Wink Martindale, the genial host of such hit game shows as Gambit and Tic-Tac-Dough who also did one of the first recorded television interviews with a young Elvis Presley, has died. He was 91.
Martindale died Tuesday at Eisenhower Health in Rancho Mirage, according to his publicist Brian Mayes. Martindale had been battling lymphoma for a year.
“He was doing pretty well up until a couple weeks ago,” Mayes said by phone from Nashville.
Gambit debuted on the same day in September 1972 as The Price is Right with Bob Barker and The Joker’s Wild with Jack Barry.
“From the day it hit the air, Gambit spelled winner, and it taught me a basic tenant of any truly successful game show: KISS! Keep It Simple Stupid,” Martindale wrote in his 2000 memoir Winking at Life. “Like playing Old Maids as a kid, everybody knows how to play 21, i.e. blackjack.”
Gambit had been beating its competition on NBC and ABC for over two years. But a new show debuted in 1975 on NBC called Wheel of Fortune. By December 1976, Gambit was off the air and Wheel of Fortune became an institution that is still going strong today.
Martindale bounced back in 1978 with Tic-Tac-Dough, the classic Xs and Os game on CBS that ran until 1985.
“Overnight I had gone from the outhouse to the penthouse,” he wrote.
He presided over the 88-game winning streak of navy Lt. Thom McKee, who earned over $300,000 US in cash and prizes that included eight cars, three sailboats and 16 vacation trips. At the time, McKee’s winnings were a record for a game show contestant.

“I love working with contestants, interacting with the audience and to a degree, watching lives change,” Martindale wrote. “Winning a lot of cash can cause that to happen.”
Martindale wrote that producer Dan Enright once told him that in the seven years he hosted Tic-Tac-Dough he gave away over $7 million US in cash and prizes.
Radio beginnings
Martindale said his many years as a radio DJ were helpful to him as a game show host because radio calls for constant ad-libs and he learned to handle almost any situation in the spur of the moment. He estimated that he hosted nearly two dozen game shows during his career.
Martindale wrote in his memoir that the question he got asked most often was “Is Wink your real name?” The second was “How did you get into game shows?”
The entire Game Show Network family mourns the loss of Wink Martindale, the host of the original “Tic-Tac-Dough” and a true legend of television game shows. His charm and presence lit up the screen for generations of viewers and he will never be forgotten. <a href=”https://t.co/DNqLToCv5r”>pic.twitter.com/DNqLToCv5r</a>
—@GameShowNetwork
He got his nickname from a childhood friend. Martindale is no relation to University of Michigan defensive co-ordinator Don Martindale, whose college teammates nicknamed him Wink because of their shared last name.
Born Winston Conrad Martindale on Dec. 4, 1933, in Jackson, Tenn., he loved radio since childhood and at age 6 would read aloud the contents of advertisements in Life magazine.
He began his career as a disc jockey at age 17 at WPLI in his hometown, earning $25 a week.
After moving to WTJS, he was hired away for double the salary by Jackson’s only other station, WDXI. He next hosted mornings at WHBQ in Memphis while attending Memphis State. He was married and the father of two girls when he graduated in 1957.
Interview with Elvis
Martindale was in the studio, although not working on-air that night, when the first Presley record That’s All Right was played on WHBQ on July 8, 1954.
Martindale approached fellow DJ Dewey Phillips, who had given Presley an early break by playing his song, to ask him and Presley to do a joint interview on Martindale’s TV show Top Ten Dance Party in 1956. By then, Presley had become a major star and agreed to the appearance.
Martindale and Presley stayed in touch on occasion through the years, and in 1959 he did a trans-Atlantic telephone interview with Presley, who was in the Army in Germany. Martindale’s second wife, Sandy, briefly dated Presley after meeting him on the set of G.I. Blues in 1960.

In 1959, Martindale moved to Los Angeles to host a morning show on KHJ. That same year he reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart with a cover version of Deck of Cards, which sold over 1 million copies. He performed the spoken word wartime story with religious overtones on The Ed Sullivan Show.
“I could easily have thought, ‘Wow, this is easy! I come out here, go on radio and TV, make a record and everybody wants to buy it!” he wrote. “Even if I entertained such thoughts, they soon dissipated. I learned in due time that what had happened to me was far from the ordinary.”
A year later he moved to the morning show at KRLA and to KFWB in 1962. Among his many other radio gigs were two separate stints at KMPC, owned by actor Gene Autry.
RIP Wink Martindale. <br><br>I met Wink at Casey Kasem’s memorial in 2014. I told him my mother in law was on Tic Tac Dough, and still uses the cast iron pan she won. <br><br>In full game show voice, he said you Danny, we really did have some fabulous gifts and prizes. 😂😂 <a href=”https://t.co/UTE7CBPn2T”>pic.twitter.com/UTE7CBPn2T</a>
—@DannyDeraney
His first network hosting job was on NBC’s What’s This Song? where he was credited as Win Martindale from 1964-65.
He later hosted two Chuck Barris-produced shows on ABC: Dream Girl ’67 and How’s Your Mother-in-Law? The latter lasted just 13 weeks before being cancelled.
“I’ve jokingly said it came and went so fast, it seemed more like 13 minutes!” Martindale wrote, explaining that it was the worst show of his career.
Martindale later hosted a Las Vegas-based revival of Gambit from 1980-81.
He formed his own production company, Wink Martindale Enterprises, to develop and produce his own game shows. His first venture was Headline Chasers, a co-production with Merv Griffin that debuted in 1985 and was cancelled after one season. His next show, “Bumper Stumpers,” ran on U.S. and Canadian television from 1987-1990.
He hosted Debt from 1996-98 on Lifetime cable and Instant Recall on GSN in 2010.
Martindale returned to his radio roots in 2012 as host of the nationally syndicated The 100 Greatest Christmas Hits of All Time. In 2021, he hosted syndicated program The History of Rock `n’ Roll.
In 2017, Martindale appeared in a KFC ad campaign with actor Rob Lowe.
He is survived by Sandy, his second wife of 49 years, and children Lisa, Madelyn, Laura and Wink Jr. They are from his first marriage which ended in divorce in 1972.