Art James

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Art James
ArtJames.jpg
Born Artur Simon Efimchik
(1929-10-15)15 October 1929
Dearborn, Michigan, USA
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Palm Springs, California, USA
Occupation Game show presenter, host, announcer

Art James (October 15, 1929 – March 27, 2004) was an American game show host, best known for shows such as The Who, What, or Where Game; It's Academic; and Pay Cards!. He was also the announcer on the game show Concentration.

He was born Artur Simon Efimchik in Dearborn, Michigan to Russian immigrants (fluent in Russian, he taught English to Russian immigrants). He attended Wayne State University in nearby Detroit, where he studied engineering. He worked as an announcer for the Armed Forces Network while stationed in Germany after World War II.

An old Army friend, who was an executive with NBC, asked James to audition for a new game show, Concentration, hosted by Hugh Downs, which needed an announcer. Concentration ran from 1958 to 1973 and was NBC's longest-running game show. He went on to either announce or host over a dozen game shows, including Say When!!; Fractured Phrases; It's Academic; The Who, What, or Where Game; Pay Cards!; Temptation; The Joker's Wild; Blank Check; The Magnificent Marble Machine; Classic Concentration; Family Feud; Catchphrase; and Tic-Tac-Dough, plus he appeared in the Kevin Smith movie Mallrats. He started Art James Productions in the 1990s with his business partner and producer, Dan Cross. Their joint company staged game shows that were specially created to communicate marketing and corporate strategies to key stake holders of Fortune 500 companies.

One episode of Say When! included a classic blooper by James while doing an live in-show commercial for Peter Pan peanut butter: during the sales pitch he dropped a knife into the near-empty glass jar breaking out the bottom and causing the knife to fall through. Though he struggled to keep from laughing, and because a retake was impossible, James still finished the commercial. The gaffe has been shown on many blooper specials.[citation needed]

James was a frequent contributor to TV Guide, writing about the world of game shows. He was living in Chaska, Minnesota at the end of his life, and died of unspecified natural causes during a visit to his brother in Palm Springs, California. James is survived by a daughter Jennifer Christie of Colorado Springs and a son, Jeff James; and 3 grandchildren.[citation needed]

External links

Media offices
Preceded by Voice, Concentration
1958–61
Succeeded by
Jim Lucas (1961–65)