All Games Entertainment

All Games Entertainment Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from All Games Entertainment, Film/Television studio, 1221 Kent Street, Augusta, GA.

All Games Entertainment is the studio business unit of "The Industrial Playhouse" (TIP Entertainment Group), a wholly owned subsidiary of GT Enterprising Worldwide.

Celebrating my 4th year on Facebook. Thank you for your continuing support. I could never have made it without you. 🙏🤗🎉
02/19/2025

Celebrating my 4th year on Facebook. Thank you for your continuing support. I could never have made it without you. 🙏🤗🎉

All Games Entertainment and our division units want to extend our thoughts and prayers to the residents of Los Angeles, ...
01/13/2025

All Games Entertainment and our division units want to extend our thoughts and prayers to the residents of Los Angeles, California and the surrounding Southern California region as they survive the dangerous wildfires. Please be safe and lift up Southern California right now. God Bless You all.

Nov 23, 2024 10:21pm PTChuck Woolery, the veteran game show host who gained fame as the original emcee behind “Wheel of ...
11/24/2024

Nov 23, 2024 10:21pm PT
Chuck Woolery, the veteran game show host who gained fame as the original emcee behind “Wheel of Fortune” and later as the face of the popular syndicated dating show “Love Connection,” has died. He was 83.

The news was first reported on the social media site X by Woolery’s friend Mark Young, who noted that “it is with a broken heart that I tell you that my dear brother has just passed away. Life will not be the same without him, RIP brother.”

The website TMZ confirmed the news, reporting that Woolery died in his Texas home after having trouble breathing.

Woolery, who spent more than ten years as host of “Love Connection” (where he famously told viewers before commercial breaks that the show would be back in “two and two”), became known in more recent years as a conservative talk show host and pundit. He hosted a nationally syndicated radio commentary show, “Save Us Chuck Woolery,” as well as the podcast “Blunt Force Truth,” with Young as his co-host.

But before he focused on politics, Woolery’s game show bona fides including hosting “Wheel of Fortune” from 1975 to 1981, before Pat Sajak took over. He was also known for hosting the gamer “Scrabble,” one season of the talker “The Chuck Woolery Show,” and the original version of daytime talk show “Home & Family” on the Family Channel.

Woolery also hosted “The Dating Game,” the primetime game show “Greed” and Game Show Network’s “Lingo.” He additionally played himself on “227,” “Cold Feet” and “Scrubs,” and then starred in a reality show about his life called “Chuck Woolery: Naturally Stoned.”

Woolery was inducted into the American TV Game Show Hall of Fame in 2007.

Before his TV career, Woolery served in the U.S. Navy, and then started his career as a performer with the music group The Avante-Garde, which had a top 40 hit with “Naturally Stoned.” He later had a handful of solo songs on the country chart.

He was married four times — including to actress Jo Ann Pflug from 1972-80; to music exec Teri Nelson Carpenter, granddaughter of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, from 1985-2004; and to Kristen Barnes, whom he wed in 2006 — and had or raised eight children/stepchildren.

In addition to his wife, survivors include his sons, Michael and Sean, and his daughter, Melissa.

RIP Chuck

08/25/2024
08/20/2024

Peter Marshall, who hosted the popular game show The Hollywood Squares for more than 15 years and had a long career as an actor, singer and comic, died today of kidney failure at his Encino home. He was 98.

Marshall won four Daytime Emmys for hosting the syndicated Hollywood Squares from 1966-81.

The tic-tac-toe game featured two contestants agreeing or disagreeing with celebrities who provided answers to Marshall's questions — which ranged from silly to ribald. The format has been revived a few times over the years, with a new edition hosted by Nate Burleson with Drew Barrymore in the famed center square is to premiere in midseason. Among the scores of stars who appeared on Hollywood Squares were Walter Matthau, Gloria Swanson, Glenn Ford, and Milton Berle, as well as regulars Paul Lynde — who often killed as the center square — Rose Marie, Nipsey Russell, Cliff Arquette, and Wally Cox.

