Theodore Alexander "Teddy" Lightner (14 September 1893 – c. 22 November 1981)[1][2][3] was an American bridge player. He developed the Lightner double, a bridge bidding convention.[4]
The Lightner Double was not his most important contribution to the development of bridge bidding, but it bears his name because Culbertson was not keen on it and so did not claim it for himself. Lightner was the first to put forward the idea that a change of suit by responder should be forcing, prior to that only a jump in a new suit having been played as forcing. Though opening two bids to show a strong hand were used at the Cavendish Club in New York, the method was not used by the top young players of the late 1920s and early 1930s. To show an exceedingly strong hand a player would sometimes open 4NT or 5 of his suit. Lightner suggested that an opening two bid should be used to announce such very powerful hands. Both the one-over-one forcing principle and strong opening two bids were enthusiastically adopted by Culbertson.[7]
Publications
High lights of the Culbertson System (The Bridge World, 1931), 238 pp., OCLC5236777; second ed. 1932, 242 pp., – "Theodore Alexander Lightner", OCLC5236814
Famous hands of the Culbertson–Lenz match (Bridge World, 1932), 483 pp. – "analyzed by Ely Culbertson, Josephine Culbertson, Theodore A. Lightner [and] Waldemar von Zedtwitz; including additional analyses by Oswald Jacoby [and] Lieut. Alfred M. Gruenther", OCLC12407777
Canasta for everyone, Sam Fry and Lightner (New York: Didier, 1949), 64 pp., OCLC1650901