Web - Amazon

We provide Linux to the World


We support WINRAR [What is this] - [Download .exe file(s) for Windows]

CLASSICISTRANIERI HOME PAGE - YOUTUBE CHANNEL
SITEMAP
Audiobooks by Valerio Di Stefano: Single Download - Complete Download [TAR] [WIM] [ZIP] [RAR] - Alphabetical Download  [TAR] [WIM] [ZIP] [RAR] - Download Instructions

Make a donation: IBAN: IT36M0708677020000000008016 - BIC/SWIFT:  ICRAITRRU60 - VALERIO DI STEFANO or
Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Terms and Conditions
Queen for a Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Queen for a Day

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses, see Queen for a Day (disambiguation).
Queen for a Day
px200
Enlarge
px200
Genre
Running time 30,increast to 45min
Creator(s) Edward Kranyak
Starring
Country of origin USA
Original channel NBC/ABC
Original run (on radio 1945-1956) January 3, 1956–October 2, 1964
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Queen for a Day was an American radio and television show. It helped usher in American broadcast listeners' and viewers' fascination with big prize giveaway shows when it was born on radio (19451957), before moving to television (19561964; 19691970) and, between the two versions, making it a forerunner "reality television". The show became popular enough that NBC increased its running time from 30 to 45 minutes.

Jack Bailey hosted both the original radio show and the original daytime television version, first for NBC and then ABC. Using the classic "applause meter" as did many game or hit-parade style shows of the time, Queen for a Day contestants told why they would like the honour—and the twist of it was that the contestant had to talk publicly about the recent hard times she had been through.

It was something of an inverted Horatio Alger syndrome: instead of boy or girl making good, strictly speaking, the lure of Queen for a Day was woman making rock bottom (or close enough to it; the tearjerking factor was always part of the show's appeal) in order to have a one in four chance at best of making good, or at least a little less burdened, for at least one day in her life. The more harsh the circumstances that led a contestant to want to appear, the likelier the studio audience was to ring the applause meter's highest level. And, to the full accompaniment of the studio orchestra ringing out "Pomp and Circumstance", the winner would be draped in a red velvet robe and a shimmering crown, and she would be festooned with gifts, trips, a fully-paid night on the town with her husband or her escort, and other prizes. "Make every woman a queen, for every single day!" would be Bailey's trademark signoff.

Queen for a Day struck a chord with Americans who hoped to see the hardest of luck catch a break once in awhile if not more, and in all fairness Bailey himself—for all his ballyhoo style—treated his contestants with dignity enough, as if it was second nature to him. But there were those critics who accused the show of exploiting rather than enhancing the women who competed and the audience (in studio and at home) who watched. Still, Queen for a Day's basic ambiance echoes almost four decades after the classic version of the show finished its two-decade broadcast life. (Dick Curtis hosted a short-lived attempt to revive the show in 1969.) Both the positive and the negative sides of the show can be seen (and are discussed) in such "reality" shows of today, which aim to relieve the put-upon or the circumstantially battered (admittedly, for more than a single day), as Extreme Makeover: Home Edition and Three Wishes.

[edit] Trivia & pop culture references

  • Within one year of its original arrival, however, Queen for a Day was the target of a parody on The Fred Allen Show. Tying it to the humourist's longtime running-gag "feud" with fellow comic titan Jack Benny, calling the segment "King for a Day", Allen set it up for Benny (in skinflint character) to sneak his way onto the "show" as a contestant, answer a single trivia question, and win a passel of goof prizes, including a professional pressers' iron that gave Allen the excuse to catch Benny, literally, with his pants down. Allen ordered assistants to start undressing Benny so his suit could be pressed right there, with Benny bellowing, "Allen, you haven't seen the end of me!" and Allen rejoining, without missing a beat, "It won't be long now!"
  • The 1951 movie Queen for a Day was based on the show and featured Jack Bailey playing himself.
  • George Carlin parodied the show with "Queenie for a Day" on the "Daytime Television" segment of his debut album, Take-Offs and Put-Ons in 1967. In his version, the winning contestant tells an increasingly tragic tale of hospitalization and homelessness, yet in the end, all she requests as a prize is a set of golf clubs.
  • In an 1980 episode of Happy Days, Marion Cunningham appears on a fictional Queen for a Day-like show to win funds for her son and his fiancée to get married, but she feels so sorry for one of her competitors that she turns over all her winnings to the other woman.
Our "Network":

Project Gutenberg
https://gutenberg.classicistranieri.com

Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911
https://encyclopaediabritannica.classicistranieri.com

Librivox Audiobooks
https://librivox.classicistranieri.com

Linux Distributions
https://old.classicistranieri.com

Magnatune (MP3 Music)
https://magnatune.classicistranieri.com

Static Wikipedia (June 2008)
https://wikipedia.classicistranieri.com

Static Wikipedia (March 2008)
https://wikipedia2007.classicistranieri.com/mar2008/

Static Wikipedia (2007)
https://wikipedia2007.classicistranieri.com

Static Wikipedia (2006)
https://wikipedia2006.classicistranieri.com

Liber Liber
https://liberliber.classicistranieri.com

ZIM Files for Kiwix
https://zim.classicistranieri.com


Other Websites:

Bach - Goldberg Variations
https://www.goldbergvariations.org

Lazarillo de Tormes
https://www.lazarillodetormes.org

Madame Bovary
https://www.madamebovary.org

Il Fu Mattia Pascal
https://www.mattiapascal.it

The Voice in the Desert
https://www.thevoiceinthedesert.org

Confessione d'un amore fascista
https://www.amorefascista.it

Malinverno
https://www.malinverno.org

Debito formativo
https://www.debitoformativo.it

Adina Spire
https://www.adinaspire.com