While categories varied slightly from season to season, the ten basic categories during the 1983–1995 version were: • Female singer • Male singer • Junior singer (Second half of the season) • Teen singer (First half of the season) • Group vocal • Dance • Junior dance (First half of the season) • Teen dance (Second half of the season) • Spokesmodel • Comedy Eight categories were contested per show. Potential contestants auditioned to be on the show. In each category, two selected contestants would compete, a champion and a challenger. The challenger would usually perform first, while the champion performed second. In later seasons, the champion performed first. All acts were judged by a panel of four judges, and each judge could award an act from one to four stars (later changed to five stars). Once both acts were complete, Ed would reveal the scores, and the best average won. If there was a tie, a studio audience vote broke the tie, in which case the results were revealed at the end of the show. Any performer must win at least several shows in a row, depending on the number of shows left in the season, to earn an entry into the next round of the competition; usually this was three or four wins in a row. In later seasons, three-match winners were automatically retired. In this case, two new performers would compete in that category the following week. In most seasons, two semifinal shows took place, one in the fall, the other in the spring, prior to the championship show. Each semifinal used seven judges. No scoring was used, and the judges' votes weren't revealed, but the acts that won their semifinals would then compete in the championship show. On the championship show, winners of Male Vocalist, Female Vocalist, Vocal Group, Comedy, and Dance, were awarded $100,000 but no record contract was guaranteed. Many Star Search winners from the early seasons secured recording contracts within a few weeks of the end of the competition—first season vocal group winner
Sawyer Brown, first season male vocalist champion
Sam Harris and second season male vocalist champion Durell Coleman were the first three, and were later followed by second season vocal group winner Limited Warranty, third season female vocalist champion
Linda Eder, second season junior male vocalist champion Jimmy Salvemini, whose album was produced by
Luther Vandross, fourth season male vocalist champion
David Slater, and third season junior female vocalist runner-up
Tiffany. Despite not winning her competition (she lost to Melissa Moultrie), Tiffany, performing as 'Tiffany Renee,' was the first
Star Search alumna to land a #1 hit, with her cover of the Top 5
Tommy James and the Shondells hit "
I Think We're Alone Now" —actually improving on the original single's chart performance. The winner of the Spokesmodel category was awarded $100,000 and a contract with a well-known modeling agency. The first Spokesmodel winner was
Tracey Ross, who later became a leading actress on the soap opera
Passions. Winners of Junior Vocalist, Junior Dance, Teen Vocalist, and Teen Dance win $10,000. In early seasons, before the three match limit rule was adopted, the grand champions were determined by how long a champion held their title. While it is believed that
Sam Harris holds the record for longest championship, at 14 weeks in Season 1, Harris was actually defeated by singer Beau Williams on Harris' 14th attempt. This record is actually held by singer Durell Coleman (1985), who won the $100,000 on Season 2 with 15 wins and no defeats. In the 1992–93 season, a daily version of the show aired but was cancelled midseason. In the 1993–1994 season, the title was changed to "Ed McMahon's Star Search." Former
MTV veejay
Martha Quinn joined the series as co-host for the 1994–95 season, judging the musical groups competition.
Star Search was typically syndicated on
Fox Television Stations (before October 1986,
Metromedia, Inc.), stations owned by the
Gaylord Broadcasting Co., stations owned by
Taft Broadcasting, and stations owned by
Cox Communications. ==2003–2004 version==