High-Low (game show)
High Low is an American game show that aired on NBC from July 4 to September 19, 1957. The series was a summer replacement for the variety show The Ford Show. Jack Barry was the emcee and Don Pardo was the announcer.
High Low was broadcast from Studio 6A at NBC Studios in the Rockefeller Center in Manhattan.
Game play
One contestant, stationed in an isolation booth, competed against a three-member panel of celebrities in a test of knowledge inspired by the game High-Low Poker. On his or her first appearance, the contestant was staked $500 of betting money. Barry posed a question containing multiple answers to both the contestant and the panel. Each member of the panel would secretly bid on how many correct answers he or she could give to the question. The panel, studio audience, and home audience could see the bids, but the contestant could not due to the way the booth was situated.After being told the amount of the "high" bid, the contestant would be given a choice:
- To double his/her winnings by matching the undisclosed "lowest" bid.
- To triple his/her winnings by matching the disclosed "high" bid.
Contestants could continue playing with their current winnings for up to five games. At that point, if the contestant decided to try for a sixth game, he or she started a new set of five games with another $500 stake. Contestants remain until they walk away or are defeated.
Among the celebrities who appeared as panelists on High Low were actor/singer Burl Ives, actresses Patricia Medina and Arlene Dahl, actor Walter Slezak, John Van Doren, and former Twenty-One champ Hank Bloomgarden.