Monty Hall, best known as the host of the popular game show “Let’s Make A Deal,” died Saturday. He was 96.
Born Monte Halparin in Winnipeg, Canada to Orthodox Jewish parents, Hall shot to fame in 1963 when he and a business partner developed and produced “Let’s Make a Deal.”
The game show was an instant success. Contestants — wearing crazy costumes to attract Hall’s attention — got to choose between mystery prizes behind three bedazzled doors.
Hall died in his home in Beverly Hills, Calif., his family told The New York Times.
He was widowed in June when his wife, Marilyn Hall, died at age 90. The two were married for 69 years.
The smooth-voiced Hall started his career in radio in Winnipeg — after a childhood spent working in his father’s butcher shop and also in a clothing factory for $9 a week.
After developing a taste for applause while appearing in college musicals, Hall moved to Toronto, where he picked up more radio work and did what he could to break into acting and singing.
By 1955, he was living in New York, and even did a year-long stint as a radio analyst for the New York Rangers.
Not long after that job ended in 1960, Hall moved his family to Hollywood.
It was while working as the host of “Video Village,” a CBS-TV game show, that Hall and his collaborator Stefan Hatos came up with the idea for “Let’s Make a Deal.”
The zany show challenged guests picked from the audience to strike deals with Hall — trading something they had brought with them for another mystery item tucked out of sight.
Frequently the hidden item — usually revealed when Hall pulled back a big curtain — was a household appliance like a dishwasher or refrigerator.
Contestants who made a bad deal got “zonked,” as the show called it.
But those who traded well got a shot at being one of two contestants to go for the Big Deal — which came at the end of the show.