Masters of the Maze

Masters of the Maze is a children's television game show that aired on the Family Channel from August 29, 1994 to September 15, 1995. After the last episode aired, the show went into reruns until September 22, 1996.[1] The first season was hosted by J. D. Roth, and the second season was hosted by Mario Lopez.[1]

Masters of the Maze
Title card from Season 1.
GenreGame show
Created byHal Berger & Fenton Rosewarne
Directed byRichard S. Kline
Presented byJ. D. Roth (Season 1)
Mario Lopez (Season 2)

Lady of the Maze:
Renae Jacobs (Season 1)
Clea Montville (Season 2)
Composer(s)Greg Edmonson
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes80
Production
Executive producer(s)Richard S. Kline
Hal Berger
Fenton Rosewarne
Running time~22 Minutes
Production company(s)Kline & Friends
Image Entertainment
Fenton Group Interactive Technology & Entertainment
Release
Original networkFamily Channel (daily)
Original releaseAugust 29, 1994 
September 15, 1995, reruns aired until September 22, 1996

Broadcast and production history

A few years before Masters of the Maze first aired, Australian Fenton Rosewarne created a puzzle called "Fenton's Maze," which Janet Weeks said "combined elements of Trivial Pursuit and Rubik's Cube."[2] Hal Berger, designer of the Power Glove, through his company IMAGE design and entertainment turned Fenton's Maze into an electronic game, licensed the product to Tiger Electronics, and then sold the game show concept to the Family Channel.[2]

The show, a two time Emmy-nominated (1995 and 1996) game show for kids, was taped in a 65-by-85 foot studio at CBS Studio Center.[3] The second season consisted of 40 shows, taped five per day.[3] According to co-executive producer Richard Kline, the concept of the show is "to allow viewers at home to get inside the video game."[4] The opening sequence was created by CBS Digital.

N. F. Mendoza, in an article in the Los Angeles Times printed the day before the show's premiere, referred to defusing a multi-level time bomb, and at one point in the article, referenced the show with the title TimeBomb.[5]

Audition process

For the second season, there were 500 prospective contestants vying for 120 contestant spots.[3] The auditions included a 25-question test, a narrative, as well as inhibition-testing events like a tug-of-war, a story-completion exercise, and a blindfolded trip through an obstacle course of folding chairs.[3]

Gameplay

Round 1 (both versions)

Three two-member teams competed. Each team chose one member to play the question and answer format of the game, while the other went offstage. At this point, the host showed distorted pictures to the players, each of which became more clear as time progressed. The first player to buzz in and identify the picture won ten points and a chance to answer a question about the picture for five additional points. The first two teams to reach 50 points won the right to enter the maze, with the first team doing so earning the right to decide who went into the maze first. After one team reached 50 points, the other teams played out the rest of the round, but without bonus questions. In the speed round, if a player buzzed in and was incorrect or unable to identify the picture, the host read a clue to the opponent without further revealing the picture.[6]

Before being allowed to enter the maze, the runner was briefed on the maze's layout by the "Lady of the Maze". In the Roth season this was simply the face of an older woman (played by Renae Jacobs); in the Lopez season, the likeness of a younger redhead woman appeared with a high-pitched voice (played by Clea Montville). The "Lady of the Maze" also appeared again when the runner had reached the halfway point.

In the earliest episodes, the players were given 10 seconds for each picture, which grew clearer as time passed, and the first person to buzz-in and identify the picture won one point for each second left on the clock, and an opportunity to answer the question about the picture to double the points. When one player earned 50 points or more, and thus the right to enter the maze, the other players played more pictures without the clock, at 10 points per picture, until another player reached 50 points.

Maze

Roth version

The maze had three sections: the Mirror Maze, the Honeycomb Maze, and the Chamber of Knowledge. The person that answered the questions in the first part of the game was also the one responsible for running through the maze, with their team partner guiding them through the maze by moving a giant joystick. This device controlled a computerized voice telling the contestant which direction to go, and triggered rumble devices on the outfit the runner wore as an additional directional aid. The joystick also had a button that controlled the runner's laser which was used in various parts of the game.

The first section was called the Mirror Maze. In this section, the contestant navigated a series of mirrors. Once the runner reached the end of the Mirror Maze, the "Mirror Man" blocked the path, not moving unless the runner correctly answered a question posed by Roth. A correct answer meant that the runner passed, while an incorrect answer or pass meant that the runner was asked another question. A contestant missing three questions had to wait five more seconds before being allowed to proceed.

Once the runner had passed the Mirror Maze, the runner had to find two of several Power Sticks that were hidden in the mountains between the Mirror Maze and the Honeycomb Maze. (Occasionally there was a Power Stick hidden in the Mirror Maze itself.) Once the runner found two, they entered the Honeycomb Maze. In this section, the runner had to lower their visor and rely on the partner to guide them through the network of doors and walls.

Once through the Honeycomb Maze, the runner raised the visor and entered a small briefing room. Here, the Lady of the Maze reappeared to give the runner instructions on what to do inside the Chamber of Knowledge, which the runner entered using one of the two Power Sticks.

Inside the Chamber of Knowledge, the runner was asked three different true or false questions by three of the six different guardians. A correct answer caused one of the three gates blocking the way out to open. If the runner answered incorrectly, the same guardian asked another true or false question. If the runner missed this question, one more true or false question was asked. If the runner missed all three, the gate automatically opened after five seconds. Once all three gates were open, the runner exited the chamber (and the maze itself) by inserting his/her remaining power stick into a holder at the finish line to stop the clock.

The first team set the time that their opponents had to beat. The second team then entered the maze, and had the amount of time established by the first team to make their way through. If the second team ran out of time, an alarm went off, the game ended immediately, and the first team won. If the second team made it out before time ran out, they won the game. The winners of this version also won prizes and the right to play a bonus round.

