Tommy Hanlon Jr. was an American-born actor, comedian, television host and circus ringmaster, notable for his career in Australia after emigrating there in 1959, where he became a Gold Logie-award-winning media personality, in 1962, Hanlon was notable for his early television appearances on daytime television and as host of the Australian version of game showIt Could Be You
Hanlon first appeared on his own as a magician as a teenager and was an entertainer for the rest of his life. After two years with Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre in Los Angeles in the 1940s, and appearing on stage alongside W.C. Fields, he came to Australia in 1959, first as a club act, then appearing on television. Hanlon became a major TV celebrity in Australia in the early 1960s, especially as host of the popular daytime program "It Could Be You" on the Nine Network, operating out of the GTV-9 studios in Melbourne. The program was a mixture of game show, human interest and humour. It featured tearful reunions of long separated families or friends. He typically closed each program sitting on a stool with a social commentary presented as a Letter from Mom. After GTV-9 purchased radio station3AK in April 1961, all GTV-9 personalities were expected to present programs on the new acquisition. Hanlon hosted a Saturday morning show with Jack Little as his sidekick.
Logie Award
He won two Logie awards, including the Gold Logie in 1962, opposite Australian entertainer and became one of the highest-paid entertainers in Australia.
Circus career
In 1967 he bought into Ashton's Circus. In the 1970s he hosted talent showPot of Gold, with resident judgeBernard King who mocked most entrants mercilessly, to the consternation of the more kind-hearted Hanlon. Hanlon quit television in 1978 and toured Australia as a ringmaster with Silvers Circus.
Hanlon died from cancer in Melbourne on 9 October 2003, only weeks after suffering a heart attack. He was predeceased by his wife, Muriel, and survived by his daughter April Bell from that marriage and her son Jeff Almond. He was also survived by his first wife, Jean Gregory; his son by that marriage, Tommy Hanlon Thomason; three grandchildren by and two great-grand children.