Marshall went on to host other TV game shows including All-Star Blitz, Yahtzee, and The Reel to Reel Picture Show.

"Listen to people, have fun, and know the game. That's basically all you have to do to be a good game show host," Marshall said in a 2019 interview for the Television Academy Foundation. "Know the game thoroughly so if something goes wrong, you know how to rectify it. And most importantly, enjoy the people."

He also hosted The Peter Marshall Variety Show, Big Bands from Disneyland and the audience participation series Fantasy with Leslie Uggams.

Tom Bergeron, who himself won an Emmy for hosting The Hollywood Squares, paid tribute to Marshall. The former "Dancing With the Stars" host posted to Instagram: "I've been blessed in my career to have made friends with so many whom I admired from afar, watching them on TV from my childhood home. [William] Shatner, [Carl] Reiner & [Dick] Van D**e are a few examples. So was Peter Marshall. The has just reported Peter has died. The original, and greatest host of The Hollywood Squares was 98.

In an Instagram Story, Bergeron, 69, described Marshall as his "friend" and "the G.O.A.T of Hollywood Squares."

Bergeron also shared a photo of him leaning his head on Marshall's shoulder during a presentation at the Daytime Emmy Awards. "The Game Show Jedi & his Padawan.

Born Ralph Pierre LaCock on March 30, 1926, in Huntington, WV, Marshall had a long career in showbiz before his Hollywood Squares gig. Boasting a memorable voice, he worked as a DJ for Armed Forces Radio after being drafted into the Army stint during World War II and as an NBC page and a theater usher.

Marshall teamed with Tommy Noonan in 1949 for a comedy act that sold out nightclubs and did The Ed Sullivan Show twice. They appeared together in movies including The Rookie (1959) and Swingin' Along (1961). He had bit parts in some early 1950s movies and became an contract player at Twentieth Century Fox, appearing in such films as Ensign Pulver, The Cavern and Annie, in which he played radio crooner Bert Healy.

Marshall got his TV start guesting on '50s variety shows as part of a comedy team with Tommy Farrell. Later that decade, he appeared in episodes of series including Men of Annapolis and The Millionaire. He also appeared in Manhattan Tower, the first color special NBC aired.

Marshall made his Broadway debut in the short-lived 1961 play How to Make a Man and returned as a star of the 1965-66 musical Skyscraper. Those shows came after he starred with Chita Rivera in Bye Bye Birdie on stage in London's West End. His other musical theater credits High Button Shoes, Anything Goes, The Music Man and 42nd Street. From 1983-87, Marshall performed the lead role of Georges in more than 800 performances of La Cage Aux Folles on Broadway and its national tour. He also starred for two years as Lenny Ganz in the national tour of Neil Simon's Rumors.

Marshall authored the 2002 memoir Backstage with the Original Hollywood Square. He is survived by his Laurie, his wife of 35 years; daughters Suzanne Browning (husband David) and Jaime Dimarco (husband Steve); son Pete LaCock (wife Janna); 12 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Another son, David LaCock, died of Covid complications in 2021.

07/08/2024

All Games Entertainment does not give META, Facebook or any entities associated with Facebook permission to use my photos, information, messages or publications, past or future.

With this statement, we're warning Facebook that
it is strictly forbidden to disclose, copy, distribute or take any other action against me based on this profile and/or its contents.

The violation of privacy can be punished by law.

06/01/2024

With conversations about equality for everyone and the whole movement, going forward it's our policy of All Games Entertainment to provide equal opportunities to qualify artists, game developers, filmmakers, and future employee applicants without regards of race, skin color, religion, s*x, disability, or national orgin.

It's important to us that we play a part of being a diversify company and be in a safe environmental area.

If you have any questions please contact us at [email protected].

All Games Entertainment, a subsidiary of The Industrial Playhouse is an equal opportunity employer.

Count Your Cash
03/03/2024

Count Your Cash

Letter Perfect
03/03/2024

Letter Perfect

Lucky Numbers
03/03/2024

Lucky Numbers

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1221 Kent Street
Augusta, GA
30901

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+17063248620

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