Chamber of Knowledge Guardians (Season 1)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of History (asked questions about American history; represented by an old Native American woman's head)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Fantasy (asked questions about story books, fairy tales, and nursery rhymes; represented by a dinosaur's head)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of the Animal Kingdom (asked questions about animals; represented by a lion's head)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of the Unexpected (asked questions about pop culture; represented to look like an elf or somewhat of a Star Trek character)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Nature (asked questions concerning all forms of nature excluding animals; represented by a face that looked to be modeled after wind)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Innovation (asked questions about science; voice usually sounded like a man, but sometimes a woman; represented by a head in a compass)
Prize Mountain

The quickest team in this version of the show won the right to play a special bonus round, which featured a mountain with five television monitors that constantly altered between a "Prize" screen and a "No Prize" screen. The runner faced the first TV on the mountain and shouted for the partner to fire the laser. If the team stopped at least three of the five monitors on "Prize" (before the team stopped at three monitors on "No Prize", which ended the game immediately), they won a $500 shopping spree at The Sharper Image in Beverly Hills.

Lopez version

The opening game remained the same, but with extra changes. One was that contestants now shot the picture using their laser podium before taking a guess; another was that there was now a special bonus picture at one point in the game in which five bonus points were added to the initial value, making it worth 15 points.

The maze was extended and featured new obstacles. Its four sections were the Mirror Maze, the Ice Cave, the Chamber of Knowledge, and Lightning Mountain (which consisted of the same set as the first season's Prize Mountain).

The Mirror Maze remained unchanged. However, the run to find the power stick was removed from this part of the game, and the Mirror Man's question was posed by the Mirror Man himself and his face was larger than last season's. If a contestant gave a wrong answer or ran out of time to answer, another question was read. A runner failing to answer that question correctly had to wait at least three seconds before proceeding.

Once the runner arrived at the entrance to the Ice Cave, the Lady of The Maze showed the runner a distorted picture on a monitor (as in the first round). A runner identifying it within five seconds took the shorter path through the cave, but otherwise had to take the longer path. In either case, the runner was required to lower the visor before entering the Ice Cave. While navigating the cave, the runner had to find a Power Stick; in addition, the contestant also had to avoid kicking two groups of sensors and Mirror Man placards that were placed on the cave floor. If the runner touched one of these objects, several large icicles descended from the cave ceiling, blocking the runner's path. Upon finding the Power Stick and getting through the Ice Cave, the player lifted their visor and enter the Chamber of Knowledge.

There were now only four guardians in this portion of the maze, and only one correct answer was required to exit. If the answer was incorrect, the runner had to answer another true or false question, and if the player missed that one, a five-second penalty was assessed before the gates unlocked.

The runner now faced a single television monitor at the base of Lightning Mountain with faces of the Mirror Man flying on it. The runner had to blast two of these images with his laser before being allowed to run up the mountain and stop the clock. As in the Roth era, the first team set the time, the second team had to beat it, and the second team was not allowed to finish their maze run if their time exceeded the first team's time. The bonus round was removed. The team that won the game automatically won the $500 shopping spree for the runner and the prizes for the navigator.

Chamber of Knowledge Guardians (Season 2)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Education (gave school-related questions)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Imagination (asked questions about pop culture and other miscellaneous facts)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of the Natural World (gave questions about nature; represented by a lion's head with a unicorn's horn)
  • The Guardian of the Gate of Science and Discovery (gave questions about science and technology; represented by a robot's head)

Similarities between both seasons

With both the JD Roth and Mario Lopez seasons, the winning team received a trophy made from one of the power sticks. In addition, the winning runner was said to go on a "special journey" in which they appeared to be disintegrated into a ball of randomly spinning particles which floated away into either the large video wall or an inter-dimensional tunnel.

Producer and game show veteran Mark Maxwell-Smith provided the voices of all the Chamber of Knowledge guardians in both seasons, as well as the Mirror Man in the Lopez era.

gollark: The x5-z8350 CPU they use is basically equivalent to a Pi 4.
gollark: I may just be used to underpowered low-quality hardware but I'm fine with them!
gollark: If I were to replace it I'd actually go for one of those dirt-cheap x86-64 ones which run Windows.
gollark: Apart from the CPU being a bit underspecced since 2015, it's fine.
gollark: I don't see why.

References

  1. Schwartz, David; Steve Ryan; Fred Wostbrock (1999). "Masters of the Maze". The Encyclopedia of TV Game Shows (3rd ed.). Facts on File. p. 137. ISBN 0-8160-3847-3.
  2. Weeks, Janet (1995-06-26). "It's Just A-maze-ing Kids Become 'Masters' of High-Tech Game Show's Universe". Daily News. p. L.14.
  3. Rauzi, Robin (1995-07-21). "Suited for the Brain Game: Kids Rely on Knowledge and High-Tech Signals to Navigate Their Way to Prizes in Popular 'Masters of the Maze'". Los Angeles Times. p. 7.
  4. "Masters of the Maze-an Interactive Game Played on Television". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (66): 70. January 1995.
  5. Mendoza, N. F. (1994-08-28). "Shows for Youngsters and Their Parents Too: Calling All Good Drivers and Bomb Defusers for Family Game Shows". Los Angeles Times. p. 7.
  6. The Family Channel. Masters of the Maze. Starring J. D. Roth. Featuring Frankie and Ernie, Marc and Robert, and Fallon and Mary. 1994. At the start of the speed round, Roth says "I'm also going to give you a clue if ... your opponent gets a picture wrong"; later, Roth says "I can't show you any more of the picture" after the player buzzing in answers incorrectly.
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