams won the jackpot prize, Sylvania gave away TV sets as prizes while Fresh gave away a wide variety of things such as washer/dryers, refrigerators, or Air Conditionors. The stunts always had an element of humor to them and at times did seem rather difficult, but more often than not teams were able to complete them. There was also a super bonus round which was attempted after the $200 clock had been beaten. This involved a very difficult stunt. For every unsuccessful attempt, $1,000 was added to the prize bonus. The most difficult stunt that I saw had the husband wearing a football helmet with a small plate turned upside down attached to the top of the helmet. The husband then had to balance a wooden dowel attached to a fishing pole on top of the plate. This stunt reached the mid $60 thousands figure before it was successfully completed.
    Paul-308

    Mistake

    Roxanne Arlen was not on this show.It was Delores (Roxanne) Rosedale that was the co-star.In the early 50s she was a major league star...and among the most glamorous females on TV.Many people remember Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield,but the actress with real style,real quality and real honor was Roxanne Rosedale.Her run on Beat the Clock (1950-1955) made her a regular television attraction for untold how many guys.From what I read she left the show to get married and have a child.I guess after that she became a full time mom and wife and ducked the Hollywood scene.Roxanne even had a Roxanne doll back in her Beat the Clock days.It sorta didn't look a whole lot like her,but she handed them to girls that appeared on the show with their parents.The dolls had a camera with strap that went around the dolls neck,much like the real Roxanne did on the show when a contestant would get covered in some gloppy mess,she would dart out from offstage with camera at the ready to take a snap of the laughable scene.Of course using the Sylvania blue dot for sure shot flash bulb the sponsor was hawking.Wonder if there ever was any film in that camera....and if so,where are those shots today? There very much needs to be a DVD of seasons of Beat the Clock offered for sale,the 3-4 episodes (Kinescope versions)that are now commercially available are surely not enough for BTC and Roxanne fans everywhere. *******Update*********** Roxanne fans....we need to straighten the Roxanne tale out....Seemingly every site has Roxanne Arlen in the place of Dolores Rosedale.....We know she was married in 1954 to Tom Roddy from New York,and we know she had a daughter "Anne" in 1955 after her Beat the Clock stint was over.She was dismissed from Beat the Clock,supposibly asking for more money.She later blamed it on Bud Collyer for her dismissal,him being jealous of her and all (false).She was in a 15 second beach scene in "the Seven Year Itch",and was on many magazine covers.She wanted to be a serious actress and a wife more than anything else on earth.She got 50% of her wish by 1954.There's what we know people.....Keep the Roxanne Rosedale spirit alive.....lets set her career straight...and find out what happened to the biggest thing on TV in the 50s.....

    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      James Dean, whose first TV appearances were in Goodson-Todman-produced anthology dramas, was also employed by G-T as a stunt tester for this program. He proved so agile at completing the stunts that his results couldn't be used to set time limits for contestants to complete them. So he was reluctantly let go.
    • Conexões
      Featured in The Jackie Gleason Show: The Honeymooners: Teamwork Beat the Clock (1954)

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de março de 1950 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Locações de filme
      • Ritz Theatre, Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA(1958-1961)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions
      • CBS Television Network
      • American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      30 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Bud Collyer in Beat the Clock (1950)
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    By what name was Beat the Clock (1950) officially released in Canada in English?
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