Top Dollar

Top Dollar was a short-lived primetime (and later daytime) game show based on the parlor game "Ghosts" (and later "Hangman" in the daytime version only).

Broadcast
CBS Primetime: March 29, 1958-August 30, 1958; Daytime: August 18, 1958-October 16, 1959

Packagers
Entertainment Productions Inc./Harry Fleischman

Primetime
Toby Reed (primetime only)

Daytime
Warren Hull

Jack Narz

Announcers
Ralph Paul

Jack Clark

Spelling Authority
Dr. Bergen Evans

Premise
The object was for three contestants to add letters to a potential word without adding the letter that completed the word. each additional letter that completed the word. After the first three letters were revealed, each additional letter added $100 to the jackpot. Any player who added the final letter to a word was eliminated and the game continued until only one player remained who then won the pot.

In the home viewer portion of the game, the first eight letters of the top dollar (longest) word of the day were matched to a telephone dial and converted to digits. Any viewer who could match those numbers to the serial number on a $1 bill won $5,000.

One month later, on September 22, daytime "Top Dollar" was given a new format based on the parlor game "Hangman". Two contestants tried to guess a mystery word as they alternated filing in a given number of blank spaces. Each word was related to a prize (example: If the mystery word was "Aladdin", the prize might have been a set of lamps) and the player who identified the word won the gift.

Trivia

 * Radio Personality, Toby Reed emceed the primetime version wth Dr. Bergen Evans, a professor of Enlgish at North Western University, serving as spelling authority.


 * On August 18, 1958, a daytime version of Top Dollar with Warren Hull as host was quickly added to the CBS schedule, to replace Dotto.


 * In November 1958, Jack Narz replaced Warren Hull as host of Top Dollar.