Danny Dark | |
---|---|
Born |
Daniel Melville Croskery December 19, 1938 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Died | June 13, 2004 Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
(aged 65)
Alma mater | Drury University |
Occupation | Voice actor, voice-over performer, announcer |
Years active | 1958–2004 |
Spouse(s) | Judith Freeman (1958) Rebecca Lee Walker Sharon Spezman Croskery (1968-1984) Jobee Ziegler (1991–2004) (his death) |
Children | Mark Croskery, Elizabeth Croskery, Caroline Croskery, Jonas Croskery and Sydney Croskery |
Danny Dark (December 19, 1938 – June 13, 2004) was widely acknowledged in the commercial industry as the voice-over king. For nearly four decades, he embedded pop culture with memorable lines in advertisements for Budweiser ("This Bud's for you"), Raid Ant & Roach Killer ("Raid- Kills Bugs Dead"), StarKist tuna ("Sorry, Charlie") and Parkay ("Parkay Margarine from Kraft. The flavor says 'butter'."). The trade paper Radio & Records said, "Dark's distinctive voice has been heard in more award-winning commercials than any announcer in broadcast history."
Dark was born Daniel Melville Croskery in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, but his family moved to Tulsa, shortly after. He attended Tulsa Central High School, where he studied under a well-known teacher of future performers, Isabelle Ronan. He started in Missouri as a radio D.J. in the late 1950s, while studying at Drury University. He quickly advanced to stations in Cleveland, Miami, New Orleans, St. Louis, finally landing a 1963-66 stint as the evening DJ for KLAC in Los Angeles.
Over the course of his career, Dark was the spokesman for Keebler Cookies, the Chevrolet Camaro, AT&T, Kmart, Texaco, Armor-All, Whitman's Chocolates, Dreyer's Ice Cream, and many other Blue Chip companies. Dark was the voice of the long-running TV western Bonanza, voicing their intermission commercials for the program's sponsor, Chevrolet. Dark was an announcer who came to be known as the "voice" of the CBS network during the 1970s and later, on the NBC television network during the 1980s and early 1990s, doing promo advertisements for night-time programming, as well as an announcer for NBC's flagship station, WNBC-TV, and the imaging voice for many of the network's affiliates and O&O stations for their local newscasts. He also voiced the NBC News 1983 "Go Where The News Is" advertising campaign.