| Tom Bergeron | |
|---|---|
| Bergeron in April 2009 | |
| Birth name | Thomas Bergeron |
| Born | May 6, 1955 Haverhill, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Nationality | American |
| Spouse | Lois Bergeron |
| Notable works and roles | Host of: America's Funniest Home Videos (2001-present) Hollywood Squares (1998-2004) Dancing with the Stars (2005-present) |
| Emmy Awards | |
| Outstanding Game Show Host 2000 Hollywood Squares |
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Thomas "Tom" Bergeron (born May 6, 1955) is an American television personality and game show host, best known to the public as the host of America's Funniest Home Videos (2001–present) and Hollywood Squares (1998–2004). He is also the host for the ABC reality series Dancing with the Stars (2005–present), and a fill-in host for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. He is a Daytime Emmy winner. He was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts.
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Biography
Career
Bergeron's first job in broadcasting was as a disc jockey at local radio station WHAV, in his home town of Haverhill, Massachusetts. He was an extremely popular radio DJ in the Seacoast area of New Hampshire in the early 1980s on Portsmouth's WHEB, where he played comedy records along with music and offbeat interviews. His professional voice and warm personality landed him additional TV and radio auditions.
One of his first jobs on television was as host of a local game show, Granite State Challenge, on New Hampshire Public Television (produced at NHPTV flagship station WENH-TV). He moved to the Boston market in February 1982, joining WBZ-TV as a general on-air personality. His early roles at the station included being a contributor on Evening Magazine, hosting brief informational and show preview segments known as 4 Today, every 30 minutes during WBZ's daytime lineup, and landing the hosting spot on Lottery Live, the nightly drawings of the Massachusetts State Lottery games. By January 1987, while still working in these roles, Bergeron added People Are Talking to his duties. He replaced former hosts Nancy Merrill and Buzz Luttrell on the early afternoon talk show, and gained even more popula already replaced Bergeron as the presenter of 4 Today in 1986, and Bergeron remained lottery host until drawings moved to WNEV-TV in September 1987.) By the early 1990s Bergeron was seen as a solid figure in Boston television, and WBZ continued to capitalize on his talents by featuring him on WBZ Radio. It was there he had an early-morning radio show called The Tom Bergeron Show. When People Are Talking ended a successful 13-year run in June 1993, Bergeron remained on WBZ-TV as commentator and lifestyle reporter for the station's expanded hour-long noon newscast.
In June 1994, Bergeron left WBZ when he was hired by the new FX cable network to co-host a morning talk show for them, called Breakfast Time. Hosting with Laurie Hibberd, the show became quite successful on the upstart cable network, prompting the Fox Broadcasting Company to pick it up two years later. At the time, the cable system in his hometown of Haverhill didn't carry FX, leading to a long-running and ultimately failed public campaign to get them to pick up the channel or at the very least to locally syndicate the program. In September 1996 it became Fox After Breakfast, since it aired later in the morning than the other network's morning programs. This show ran for one year on Fox; eventually it became The Vicki Lawrence Show after a number of cast changes. Bergeron later was signed to a contract with ABC News as guest host to Good Morning America. After Charles Gibson left the show, Bergeron was seriously considered as a permanent replacement,[citation needed] but that job went to Kevin Newman.
Beginning in 1998, he became the host of Hollywood Squares. He was nominated for 5 Emmys and in 2000, he won his first and only Emmy. After Hollywood Squares ended its six-year-run in 2004, he continued hosting America's Funniest Home Videos, which he started hosting in 2001. In later years, Bergeron appeared twice on Star Trek: Enterprise as an alien trader named D'Marr and as a Coridan Ambassador. He also appeared in an episode of The Nanny in 1998. In 2005, he began hosting the ABC reality series Dancing with the Stars, for ABC, with ex-reporter Lisa Canning before Samantha Harris. The show proved to be a hit, airing in over 90 countries. His sharp sense of humor and good banter with the judges and cast members of Dancing with the Stars have helped to make him a big star again.
In 2009, Bergeron released his first book I'm Hosting As Fast As I Can: Zen and the Art of Staying Sane in Hollywood. This details his career and other oddball stuff along with some zen and some life lessons that people could use in life.
Bergeron is married and has two daughters. He lives in Los Angeles and Greenwich, Connecticut.
In 2005, Bergeron was a co-host on the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon, and in 2006 he was elected national vice president of the association.
Other facts
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Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (April 2009) |
- Bergeron also hosts a program on the Discovery Channel's "Green Planet" called "Supper Club". As it says on the network's website - Each week, Supper Club lets viewers be a fly on the wall at a Hollywood dinner party, as Tom Bergeron hosts a fabulous evening alongside a celebrity chef who cooks up a green meal, while four special celebrity guests break bread and discuss the latest news and events in the green movement.
- Bergeron has often identified long time WBZ Radio overnight host Larry Glick as his broadcasting mentor.
- Bergeron would do a magic act for various events - including for Boy Scout Troop 52 in Alton, New Hampshire in the early 1980s
- Bergeron appeared on an episode of the new I've Got A Secret on Game Show Network on December 30, 2006. His "secret" was that he used to perform as a street mime. He stated that he started when he was 20 years old and performed in theatres, on street corners, etc. He failed to stump the panel.
- Bergeron is the 2007 March of Dimes WalkAmerica spokesperson.
- Bergeron is one of the first inductees into the Massachusetts Broadcasters' Hall Of Fame, which was created in 2007.
- Bergeron hosted the "The Three Stooges Lost & Found Interviews" which originally aired 07/31/2009 on Sirius/XM Radio Howard 101. The show featured a 16 year old Tom Bergeron interviewing Larry Fine and Moe Howard in 1972 and 1971, respectively. He mentioned that he called Los Angeles information to get Larry's number, who volunteered Moe's private number minutes into their first interview by asking "Ya want Moe's Number?"
External links
- Tom Bergeron at the Internet Movie Database
- Tom Bergeron at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)
| Preceded by John Davidson in the 1986–1989 version |
Host of The Hollywood Squares 1998–2004 |
Succeeded by most recent |
| Preceded by Daisy Fuentes & John Fugelsang |
Host of America's Funniest Home Videos 2001–present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by New show |
Co-Host of Dancing with the Stars 2005–present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by Ben Stein and Jimmy Kimmel |
Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Game Show Host 2000 tie with Bob Barker |
Succeeded by Regis Philbin |
| Preceded by Wayne Brady |
Host of Miss America 2004 |
Succeeded by Chris Harrison |
| Preceded by Ryan Seacrest |
Hosts of Emmys (w/Heidi Klum, Howie Mandel, Jeff Probst, Ryan Seacrest) 2008 |
Succeeded by Neil Patrick Harris |
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