Barry & Enright Productions

Background: Barry & Enright Productions (also known as "Jack Barry-Dan Enright Productions" and "Jack Barry & Dan Enright Productions", and formerly known as "Barry, Enright, & Friendly Productions") was a television production company that was formed in 1947 by Jack Barry and Dan Enright. Ed Friendly, who was a producer at NBC was also working with the duo. Their first game show was Juvenile Jury and their second was Life Begins at Eighty. Eventually in 1950, both game shows made it to television. In 1959 due to the quiz show scandals on their game shows by Jack Barry, all shows were canceled and Barry and Enright were forced to sell the library to NBC. In 1971, Dan Enright came back to television as executive producer for All About Faces. After an unsuccessful stint working with former rival Goodson-Todman, Jack Barry first staged a comeback as an emcee, replacing Dennis Wholey on the short-lived game show, The Generation Gap in 1969. Before then, he formed a production company known as "Jack Barry Productions" in 1968 and in 1971, sold The Reel Game to ABC (he also hosted the 13-week game show), and in 1972, permanently resurrected his career by hosting the hit game show The Joker's Wild, which he reputedly created while with Goodson-Todman. In 1975 Enright rejoined his partner and reformed Barry & Enright Productions, Jack Barry Productions became an in-name-only division of B&E, and their collaboration continued until Barry's death from a heart attack in 1984. Enright kept the company name and continued running the company, but he changed Barry's policies and practices that the staff members disagreed with. In 1987, B&E co-produced a British game show called Chain Letters with Tyne Tees Television and Action Time. During the same year, the company created the only game show they produced for cable broadcast known as Bumper Stumpers in association with Global Television Network (who reran the program from 1990-1995), Wink Martindale Enterprises and USA Network (who ran the program in the US). In 1990, Jack Barry's sons created the short-lived revival of Tic-Tac-Dough under the revival of the independent company Jack Barry Productions. The company wasn't under the Barry & Enright company as Dan Enright continued running B&E. The 90s versions of Tic-Tac-Dough and The Joker's Wild including the 1989 revival of Juvenile Jury were all canceled in 1991. B&E was later renamed "Stafford-Enright Productions" with former Wheel of Fortune hostess Susan Stafford, a long time friend and companion of Dan Enright, as president. Stafford and Enright later married in 1992, but Dan Enright died of cancer on May 22, 1992 and Stafford-Enright was renamed to "The Susan Stafford Company". On December 7, 1992, Sony Pictures Entertainment acquired the Barry & Enright game show library. In 1995, Columbia TriStar International Television revived and co-produced Chain Letters with Action Time. The remainder of the series: Twenty One, the 1950s and 1990 versions of Tic-Tac-Dough and The Joker's Wild, and Pictionary are currently owned by NBCUniversal, Inc.

Barry, Enright, & Friendly Productions

(1947-1954?)

Logo: Just an in-credit text saying:

A BARRY ENRIGHT AND FRIENDLY PRODUCTION

FX/SFX: None, just superimposed or scrolling in the credits.

Music/Sounds: The end title theme from any show.

Availability: Extinct. Was seen on Winky Dink and You and Juvenile Jury among others.

Scare Factor: None. ______________________________________________________________

Jack Barry Productions

(1968-1975, 1984-1986, 1990-1991)

A JACK BARRY PRODUCTION

However on the 90s version of The Joker's Wild, it would say:

JACK BARRY PRODUCTIONS

On the Bill Cullen version of The Joker's Wild, it would appear as copyright information, as displayed here:

(C) MCMLXXXIV Jack Barry Productions, Inc. all rights reserved

FX/SFX: Just scrolling in the credits or superimposed.

Music/Sounds/Voice-over: The end title theme from any show with the announcer's voice-over "[Title of the game show] is a Jack Barry Production". This was not used on CBS' run of The Joker's Wild.

Availability: Extinct. Seen on the CBS version of The Joker's Wild from 1972-1975, the 1968 and 1969 pilots, and the 90s version, the 70s version of Juvenile Jury, Hollywood's Talking and the pilot for The Hollywood Connection and the unsold pilot game show We've Got Your Number as well as the ill-fated Blank Check with Art James. It appears as copyright text on the Bill Cullen version of The Joker's Wild.

Scare Factor: None. ______________________________________________________________

Barry & Enright Productions

1st Logo (1954?-1959)

Barry & Enright Productions (1956)Logo: An in-credit text that says:

a Jack---Dan--- BARRY & ENRIGHT Production

FX/SFX: Just superimposed or scrolling in the credits.

Music/Sounds/Voice-over: The end-title theme from any show with the announcer's spiel "[Title of the game show] is a Jack Barry and Dan Enright Production".

Availability: Very extinct. It was seen on the original Twenty-One, Juvenile Jury, and Tic-Tac-Dough, among others.

Scare Factor: None.

