




Another contestant on “Price” won a portable beach house- and for a bonus,
was given bathing suits for the entire family. The family got them all
right, but they were circa 1900- a bonus, incidentally, they as yet have
been unable to unload.
Then there was the lady from Dallas who won a swimming pool. Her bonus was a
wishing well, entitling her, said Cullen, to “one wish.”
“A car with four doors!” the lady announced.
The next week Cullen gallantly produced four doors salvaged from a junkyard
then coyly came up with the car. The latter the contestant took home, the
four doors she happily returned to the junkyard.
For bright-eyed, eager-beaver Bill Cullen, one of the hardest-working,
highest-paid entertainers on television, “The Price is Right” is right.
“It’s a great show and I’m lucky to be on it,” he says frankly. “I’m one of
the luckiest guys I’ve ever known. You can put it this way: I don’t say I’ve
got great talent. I always am the first to say I’ve had great luck.”
Cullen’s luck began 15 years ago when he came to New York from Pittsburgh,
got a radio job at CBS. In 1952 he switched to TV as a panelist on “I’ve Got
a Secret.” Since then he has mastered everything from “Place the Face” to
“Name That Tune.”
Since Bill became emcee of “Price” in November, 1956, he has given away such
tidbits as: a five-piece band, 12 jars of caviar and 12 quarts of champagne
(all to a lady from Long Island who threw a whale of a party): 100 shares of
Union Pacific stock (plus a safe to keep the stock in and a chihuahua to
“guard” the safe); an island in the Pacific; a mink-covered couch (plus two
live mink so the winner could “raise covering for the rest of your
furniture”); a 16-foot Ferris Wheel (to a father of three from Hattiesburg,
Miss.); a chauffeur-driven 1928 Rolls-Royce (as a bonus to a lady who had
just guessed the price of a sports car), and 100 pounds of Swiss cheese (so
that the panelist who had just won a snack bar could make himself a
sandwich).
The gentleman who won the cheese gave his prize to a local hospital. The
panelists who won the railroad stock, the Pacific Island, the mink couch,
and the Rolls-Royce kept their prizes. And the three children of the man who
won the Ferris Wheel set it up in their backyard. They think their father is
the greatest daddy of them all.
Of all the gifts that he has bestowed, quizzer Cullen’s personal favorite is
an elaborate array of bonuses given to Paul Jones, a 25-year-old furniture
salesman from Simpsonville, SC, who guessed correctly the value of a color
television set.
”Now that you’ve won this set, we want you to know what goes on behind the
scenes of television,” Cullen told him blandly. “So your bonus is a job as
actor in an episode of ‘Jefferson Drum.’”
Jones, now happily en route to Hollywood will begin his career as an actor
(he will go to work in the series sometime after Monday, July 7, when the
series is scheduled to go back into production) won another prize: 10,000
Eskimo Pies, complete with an ice cream vendor’s tricycle, awaiting him in
the company’s freezers.
“Just in case your option isn’t picked up in Hollywood, “Cullen explained,
“we want you to set up an alternate business.”
Up One Level to: The Price is Right (1956) |
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Up Two Levels to: The Shows of Bill Cullen |
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Up Three Levels to: Bill Cullen's World |
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Up Four Levels to: Game Show Utopia |