Mark_Giardina said:Jerry Orbach- Law & Order
He was going into the Spinoff "Law and Order: Trial By Jury" at the time of his death. He died after the Law and Order:Trial By Jury Episode "41 Shots" was made.
Mark_Giardina said:Jerry Orbach- Law & Order
...although What's My Line? had ended production, it was still in first-run syndication when its final host, Larry Blyden, was killed in a car crash in Morrocco...EJM said:I needed to double-check before I posted it, but "What's My Line?" did apparently lose two other regular panelists while it was in production: Fred Allen may have officially been a regular in the mid-'50s (succeeding Steve Allen), while Bennett Cerf still appeared on a semi-regular basis on the syndicated revival. Supposedly, like with Hal March, some of his Mr. Cerf's last appearances may have been run in some areas after his death.
...indeed, that show ran in the 1979-80 season, and Bobby Van (who'd been diagnosed with the brain cancer that killed him before production started) died on 31 July 1980. I distinctly recall WVTV/18 Milwaukee running Make Me Laugh for at least another month after Van's death, replacing the show at 10:00 weeknights with Dave Allen at Large in September...EJM said:Expanding on that, it's possible that the Bobby Van-hosted version of "Make Me Laugh" was still in syndication when he died.
onairb said:Not sure if it qualifies as 'during' production, but, tied in with the Bobby Van post, Bert Convy was supposed to host the 1990 ABC version of 'The Match Game', and at the very least taped the pilot episode before he was diagnosed with a brain tumor, which eventually killed him. (Ross Shafer was ultimately hired to host the show).
WMC2006 said:I think I read that Bert left WLD after the second season to host another show. Robb Weller took over as host for the 3rd season.
bpatrick said:Lawrence Welk lost at least two while he was on ABC: Dick Kesner,
the violinist who could have passed for Richard Boone's brother, died
in an automobile accident just a few days before the same fate befell
Ernie Kovacs; Aladdin died in 1971.
Mario-500 said:bpatrick said:Lawrence Welk lost at least two while he was on ABC: Dick Kesner,
the violinist who could have passed for Richard Boone's brother, died
in an automobile accident just a few days before the same fate befell
Ernie Kovacs; Aladdin died in 1971.
Who?
Combs' last 'Feud' episode(for CBS, anyway) aired in March of '93; the network pulled the plug after airing reruns all summer. CBS revived it in the spring/early summer of '94, but it only ran about a year, due to OJ Simpson trial coverage pre-empting it.WMC2006 said:No, Combs died in 1996. Combs' final episode aired in 1994, then Richard Dawson took over again for the 1994-1995 season.
Since you opened the gate to that slippery slope, PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING, Mike Dibiase died in the ring of a heart attack in 1969, during a wrestling show in Lubbock, TX. Yes, he was pro-wrestling icon Ted Dibisase's father. Another pro wrestler died a few years earlier of the same ailment, in the parking lot, following a show in NJ. His name was Chic Garabolde. And of course, you needn't be a wrestling fan to remember hearing the horrific news of pro-wrestler Owen Hart's death on live-PPV TV. His body slammed helplessly into the wrestling ring when a cable, hooked to the rafters above, failed.Ultimajock said:Larry ...oh, and while considering the elements of the dramatic artsthat are involved in professional wrestling, I'll toss in Hercules Cortez with AWA All-Star Wrestling and David Von Erich and Gino Hernandez with World Class Championship Wrestling, each of whom were top active stars with their respective promotions at the time of their deaths...
As I recall, Archie Campbell died a few years after his exit from Hee Haw. Other active Hee Haw alumni worth remembering: Kenny Price and Slim Pickins.anotherguy said:From Hee Haw:
Stringbean
Junior Samples
Grady Nutt
Possibly Archie Campbell?