Calgary Herald

Toy maker’s widow seeks rights to The Game of Life

- MICHELLE R. SMITH

Who will win The Game of Life?

Testimony began Thursday in federal court in Los Angeles in a lawsuit over who owns the rights to one of the most popular board games of all time.

The widow of a toy inventor says her husband, Bill Markham, has been denied his legacy of creating The Game of Life, after another man, Reuben Klamer, took full credit for it. Lorraine Markham also says she was cut out of more than US$2 million in royalties by Klamer and Rhode Island-based toy company Hasbro.

Since the game was created in 1959, Markham’s contributi­ons to the developmen­t of the game have been minimized and ultimately eliminated from the history books, Markham’s lawyers wrote in a pretrial filing.

“What was once a great partnershi­p between Markham, a toy and game designer, and Klamer, a savvy marketer and promoter, has been tarnished by Klamer’s unrelentin­g quest to steal the credit of developing the game for himself,” they wrote.

Both Hasbro and Klamer dispute that, arguing that Markham was merely hired by Klamer to create a prototype. Klamer owned a company with TV personalit­y Art Linkletter, and the company was asked by Milton Bradley to come up with a game to mark the game maker’s 100th anniversar­y in 1960.

Klamer said he went into Milton Bradley’s archives and found the company’s first game, The Checkered Game of Life, which he said served as the inspiratio­n to develop the game that is now called The Game of Life, according to court papers.

They also argue that other people helped Markham with the game’s design, and that the game has changed significan­tly since the prototype Markham developed.

The Game of Life was different from other games at the time because it featured a three-dimensiona­l board with a circuitous track, rather than a track around the outside of the board. Players spun a clicking wheel, rather than rolling dice. Players would then travel along the track in a car, marking life events such as getting married, having children and buying insurance. At the end, the richest player wins.

The game has sold more than 30 million copies, and been spun off into an iPhone app, TV show, gambling and other ventures. It has been displayed at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and was inducted into the Toy Hall of Fame in 2010.

The lawsuit was filed in Rhode Island in 2015. This week’s testimony will centre on the limited question of who owns rights to the game.

U.S. District Judge William Smith agreed to hold a partial bench trial in Los Angeles because of the age of many of the witnesses, according to Frank Perry, chief deputy clerk in the U.S. District Court in Providence. Perry said a final ruling would most likely happen at the conclusion of the entire case, which could eventually include a trial by jury.

Markham wants a declaratio­n that her late husband was the sole inventor and creator of the game. She also wants the right to terminate all licensing agreements for the game, as well as a right to all future royalties.

What was once a great partnershi­p between Markham ... and Klamer ... has been tarnished by Klamer’s unrelentin­g quest to steal the credit of developing the game for himself.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Toy company Hasbro and Reuben Klamer are disputing the claims that toy inventor Bill Markham is the sole inventor of the iconic Game of Life. They say Markham was merely hired to create a prototype.
STEVEN SENNE/AP Toy company Hasbro and Reuben Klamer are disputing the claims that toy inventor Bill Markham is the sole inventor of the iconic Game of Life. They say Markham was merely hired to create a prototype.

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