One evening during the 1950s at the
500 Club in
Atlantic City, DeWitt entertained with the
Rat Pack (
Frank Sinatra,
Dean Martin,
Sammy Davis Jr.). While Davis was on stage impersonating
Jack Benny, DeWitt walked out from the wings and ad-libbed an impersonation of
Jack Benny's radio and TV valet
Eddie "Rochester" Anderson. In September 1953, DeWitt appeared with Sinatra and Bud and CeCe Robinson at Bill Miller's Riviera. DeWitt was known best as the emcee of the TV show
Name That Tune. Originally produced by Harry Salter,
Name That Tune ran from 1953 to 1959 on
NBC and
CBS in prime time. The first hosts were Red Benson and
Bill Cullen, but DeWitt became most identified with the show. DeWitt recorded two record albums during the show's run. The first,
Name That Tune with George Dewitt was recorded in 1956. The second was titled
George DeWitt Sings That Tune, recorded in 1957.
CBS dropped the series in the wake of the quiz scandals, even though
Name That Tune was not implicated as much as
Twenty One or
The $64,000 Question. DeWitt made a number of guest appearances on television, including an appearance on the
Frank Sinatra variety TV show with the
Three Stooges. ==Film and television==