“HOLLYWOOD SQUARES” HOST & VETERAN
ENTERTAINER OF STAGE & SCREEN, PETER MARSHALL HAS DIED AT THE AGE OF 98
NAME:
Peter Marshall
(born Ralph Pierre LaCock)
BORN:
March 30th, 1926 in Huntington, West Virgina
DIED:
At 8:50am, August 15th, of kidney failure
Peter Marshall, the multiple Emmy Award-winning (5 wins and 19
nominations) host of the original HOLLYWOOD SQUARES celebrity game
show, passed of kidney failure ( … although as Peter
remarked, his cause of death should officially be of
boredom). According to his wife of 35 years, Laurie, Peter passed at
his Encino home, surrounded by loved ones.
Peter Marshall was born Ralph Pierre LaCock in Huntington, West
Virginia on March 30, 1926. Best known for hosting more than 5,000
episodes of the Emmy Award-winning original version of the
classic game show The Hollywood Squares, Marshall has enjoyed
a multi-faceted, eight-decade career as an actor, singer and emcee.
Peter made his entrance into show business while still in his
teens, moving to New York City where his sister, actress Joanne Dru,
was modeling, and landing a job as an NBC Radio page and an usher at
Paramount Theater. After graduation from high school, Peter
was drafted into the Army in 1944 and stationed in Italy, where he
developed hosting skills as a disc jockey for the Armed Forces
Radio.
By 1949, he joined forces with Tommy Noonan. The comedy duo appeared
in major nightclubs, films and theatres throughout the
country in addition to television appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show
and other programs. Peter's movie career expanded in the late 1950s as
a contract player at Twentieth Century Fox, appearing in Ensign
Pulver, The Rookie , Swingin’ Along/Double Trouble Rookie, The
Cavern and portrayed radio crooner Bert Healy in Annie.
In 1961, Peter starred opposite Chita Rivera in Bye Bye Birdie on stage in
London's West End. His first starring role on Broadway was
in Skyscraper with Julie Harris in 1965. His other musical theater
credits include High Button Shoes, Anything Goes, The Music Man,
and 42nd Street. In the 1980s, Peter performed the lead role of
Georges in over 800 performances of La Cage Aux Folles on the national
tour and on Broadway. On the non-musical stage, he starred for two years
as Lenny Ganz in the national tour of Neil Simon's farce Rumors.
After appearing in commercials for Kelloggs cereals, Peter was enlisted
in 1966 to host The Hollywood Squares, a humorous game show
take on tic-tac-toe featuring nine celebrity guests and
two contestants. With regulars such as Paul Lynde, Joan Rivers, Rich
Little, Rose Marie, George Gobel, Wally Cox, Ruta Lee, Charlie
Weaver, and hundreds of other stars, The Hollywood Squares
became a wildly-popular television institution for the next fifteen years,
winning Marshall multiple Emmy Awards. He subsequently hosted The
Peter Marshall Variety Show, Big Bands From Disneyland, the audience
participation series Fantasy with Leslie Uggams and game shows All-Star
Blitz and Yahtzee.
Peter's television credits also include appearances on The Love Boat,
Hotel, WKRP In Cincinnati, Burke's Law, Love American Style, The Lucy
Show, 77 Sunset Strip, Lou Grant, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, the
mini-series Harold Robbins' 79 Park Avenue and a British production
of Gilbert & Sullivan's HMS Pinafore with the London
Symphony Orchestra.
Marshall's love for music goes back to his days as a 15-year-old
vocalist with the Bob Chester Orchestra through his years as a
Las Vegas headliner. He has produced and toured in big band shows and
released numerous albums including Boy Singer, No
Happy Endings and Let's Be Frank. For over two decades Peter
hosted his own show on the national Music of Your Life radio network and
he has hosted nostalgic music specials for PBS including The Big
Band Years, Starlight Ballroom and Perry Como Classics.
A lifelong animal lover, Peter had most recently participated in a 50th
anniversary tribute for Betty White's Pet Set and hosted
the Doris Day 90th Celebration, in addition to narrating “Wait For
Your Laugh,” a documentary devoted to his late friend and Hollywood
Squares colleague Rose Marie. In 2002, he penned the acclaimed memoir
Backstage with the Original Hollywood Square.
Peter is survived by his wife, Laurie, of 35 years, daughters Suzanne Browning
(Husband David) and Jaime Dimarco (Husband Steve), son Pete LaCock
(Wife Janna) and predeceased by son David LaCock in 2021 from
complications due to Covid, the grandfather of 12 and the
great-grandfather of nine as well as numerous dogs and cats, as well
as his caregiver, Louis Soto.
https://www.petermarshallofficial.com
For
more information please send an email to harlan@bhbpr.com
or call 626.296.3757
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