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Karen Valentine of Room 222 recalls her time on The Dating Game as being “awful.”

In the well-known television series Room 222, Karen Valentine played a student who later became a teacher. Karen Valentine recalls the challenging path that led to her acclaimed position.

Contrary to her time on The Dating Game, which she describes as an “awful” experience with no love lost, she still cares deeply about the program that made her famous.

Before they were well-known, celebrities like Suzanne Somers, Tom Selleck, Leif Garret, and Farrah Fawcett took part in The Dating Game, the first dating reality show. Additionally, the program functioned as a platform for budding actors.

After appearing on Chuck Barris’ television series Dream Girl of 1967, one of those celebrities, Karen Valentine, was invited to the dating program he also developed.

Former adolescent beauty pageant champion Valentine was allowed to chat with three available males who were hiding behind a wall.

She said that she had thought the appearance would be “harmless fun,” but she claimed that her “choice” had turned the event into something terrible.

That was awful since the guy thought this was going to be a date, isn’t that right? The Dating Game later grew more serious when participants were taken on trips, according to Valentine, who is now 76.

“I only went to the Ambassador Hotel to see a show, but the guy thought we would make out in the limo, and I was like, ‘You know this is a first date, right?’”

“The person thought this was a serious matter, even though the reward I won was tickets to dinner and a concert. I want to reschedule the event. Who needs to go on a date, right? I want to give acting or anything else a shot.”

Valentine eventually overcame her rough patch and was hired for the 1969 television movie Gidget Grows Up, which led to her starring role in the hugely successful TV series Room 222 (1969–1974). Award-winning actor Lloyd Haynes (1934–1987) played a black high school teacher who worked hard to encourage tolerance in his students in the experimental television program.

The show was created by James L. Brooks, the creator of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Taxi, and films including As Good as It Gets and Terms of Endearment, and it was developed and produced by Gene Reynolds, a member of the MAS*H team.

Valentine and Michael Constantine won Outstanding New Series honors for Room 222 in 1970 and were nominated for supporting roles in My Big Fat Greek Wedding in 2002. My Big Fat Greek Wedding by Michael Constantine earned him the 2002 award for Outstanding New Series.

According to Valentine, her first nomination and win “was mind-blowing to have that happen so soon, so quickly.” “Additionally, I met Carol Burnett, who congratulated me on my achievement. It sounded similar to ‘Thank you.’”

The young actress remembered being in awe when she met another famous actor.

“I remember taking singing lessons at the time, and I went to my singing class,” Valentine said. “Gregory Peck was taking classes as well. I played the teacher’s piano when he passed by, and he mimed, “You did it!” when he spotted me through the window. I thought, “Oh my God. Gregory Peck is here! How did I acquire the good fortune to meet these celebrities and skilled people right away?”

Critics applauded Room 222, but the show was terminated mid-season in the fourth season after declining ratings, according to Closer Weekly.

When the network informed the cast that the show was canceled, Valentine reflected, “Why things changed, I have no idea. It was sad because it’s always sad, especially when you feel you have a good product and presentation, for it to be taken away, but they did have the money to let us know it was happening. But in the end, the network decided to go on a different course.”

She starred in Karen (1975), a show Reynolds produced after Room 222 was canceled, but it was discontinued after four months due to low ratings.

The show’s premise, according to Valentine, was “controversial political stories that were a savvy, humoristic reflection of then-current headlines,” and the show’s initial opening titles were “a take-off of the opening of the film ‘Patton.’”

“It was changed to me riding a bicycle around D.C.,” she continued.
“Instead of a political issue-focused drama/comedy, the network had in mind something softer, more intimate, and not overly convoluted. It was, in my opinion, ahead of its time.”

Valentine, a stage performer who has previously appeared on Broadway, maintained her career as a guest star on The Hollywood Squares from 1971 to 1977 and in episodes of Murder She Wrote and The Love Boat.

Her most recent movie, Wedding Daze (2004), aired on the Hallmark Channel and featured her alongside John Laroquette.

Valentine has only happy recollections of her time on Room 222, the show that helped her find success very early in her career: “Working with all of those people, and to have that kind of experience first time out-the show just brings back the fondest and best memories in the world to me.”

She continues, “it also spoilt me since it raised the high standard. Consequently, when other things happen, you wonder, ‘What is this?’ You know, it was different. But I did get some good, entertaining content, which was lucky.”

What was your favorite Karen Valentine-starring film or television program?

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