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WINK MARTINDALE
“DECK OF CARDS
“
(T. Texas Tyler)
Dot 15968
No. 7 November 2. 1959
.
,.
Winston Conrad was born on December 4, 1934, in Bells,Tennessee. As early as 16 years of age, Wink,
as he became known to his school churns, began making money with his mouth–first as a radio
announcer, then as host of Los Angeles’ “Teenage Dance Party” on KHJ-TV in 1959. That year Dot
Records’ Randy Wood spotted the young lad’s face, heard that Wink voice, and placed him in a
recording studio to recite his way into pop history.
.
“Deck of Cards,” a remake of T. Texas Tyler’s 1949 spoken·word tale (#21) of a lonely soldier’s peculiar
relationship with a pack of cards, was not Wink’s first effort at singing (or talking) his way
onto the
charts. In 1954, Martindale had waxed a few sides for OJ Recordings. Nothing much happened with
those, or with Wink’s follow-ups to “Deck.” Only “Black Land Farmer” (#85, 1961), a cover version of
Frankie Miller’s C & W hit, made the Hot 100.
.
While Wink’s voice is no longer heard on pop radio gobs of idiot box
viewers have seen him since 1978
as the host of the syndicated game show “Tic Tac Dough.” In the fall of 1989, Martindale shifted to the
Fox Network to host another game show, “Last Word,” followed in the mid-’90s by “Debt,” where
contestants play to unload their debts.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik