Clark, Dick

Clark, Dick
in full Richard Wagstaff Clark

born Nov. 30, 1929, Mount Vernon, N.Y., U.S.

U.S. television personality.

He worked as a radio and television announcer before beginning his long engagement as host of the TV show American Bandstand (1956–89), a showcase for popular music. He formed his own production company in 1956 and produced over 30 series, 250 specials, and 20 TV movies.

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▪ 2003

      Five decades after he began shaping the viewing and listening habits of music fans with American Bandstand, Dick Clark, the “world's oldest teenager,” was still profiting from the marriage of television and rock and roll as the executive producer of American Dreams, a nostalgic dramatic series that premiered in 2002. Set in the early 1960s, it focused on a family whose daughter dances on American Bandstand and featured vintage musical performances from the show.

      Richard Wagstaff Clark was born on Nov. 30, 1929, in Mount Vernon, N.Y. He was a disc jockey at the student radio station at Syracuse (N.Y.) University, from which he graduated in 1951. Clark also worked at radio and television stations in Syracuse and Utica, N.Y., before moving in 1952 to WFIL radio in Philadelphia. His career skyrocketed in 1956 when he took over as the host of Bandstand, a popular afternoon program on WFIL-TV on which teenagers danced to records. Largely through Clark's initiative, Bandstand was picked up by ABC as American Bandstand for nationwide distribution, beginning on Aug. 5, 1957. The program's mix of lip-synched performances, interviews, and its famous “Rate-a-Record” segment captivated teenagers, who rushed home weekday afternoons to learn the newest dances, pick up fashion cues, and speculate on the romances between American Bandstand's regulars. Overnight, Clark became one of pop music's most important tastemakers as exposure on American Bandstand or his prime-time program, The Dick Clark Show, generated countless hits. Meanwhile, Clark's vertically integrated business interests grew to include record companies, song publishing, and artist management. When the record industry's payola scandal (involving payment in return for airplay) broke in 1959, Clark told a congressional committee that he was unaware that performers in whom he had interests had received disproportionate play on his programs. He emerged from the investigation largely unscathed, partly because his clean-cut image contrasted with the rebelliousness of payola's most famous fall guy, disc jockey Alan Freed.

      In 1963 American Bandstand moved to Saturdays and to Los Angeles, both to follow the shifting centre of the music industry and to allow Clark to broaden his involvement in television production. His Dick Clark Productions began presenting game shows, made-for-TV movies, and variety programs, most successfully The $25,000 Pyramid and TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes. Among the many awards programs the company produced was the American Music Awards, which Clark created. While Clark's behind-the-scenes business acumen had much to do with the fortune he amassed, he was better remembered for the charming on-air personality and ageless look that allowed him to remain one of television's most popular hosts and pitchmen even after American Bandstand went off the air for good in 1989. At the turn of the 21st century, he remained a fixture as the host of ABC's New Year's Rockin' Eve and was one of the hosts of The Other Half, a talk show about men geared for a female audience.

Jeff Wallenfeldt

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▪ American television personality
in full  Richard Wagstaff Clark 
born Nov. 30, 1929, Mount Vernon, N.Y., U.S.
 
 American television personality and businessman, best known for hosting American Bandstand.

      Clark was a disc jockey at the student radio station at Syracuse University (1951), and he also worked at radio and television stations in Syracuse and Utica, N.Y., before moving in 1952 to WFIL radio in Philadelphia. In 1956 he took over as the host of Bandstand, a popular afternoon program on WFIL-TV on which teenagers danced to records. Largely through Clark's initiative, Bandstand was picked up by ABC as American Bandstand for nationwide distribution, beginning on Aug. 5, 1957. The program's mix of lip-synched performances, interviews, and its famous “Rate-a-Record” segment captivated teenagers. Overnight, Clark became one of pop music's most important tastemakers as exposure on American Bandstand or his prime-time program, The Dick Clark Show, generated countless hits. Meanwhile, Clark's business interests grew to include record companies, song publishing, and artist management. When the record industry's payola scandal (involving payment in return for airplay) broke in 1959, Clark told a congressional committee that he was unaware that performers in whom he had interests had received disproportionate play on his programs. He emerged from the investigation largely unscathed.

      In 1963 American Bandstand moved to Saturdays and to Los Angeles, both to follow the shifting centre of the music industry and to allow Clark to broaden his involvement in television production. His Dick Clark Productions began presenting game shows, made-for-TV movies, and variety programs, most successfully The $25,000 Pyramid and TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes. Among the many awards programs the company produced was the American Music Awards, which Clark created. While Clark's behind-the-scenes business acumen had much to do with the fortune he amassed, he was better remembered for the charming on-air personality and ageless look that allowed him to remain one of television's most popular hosts and pitchmen, even after American Bandstand went off the air in 1989. At the turn of the 21st century, he remained a fixture on American television as the host of ABC's New Year's Rockin' Eve.

      Five decades after he began shaping the viewing and listening habits of music fans with American Bandstand, Clark, who was often called the “world's oldest teenager,” continued to profit from the marriage of television and rock and roll, serving as the executive producer of American Dreams (2002–05), a nostalgic dramatic series set in the early 1960s. It focused on a family whose daughter dances on American Bandstand and featured vintage musical performances from the show.

      In 2007 Dick Clark Productions was sold to Daniel M. Snyder's RedZone Capital in a $175-million deal.

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Universalium. 2010.

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