2nd Logo (April 12, 1976-December 28, 1990)

Nicknames: "B-E", "E-B", "Huge B-E/E-B"

Logo: We have a stretched out "E" going through the stretched out letter "B". Inside it says "BARRY & ENRIGHT". Sometimes you'll see the name "JACK" and "DAN" inside the "E". The logo is also referred to as "A JACK BARRY & DAN ENRIGHT PRODUCTION" with the word "PRODUCTION" below the logo.

Variants:
 * An in-credit variant saying "A BARRY & ENRIGHT FILM" or an in-credit text "A BARRY & ENRIGHT PRODUCTION" appears at the start and end credits of the 1981 cult-classic sex comedy Private Lessons (shown on occasion on the Showtime Networks) and Making Mr. Right. It appears as copyright text on The Joker's Wild/Tic Tac Dough special from 1981.
 * An in-credit text was seen on the UK game show Chain Letters.
 * Early seasons of The Joker's Wild doesn't have the ampersand (&) symbol in the logo as well as the short-lived 1977-78 series The Hollywood Connection with Jim Lange.
 * 1978-1980: The word "PRODUCTIONS" is seen below the logo. Plus the first names "JACK" and "DAN" aren't in the logo. Although a few late 1979 episodes of The Joker's Wild would briefly revert back to the first logo design with the names "JACK" and "DAN" inside, as they did in the 1st season. Also on 1979 episodes of Tic-Tac-Dough, the logo would appear in shadow mode.
 * 1979-1990: It's only referred to as "A BARRY & ENRIGHT PRODUCTION" with "A" centered on top of the logo and "PRODUCTION" centered on the bottom. This was first used on Joker Joker Joker. On the pilot for Bullseye, there is a large "A" at the top of a smaller sized Barry & Enright logo with "PRODUCTIONS" underneath.
 * This logo would appear in shadow mode in the middle years.
 * 1984-1990: There is a line below the letter "A" and "PRODUCTION". Several 1984-1985 episodes of Tic-Tac-Dough with Wink Martindale and starting on season 2 of Bumper Stumpers, this version doesn't feature the letter "A" and would have "PRODUCTIONS" below instead.
 * The logo would appear in different colors: gold, blue, red, white, or yellow based on the credits.
 * On the short-lived game show Hot Potato, the B-E logo is a red still logo on a stand-alone blue background. And some very early episodes of Hot Potato, (such as the premiere episode from January 23, 1984) would use the 1980 variation on a standalone blue background.
 * Sometimes, the logo is omitted.
 * Pictionary has the logo chrome textured and is displayed against a purple-dark blue gradient background. The logo shines.

FX/SFX: Just scrolling, superimposed in the credits, or the fade in and fade out of the logo. On one network version episode of Break the Bank, the logo sometimes zooms in. On some 1978 episodes of The Joker's Wild, the logo would scroll and then zoom in. On some episodes of the short-lived Play the Percentages from early 1980, instead of the show's title scrolling up with the copyright and production company already with it, the show's title name scrolls like normal but once the show's title name finishes scrolling upward, the "BARRY AND ENRIGHT PRODS." copyright name stamp fades in. And it fades in between the title name and the copyright year.

Cheesy Factor: The way how this logo is designed looks really bizarre. The Bullseye pilot variant is a just laughably terrible goof.

Music/Sounds/Voice-over: Just the end title theme from any show with an announcer spiel: "[Title of the game show] is a Jack Barry-Dan Enright Production" or "[Title of the game show] is a Jack Barry & Dan Enright Production". Jay Stewart and Johnny Gilbert, who were announcers on the 1977-78 season of The Joker's Wild and The Hollywood Connection would announce his name first before saying the rest. There was no announcer spiel on the final episode of The Joker's Wild hosted by Bill Cullen.

Availability: Extinct. It's very obscure due to GSN's compressing credits. It appeared on the 1976 version of Break the Bank, Pictionary, Bullseye, Tic-Tac-Dough, and The Joker's Wild, among others.

Scare Factor: None to low. The design of the logo may be off putting for some, but for many, it's harmless.

3rd Logo (1990-March 8, 1991)

Nicknames: "B-E II", "E-B II", "90s B-E"

Logo: In the credits, we see a purple updated 1976 Barry & Enright Productions logo, this time having a shadow effect. Below it says "BARRY & ENRIGHT" in a big bold font and the word "PRODUCTION" in a smaller font and spread out to fit under the name.

FX/SFX: The fading in of the logo or superimposed.

Music/Sounds/Voice-over: The end-title of the theme with the announcer's voice-over.
 * Larry van Nuys: "(This is Larry van Nuys), [Title of the game show] is a Barry & Enright Production".

Availability: Extinct. Was only seen on the infamous 1990 revival of Tic-Tac-Dough, the second season of Juvenile Jury, and two other game shows called All About the Opposite Sex and Hold Everything!

Scare Factor: None.