Royal Parker

Royal Pollokoff (April 8, 1929 January 8, 2016), better known by the stage name Royal Parker, was an American television personality. In a broadcasting career spanning the 1940s1990s, he appeared in various roles, becoming a staple on television screens in the Baltimore, Maryland, area.[1]

Royal Parker
Royal Parker in the 1980s
Born
Royal Pollokoff

(1929-04-08)April 8, 1929
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
DiedJanuary 8, 2016(2016-01-08) (aged 86)
Occupation
  • Television broadcaster
  • television host
  • television producer
  • radio announcer
  • radio programmer
Years active1940a–1994
Spouse(s)Phyllis
Children3

Early years

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, on April 8, 1929, Parker graduated from Baltimore City College in 1946. He began his broadcasting career in the late 1940s on WASA (now WHGM), an AM radio station in Havre de Grace, Maryland, hosting a music program called the Royal Record Review.[1] He moved to television when the medium was in its infancy, joining WAAM-TV (now WJZ-TV) in Baltimore in 1951.

Television career

Parker served in diverse roles during his more than four decade career in television (19511994), including newscasts, sports events, children's programs, announcing duties, and commercials. As a television newscaster with WAAM-TV in Baltimore, Parker covered the 1952 elections, when Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected U. S. President and J. Glenn Beall was elected U.S. Senator from Maryland. He created a children's television character, Mister Poplolly, in which he would don an oversized hat and glasses, along with a clown's nose, for a daily show.[1] Later, he portrayed a Popeye-like sailor hosting a daily cartoon show. Parker also did commercials, including The Buddy Deane Show between 19571962 (by then, WAAM had been sold to Westinghouse and its call letters changed to WJZ-TV).

In 1962, Parker moved to WBAL-TV, where he hosted such popular televised bowling programs as Pinbusters and Bowling for Dollars in the 1970s.[2] While at WBAL, he played P. W. Doodle, a newsboy character he created based on his own experience selling newspapers in Baltimore as a youth.[3] On November 22, 1963, he was called upon to broadcast the news flash of U.S. President John F. Kennedy's assassination.[3]

Later on his career, Parker broadcast the resignation of Richard Nixon, economic disasters facing the United States, the Iran hostage crisis and the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan.

Parker remained at WBAL-TV until his retirement in 1994.[3] Reflecting on his varied roles in the early pioneering years of commercial television, Parker recalled in 2008 that when he started at WAAM in 1951, earning $45 per week, "We just figured things out as we went along. In six months, you did everything. I could run a control board, or put on a cooking show".[1]

Later years and personal life

Parker and his wife, Phyllis, had three sons.[3]

After leaving broadcasting, he ran for a seat in the Maryland House of Delegates in 1994, but lost in the primary election.[4] He later took a job as an inspector for the Baltimore City Liquor License Board, retiring from that position in 2006.[5]

In his retirement, Parker remained active in local charitable work, which included frequent benefit appearances for the Mount Washington Pediatric Hospital.[1]

He died of congestive heart failure on January 8, 2016 in Pikesville, Maryland, a Baltimore suburb, at age 86.[6]

gollark: No, you consume it too sometimes.
gollark: Yes, I probably wouldn't trust any complicated computer stuff with much brain access, realistically.
gollark: Why not connect your brain to <@160279332454006795>'s heavdrone™s?
gollark: oh no.
gollark: Anyway, you might as well just connect a low-power ARM SoC to your brain since it's probably fast enough and you can offload stuff to other processors if you need more.

References

  1. Olesker, Michael (May 20, 2008). "Here's a Royal cheer for a charitable guy". The Baltimore Examiner. p. 6.
  2. Cohen, Charles (April 24, 2002). "Broadcast Muse". Baltimore City Paper. Archived from the original on August 14, 2011. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
  3. Kelly, Jacques (November 11, 2006). "Local Television's Royal Parker". The Baltimore Sun. p. 2B.
  4. "Primary Election Results". The Baltimore Sun. September 14, 1994. p. 4B.
  5. Michael Dresser, Royal Parker Pollikoff, Baltimore TV pioneer, dies, Baltimore Sun (January 9, 2016). Retrieved on January 9, 2016.
  6. Longtime Baltimore TV Broadcaster Royal Parker dies at 86, WBAL-TV. Retrieved on January 8, 2016.


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