Everything about Solid Gold Tv Series totally explained
Solid Gold is an
American syndicated television series which aired from 1980 to 1988, usually on Saturday in the early evening timeslot. From 1986 to 1987 it was called
Solid Gold '86/
Solid Gold '87, and from 1987 to 1988 it was retitled
Solid Gold in Concert.
The main premise of Solid Gold consisted of the "Solid Gold Dancers" doing elaborate (and sometimes borderline risqué) dances to the top ten hits of the week. Many other specials aired in which the dancers would dance to older pop hits as well.
From 1980 to 1987, the show was taped...to be announced soon. When it was called
Solid Gold in Concert, from 1987 to 1988, the show was moved to the Paramount Studios in
Hollywood.
Solid Gold was produced by
Brad Lachman and
Bob Banner in association with
Operation Prime Time (
Alfred M. Masini, in charge of OPT) and
Paramount Television (
Richard H. Frank, in charge of Paramount).
At the start of Solid Gold's first season (1980),
Michael Miller was chosen by
Dionne Warwick to be the show's Musical Director - a role he continued on with for the entire run of the series. Michael also composed the
Solid Gold theme song, along with Academy Award-winning lyricist,
Dean Pitchford, who wrote the theme's words.
Year-end Top 40 countdown shows
The first episode of the show in
January 1980 would become a yearly tradition, as they counted down the Top 50 of
1979 in a two-hour series premiere. The show was called
Solid Gold '79 for that one episode. Every year thereafter through
1986, they'd host a two-hour year-end Top 40 countdown show.
All chart information for the Solid Gold countdown was taken from the
Radio & Records magazine chart lists, which only tracked airplay (at the time
Billboard didn't have an airplay chart), and as such, the placement of singles on
Solid Gold usually didn't match
Billboard. For example, "Her Town Too," a 1981 hit by
James Taylor and
J.D. Souther, lasted six weeks on the
Solid Gold countdown, while it didn't even make the Top Ten on the main
Billboard chart.
Hosts
The premiere and much of the first season was hosted by
Dionne Warwick and Marty Cohen, known more commonly as "Partyin' Marty Hardy". In the fall of the
1981-
1982 season,
Marilyn McCoo of
The Fifth Dimension and
Andy Gibb took over hosting duties. In the
1982-
1983 season
Rex Smith replaced Andy Gibb as Marilyn McCoo's co-host and in the 1983-1984 season
Marilyn McCoo hosted alone. In
September 1984,
Rick Dees hosted the show with comedy bits added to the format. Dionne Warwick returned to the show as host in the
1985-
1986 season before
Marilyn McCoo would return as host in the
1986-
1987 season along with
Arsenio Hall and
Nina Blackwood as co-hosts which would last until the end of the series in
1988.
The Solid Gold Dancers
The weekly one-hour show played segments from the Top 10 charting songs accompanied by the
Solid Gold Dancers.
Darcel Wynne was the principal dancer on
Solid Gold during her five-year reign. She appeared on the show from 1980 to 1984, took most of the 1984-1985 season off and rejoined the cast for 1985-1986. In 1986, Darcel had many speaking roles on
Solid Gold, regularly announcing the countdown re-caps towards the end of the show. Wynne and most of the other dancers left the program at the end of that season.
The last appearance of the Solid Gold Dancers in media wasn't on
Solid Gold itself, but rather in the 1988 motion picture
Scrooged. The movie, which premiered in November 1988, was scripted and filmed before
Solid Gold was officially cancelled.
Other long-running Solid Gold dancers included Pam Rossi (1980-1986), Deborah Jenssen (1980-1984), Kahea Bright (1980-1984), Paula Beyers (1980-1982), Helene Phillips (1980-1982), Alexander Cole (1980-1983), Tony Fields (1980-1984),
Lucinda Dickey (1982),
Janeen Best (1982-1983 & 1985),Gayle Crofoot (1982-1985),
Cooley Jackson (1983-1986),
Chelsea Field (1983-1984), Lezlie Mogell (1984-1985),
Mark Sellers (1984-1986),
Jamilah Lucas (1984-1988), Beverly Jeanne (1984-1986) Nicole Romine (1984-1986), Eileen Fairbanks (1985-1987), Audrey Baranishyn (1986-1987), Leslie Cook (1986-1988), Gigi Hunter (1986-1988), Darrel Wright (1986-1988), Paul Michael Thorpe (1986-1988), Regan Patno (1986-1988) and Andrea Moen (1987-1988). Though Jamilah wasn't listed as Principal Dancer in the closing credits, she replaced Darcel as principal dancer after she left the show.
Guest performers and the usage of the Top 10
At times, artists who had a single among the week's Top 10 appeared as guest performers, although the songs were lip-synced and not performed live. Celebrities also occasionally served duty as guest hosts. During the 1986-1987 season, the Top 10 was no longer danced to by the Solid Gold Dancers and instead was just simply listed halfway through the show.
Awards
Solid Gold won
Robert A. Dickinson three
Primetime Emmy Awards for
Outstanding Lighting Direction (Electronic) for a Series (two of which were co-won by
Frank Olivas). Choreographer
Anita Mann was also nominated twice (1985 and 1986) for
Outstanding Choreography.
Solid Gold Hits
In the summer of
1984, a weekday half-hour format called
Solid Gold Hits went into syndication; it was hosted by
Grant Goodeve and showcased just a general grouping of the hits of the time. The main
Solid Gold program was still airing on weekends.
Pop culture references
A September 2007 episode of the sketch-comedy show
Saturday Night Live featured a satirical promotion for a supposed "Best of Solid Gold"
DVD, with the announcer stating, "enjoy as the Solid Gold dancers sexy-shake it to some of the most undanceable songs ever written," before showing the dancers dancing to "
We Built This City". There is also the
Solid Gold Elite Dancers of
This Spartan Life, the show's equivalent to a talent segment, which features prefectly synchronized movments in the show.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Solid Gold Tv Series'.
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