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Art Linkletter RIP

 
 
djjd62
 
Reply Wed 26 May, 2010 02:27 pm
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/3c/Alinkletter.jpg

Arthur Gordon "Art" Linkletter (July 17, 1912 - May 26, 2010) was a Canadian-American radio and television personality and the former host of two long-running United States television shows: House Party, which ran on CBS radio and television for 25 years, and People Are Funny, on NBC radio-TV for 19 years. Linkletter was famous for interviewing children on House Party and Kids Say the Darndest Things, which led to a successful series of books quoting children.

Linkletter was born Gordon Arthur Kelly in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Canada. In his autobiography, Confessions of a Happy Man (1960), he revealed that he had had no contact with his natural parents or his sister or two brothers since he was abandoned when only a few weeks old. He was adopted by Mary (née Metzler) and Fulton John Linkletter, an evangelical preacher. Later moving to the United States, he graduated from San Diego State University (SDSU) where he was a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. While he attended San Diego State, he played for the basketball team, and swam for the swim team. He had previously planned to attend Springfield College, but did not for financial reasons. He later served for many years as a trustee at Springfield College, and donated money to build the swim center named in his honor.
In 1963, Linkletter became the endorser and spokesman for Milton Bradley's Game of Life. His picture appeared on the box with the statement "I Heartily Endorse This Game", and also on the $100,000 bills featured in the game.

In 2005, at the age of 93, he opened the Happiest Homecoming on Earth celebrations for the fiftieth anniversary of Disneyland. Half a century earlier, he commentated on the opening day celebrations in 1955. For this, he was named a Disney Legend in 2005.

Linkletter was once a spokesperson for National Home Life, an insurance company. Linkletter, a Republican, became a political organizer and a spokesman for the United Seniors Association, now known as USA Next, an alternative to the AARP. He was also a member of Pepperdine University's Board of Regents. He received a lifetime achievement Daytime Emmy award in 2003. Also, he was recently a member of the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation (the council ended in November 2008).

Linkletter has received honorary degrees from a number of universities, including Pepperdine University and the University of Prince Edward Island.

Linkletter had one of the longest marriages of any celebrity in America. He married Lois Foerster on November 25, 1935, and they had five children: Arthur Jack (known as Jack Linkletter, a TV host), Dawn, Robert, Sharon, and Diane. He was also a good friend of Walter Elias Disney.

He lost two of his children to violent deaths. His 20-year-old daughter, Diane Linkletter, died on October 4, 1969, by jumping out of her sixth-floor kitchen window. Linkletter claimed that she committed suicide because she was on, or having a flashback from, an LSD trip. But toxicology tests done after the incident detected no signs of LSD use, and it is quite likely that the drug played no part in her suicide. LSD is eliminated from the body within a matter of hours, but "flashbacks", though rare, do occur.

Linkletter spoke out against drugs to prevent children from straying into a drug habit.[citation needed] His record, We Love You, Call Collect, recorded before her death, featured a discussion about permissiveness in modern society. It featured a rebuttal by Diane, called Dear Mom and Dad. The record won a 1970 Grammy award for the "Best Spoken Word Recording". His son Robert died in an automobile accident.

His son (Arthur) Jack Linkletter, (November 20, 1937"December 18, 2007 (aged 70)), died from lymphoma.

In early 2008, Linkletter suffered a mild stroke.

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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 May, 2010 02:32 pm
Art Linkletter's was the first face I saw on TV. His Art Linkletter's House Party was a favorite of my step grandmother. Later on, after we got our own TV, I enjoyed the segment he did called Kids Say the Darnedest Things. Then I lost interest in him. RIP, Art.
Ragman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 May, 2010 05:17 pm
@edgarblythe,
Same here. I watched that show as a young kid. I think HouseParty came on around 3 pm ET. My mother watched it so did I.

However, my first aware TV experience was Romper Room and then Howdy Doody.

After that in the early '60s, around 4:30 was either 'American Bandstand or 'Who Do You Trust' with Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon. Later on, Bandstand moved to 7:30 pm ET as it became popular.

I didn't know about that toxicology report.
May Art Linkletter RIP.
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 May, 2010 05:33 pm
I remember Art Linkletter pretty well, both when I was a child and somewhat later making fun of him, at least in my own mind.

Rest in peace.
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