Match GameScott Thompson and Sarah Silverman to bring their comedic stylings to the new "Match Game"
As we told you back in February, a new edition of the classic 70's game show Match Game is in the works, and now the panelists have been set. Comprising the new cast for the upcoming pilot are comedian Norm McDonald, Super Dave Osbourne, Rashida Jones (from The Office), Niecy Nash (from Reno 911) and best of all, out comedian Scott Thompson and gay-adjacent comic Sarah Silverman. Earlier this month, we blogged about the new versions of classic game shows about to hit the air, and I suggested that if they remade Match Game, they should consider Carson Kressley and Kathy Griffin to replace the 70's Will & Grace style dynamic duo of Bret Sommers and Charles Nelson Reilly. Well, I was close. Just think of Sarah and Scott as the Earth-Two version of Kathy and Carson.
It'll be interesting to see if Sarah's humour (which is an acquired taste) will translate to a game show format, and if she and Scott will be given a chance to form their own Bret & Charles-style rapport. Submitted by on Mon, 2008-06-23 09:05. A new edition of Match Game could be as gay as BLANK
For the moment, at least, I'm pretty excited about the news that a new edition of The Match Game is in the works. Like many a game show with a panel of celebrities, The Match Game is at its best when it has a gay sensibility at work: the definitive 70's edition had Charles Nelson Reilly as a frequent panelist, along with gay faves like Betty White, Marcia Wallace and Reilly's verbal sparring partner, Brett Somers. Reilly often stole the show I'm particularly fond of this clip where host Gene Rayburn gets tired of Reilly's one-liners and hands him the emcee mike: When the GSN revived I've Got a Secret in 2006, they played up the show's gay sensibility by using an all-gay panel made up of Billy Bean, Suzanne Westenhoefer, Jermaine Taylor and Frank DeCaro. The results were pretty great. I'll keep my fingers crossed that this new Match Game tries something similar.
Back in the 70s all that innuendo flying around was still a little bit naughty and shocking. Still, part of the fun was that the panel knew how to play off of each other: Submitted by on Tue, 2008-02-05 15:08. Charles Nelson Reilly dies at 76Charles Nelson Reilly was one of those celebrities whose name was widely recognized, but many folks--especially younger ones--had little idea what he was actually famous for. In fact, mention of his name over the past ten years often provoked the response "He's still alive?" Sadly, that statement is now accurate as Reilly died this past Friday from pneumonia after a year long illness. His only survivor is his partner Patrick Hughes III, whom Reilly met in the early 80's on a gameshow called Battlestars.
I think what's most important to remember about Reilly is that he provided a stepping stone between the era of completely closeted actors and today when T.R. Knight and Neil Patrick Harris can be openly gay. Yes, Reilly was a somewhat campy figure, but for many gay men of the 70's he was daring and was a role model when there were precious few. Homophobia likely robbed him of the career he should have had, but he persevered nonetheless and improved life for those gay men who came after him. Like many somewhat famous people, by the end of his life Reilly was well-known for mostly one thing, but actually had a multi-faceted career, much of which is long forgotten. In Reilly's case, he was tagged as the game show guy (along with Paul Lynde) having appeared on Match Game from 1972-1982. Reilly later lamented that being associated with the game show killed his serious acting career which included a Tony Award. In a 2001 interview with The Advocate Reilly said. "You can't do anything else once you do game shows. You have no career." Like Hollywood Squares' Lynde, Reilly often adopted an exaggerated, campy persona on air. But Reilly also appeared dozens of times on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and had roles on shows as diverse as McMillan and Wife (with Rock Hudson), The X-Files, and Spongebob Squarepants. Reilly didn't officially come out until his one man stage show Save It For the Stage: The Life of Reilly in 1999, but Reilly also said he never hid his sexuality and was even told being so openly gay hurt his career. The name for his play was inspired by his mother who used to interrupt him while speaking by telling him to "Save it for the stage". Some other Reilly facts:
Submitted by on Mon, 2007-05-28 09:24. |
User login![]() Recent blog posts
|









Recent comments
9 min 5 sec ago
25 min 31 sec ago
28 min 39 sec ago
35 min 58 sec ago
49 min 59 sec ago
1 hour 5 min ago
1 hour 12 min ago
1 hour 17 min ago
1 hour 17 min ago
1 hour 38 min ago