Crowther made a name for himself in television in the 1950s, with appearances as presenter of such programmes as the
Billy Cotton Band Show and
The Black and White Minstrel Show, and later the long-running children's TV show
Crackerjack for the
BBC, from 1960 to 1968. In September 1967, Crowther was the presenter chosen to host the first series of the revamped children's favourites show,
Junior Choice, on the newly opened
Radio One station. The next year, 1968, he recorded the LP
Songs for Swinging Children, released on
Pye Records's blue Label. From 1964 to 1967, Crowther presented
Meet the Kids, an annual trip to a children's hospital ward that was screened by the BBC on Christmas Morning. He would walk around the ward meeting the patients, and the show would feature a surprise celebrity, and a present hidden under each bed. Typical locations were
Great Ormond Street and Hackney Hospitals. In 1969, Crowther switched to ITV, and
A Merry Morning was screened annually, following the same format, usually from the Seacroft Hospital in Leeds. From the 1970s, Crowther appeared in a number of
television commercials for
Stork SB Margarine. In 1971, he made
The Leslie Crowther Show, a comedy sketch show, with three older comics,
Arthur English,
Chic Murray and
Albert Modley ("Eee it's grand to be daft!") as the internal "rep" company. In 1972 and 1973, he appeared in a television
sitcom called
My Good Woman, alongside
Richard Wilson,
Sylvia Syms and
Keith Barron. He also narrated two storytelling LPs for children,
Tallulah Supercat and
Tallulah and the Cat-Burglars. Crowther also appeared as
Chesney Allen with
Bernie Winters as Allen's partner
Bud Flanagan in performances on television and on stage. In the middle of 1977, Crowther made an effort to break into radio with the pilot of a comedy show, ''
It's Leslie, by Crowther'', recorded in the Regent Sound Stage (now the Vue Cinema in Lower Regent Street) and produced by
John Browell. This however did not come to anything and he returned to TV.
Game shows Crowther was one of the many hosts of the
ITV panel/game show
Whose Baby? which he presented in the mid-1980s. He also presented the fifth series of
Southern Television's children's game show
Runaround in 1977, standing in for
Mike Reid. He was also host of the first British version of the game show
The Price Is Right, from 1984 to 1988, during which time his "Come on down!" catchphrase became familiar. In 1994, Crowther said that when
The Price Is Right was cancelled in May 1988, the producers never bothered to contact him directly. Instead, he learned the news from the press who called at his house and asked him how he felt. In February 1990, he was chosen to be host of the TV show
Stars in Their Eyes by
Granada TV. The first episode was transmitted on 21 July 1990. Crowther hosted the first three series, and a Christmas special in 1991. At the time of his car crash in October 1992 he was booked to record an
Elvis Presley special, which was then hosted by
Russ Abbot, and a fourth series, eventually hosted by
Matthew Kelly (who would later host the show for 11 years). ==1992 car crash==