Don Pardo

Don Pardo
Don Pardo
Born Dominick George Pardo
February 22, 1918 (1918-02-22) (age 93)
Westfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
Other names Dom Pardo
Occupation Voice actor
Announcer
Years active 1938–present
Children Chris Pardo
Signature

Dominick George "Don" Pardo (born February 22, 1918) is an American radio and television announcer. He is best known as the voice of the long-running late night sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live.

Pardo is noted for his long association with NBC, working as the announcer for early incarnations of such notable shows as The Price is Right, Jeopardy!, and NBC Nightly News. He has acted as the announcer of Saturday Night Live for all but one of its seasons. Today, he continues his voiceover duties during the program's opening montage, several years after his official retirement from NBC.

Contents

Radio career

Pardo was born in Westfield, Massachusetts, and spent his childhood in Norwich, Connecticut, and Providence, Rhode Island. He was hired for his first radio position at WJAR-AM in Providence in 1938. Pardo joined NBC as an in-house announcer in 1944, remaining on the network staff for the next 60 years. During World War II, he worked as a war reporter for NBC radio.

NBC television

In the early 1950s, he served as announcer for many of RCA's and NBC's closed-circuit color television demonstrations, but eventually became one of the top game-show announcers for the network.

Pardo made his mark on game shows for NBC as the booming voice of the original The Price Is Right from 1956 until it moved to ABC in 1963, then Call My Bluff. The next year, he moved to Jeopardy!, which he announced from 1964 until the original version of the series ended in 1975. Pardo reprised that role with a cameo voiceover in "Weird Al" Yankovic's 1984 song "I Lost on Jeopardy" (a parody of the Greg Kihn Band's 1983 hit song "Jeopardy"). He also announced numerous other New York–based NBC game shows, such as Three on a Match, Winning Streak, and Jackpot!, all three of which were Bob Stewart productions.

Pardo squeezed in many other assignments at NBC, including the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade (until 1999), WNBC-TV's Live at Five news program, NBC Nightly News, and Wheel of Fortune (during two special on-location weeks in 1988, when the show originated from New York and was using substitute announcers after Jack Clark's death).

Pardo was the on-duty live booth announcer for WNBC-TV in New York and the NBC network on November 22, 1963, and he was first to announce to NBC viewers that President John F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas, Texas. (His first bulletin interrupted a local WNBC-TV broadcast of Bachelor Father before the NBC network went live with the story.) Because NBC waited eleven minutes to begin videotaping the coverage, it was believed for decades that Pardo's historic bulletins were lost; but, almost 40 years later, an audio tape of the bulletins was discovered in a private collection.

In January 1986, Don Pardo replaced Hal Simms as announcer on the NBC soap opera Search for Tomorrow. He was the announcer until the final episode, on December 26, 1986.

Saturday Night Live

His best-known announcing work is for the television series Saturday Night Live. His was the first voice heard on the show's premiere episode in 1975.

He has remained the program's announcer to the present day, except for one season (1981–1982), when it was announced by Mel Brandt (except for the episodes performed on December 5 and December 12, 1981, when veteran announcer Bill Hanrahan briefly substituted for Brandt). After "Live, from New York...", which is cried out at the end of the opening sketch, Don Pardo announces the show's title, then names the cast members and musical guest(s) in a voice-over during the opening montage. According to Pardo, his announcing booth in Studio 8-H, from which Saturday Night Live is telecast, is almost exactly where Arturo Toscanini stood when conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra in Rockefeller Center from 1937 to 1950. (Toscanini's broadcasts later moved to Carnegie Hall.)

In December 1976, on one memorable SNL episode, Pardo participated in a musical performance by Frank Zappa, reciting a verse of the song "I'm the Slime". Pardo subsequently reprised this role on the live-recorded version of the song for the Zappa in New York album (it was not featured on the first release in 1978, but it appears on the 1993 CD re-release). He also provided narration for the songs "The Illinois Enema Bandit" and "Punky's Whips" (a business dispute between Zappa and his then record company led to "Punky's Whips" being removed from the 1978 album, but the song was reinstated on the 1993 CD).

Retirement

Although Pardo officially retired from NBC in 2004 and moved from Demarest, New Jersey, to Tucson, Arizona, the producers of Saturday Night Live persuaded him to continue providing the introductions for their show. In 2006, he decided to begin prerecording his announcements from a home studio in Arizona. That lasted only a few episodes before producers insisted they needed him in Studio 8H, and he resumed weekly flights to New York to do the show.[1][dead link] On Saturday, February 23, 2008, Pardo appeared at the closing of SNL to blow out the candles of his 90th birthday cake. Upon his induction into the Rhode Island Radio Hall of Fame on May 14, 2009, Pardo indicated that the May 16, 2009, episode of Saturday Night Live could be his last.[2][3] However, his voice was heard once again announcing the show's 35th season premiere, and he continued providing the voice-overs through the season.

He announced that for the 36th season, he would pre-record his parts from his home in Arizona rather than performing live in New York City.[1]

Family

Pardo's son Chris used to go with his father to Rockefeller Plaza and do various jobs for his father's NBC shows. He has said, "I kind of grew up at NBC". Chris worked in radio and motion picture promotion and in 2008, moved with his wife to York County, South Carolina to be close to their own son, who moved there because of his job with Wells Fargo. In 2010 at age 70, Chris began hosting a radio sports talk show.[4]

References

External links

Media offices
Preceded by
Mel Brandt
Announcer on Saturday Night Live
1982–present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
None
Announcer on Saturday Night Live
1975–1981
Succeeded by
Mel Brandt
Preceded by
None
Announcer on Jeopardy!
1964–1975
Succeeded by
John Harlan
Preceded by
None
Announcer on The Price Is Right (1956)
November 26, 1956 – September 6, 1963
Succeeded by
Johnny Gilbert

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