Roy Ward Dickson
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== Shows == | == Shows == | ||
[[Abracadabra]] (devisor and host) | [[Abracadabra]] (devisor and host) | ||
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+ | [[Full House (1)|Full House]] (devisor and host) | ||
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+ | [[Gair am Air]] (devisor) | ||
[[£100 Word]] (devisor) | [[£100 Word]] (devisor) | ||
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[[Pix]] (devisor and host) | [[Pix]] (devisor and host) | ||
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+ | [[Pwy Fase'n Meddwl]] (devisor) | ||
[[Sion a Sian]] (devisor) | [[Sion a Sian]] (devisor) | ||
- | [[ | + | [[Think of a Number (2)|Think of a Number]] (devisor and host) |
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+ | [[Three Little Words]] (devisor) | ||
[[Try for Ten]] (devisor) | [[Try for Ten]] (devisor) | ||
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+ | [[Turnabout (2)|Turnabout]] (devisor and host) | ||
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[[Category:People|Ward Dickson, Roy]] | [[Category:People|Ward Dickson, Roy]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Devisors|Ward Dickson, Roy]] |
Current revision as of 06:58, 2 November 2023
Contents |
Shows
Abracadabra (devisor and host)
Full House (devisor and host)
Gair am Air (devisor)
£100 Word (devisor)
Mr and Mrs (devisor)
Pix (devisor and host)
Pwy Fase'n Meddwl (devisor)
Sion a Sian (devisor)
Think of a Number (devisor and host)
Three Little Words (devisor)
Try for Ten (devisor)
Turnabout (devisor and host)
Biography
Serial game show devisor and host Roy Ward Dickson was a Canadian, though he was born in England in 1910, and divided his career between the two countries. His original career was teaching, but after a couple of years he left to became a newspaper journalist in Vancouver, later moving to Toronto where he attempted to interest his employers in a game he had invented. Unfortunately the newspaper wasn't interested, so he set up his own company and in 1935 made his radio debut in Toronto as host of a show called Professor Dick and his Question Box. He never looked back from then on, becoming a familiar voice (and later face) on both sides of the Atlantic. He died in 1978.
Trivia
His real name was Richard del Valle.