<P> On September 8, 1980, a new To Tell the Truth series premiered in syndication . The new series was recorded at the same studio at NBC's Rockefeller Center complex that the previous series had, and Canadian TV personality Robin Ward served as the host, with Alan Kalter returning as announcer . A new theme and set were commissioned for this edition of Truth . Even though previous regulars Bill Cullen, Peggy Cass, and Kitty Carlisle made frequent appearances, there was no regular panel for this edition . The new Truth aired for one season in syndication, but it never recaptured the popularity of the original, and aired its final episode on September 11, 1981 . </P> <P> Two games were played, and each wrong vote paid the challengers $100; $500 was paid if the entire panel had been fooled . No consolation prize was given if the entire panel correctly identified the subject . </P> <P> After the second game, a new game called "One on One" was played with the four impostors from earlier . One fact had been purposely withheld from the panel about one of the impostors and it was up to the panelists to determine correctly to which of the impostors it applied . One at a time, each panelist would be given twenty seconds to question the impostor sitting directly across from them and would then say whether he / she believed the fact applied to that impostor . Wrong votes still paid $100 with $500 paid if the panel did not correctly determine to whom the fact pertained . </P> <P> The 1980 edition of To Tell the Truth was a rarity in that it was still based in New York while nearly all television game show production had moved to California . Both To Tell the Truth and The $50,000 Pyramid (which debuted at the midpoint of the 1980--81 season and taped at ABC's Studio 15) were the last two broadcast (non-cable) television game shows to emanate from New York until Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? came to television for the first time in 1999 and taped at the ABC Television Center in Lincoln Square . Millionaire continued to tape in New York until 2013 . New York tapings for game shows were then used in 2016 for two ABC primetime game show revivals, Match Game and The $100,000 Pyramid . </P>

Who was the original cast of to tell the truth