Wiktionary
a. (alternative form of winner-take-all English)
Wikipedia
Winner Take All, an American radio-television game show, ran from 1946-1952 on CBS and NBC. It was the first game show produced by the Mark Goodson- Bill Todman partnership. The series was originally hosted by Ward Wilson, but is best known for being the first game hosted by Bill Cullen.
Although the game format was very simple, Winner Take All served as the genesis for many future game-show formats. It was the first game to use lockout devices, and the first to use returning champions.
Winner Take All is a 1932 American Pre-Code drama film, starring James Cagney as a boxer. The movie also featured a single scene of George Raft conducting a band that had been lifted from Queen of the Nightclubs, an earlier film; Cagney and Raft would not make a full-fledged film together until Each Dawn I Die seven years later.
Winner Take All was directed by Roy Del Ruth. Footage from Cagney's fight scenes would be used 52 years later in Cagney's final performance, the 1984 TV-movie Terrible Joe Moran, which also told the story of a former boxer.
"Winner Take All" is a Sailor Steve Costigan short story by Robert E. Howard. It was originally published in July 1930 issue of Fight Stories. Howard earned $80 for the sale of this story which is now in the public domain.
It is also known as Sucker Fight after being published under that name in the Winter 1939-1940 issue of Fight Stories, with the authorship attributed to the pseudonym Mark Adams.
'Winner Take All ' is a 1939 American drama film, directed by Otto Brower. It stars Tony Martin, Gloria Stuart, and Henry Armetta.