 The Tonight Show
1 9 5 4 - 1 9 9 2 (USA)
The
Tonight Show premiered on NBC in 1954 with Steve Allen as its
first host. While it maintained a distinctive format and style
throughout its first four decades on the air, The Tonight Show
changed significantly with each successive host.
Steve Allen, Ernie Kovacs, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson, and Jay
Leno each took The Tonight Show in a significant new
direction. Each of these hosts imprinted the show with distinctive
personalities and management styles.
Jack Paar dramatically quit the show live on air in 1960 after
a risqué joke of his was pulled from the show without his
knowledge.
"I've been up 30 hours without an ounce of sleep wrestling
with my conscience all day. I've made a decision about what I'm
going to do. I'm leaving The Tonight Show. There must be a
better living than this".
He then stormed off, leaving his flustered sidekick to
broadcast to a nation of millions. Within a month Paar was back with his tail between his legs.
The contrast between Jack Paar and Johnny Carson was marked.
Paar was emotional and likely to blow up - Carson was calm and
unflappable. Unlike Paar, Carson tended to avoid anything
controversial and was usually content to keep his audience
amused.
Carson opened each of his NBC shows with a monologue and then
spent most of the remainder of the evening simply chatting with
guests - it was like having friends over to your place for coffee
(albeit very famous friends!).
For millions of Americans, the show was a comforting,
consistent, comedic lullaby. Every night for three decades, they'd
drift off to sleep as a twinkle-eyed, silver-haired Nebraskan
swung an invisible golf club, made some alimony jokes, and
inspired throaty ho-ho-ho's from his eager sidekick.
Over the course of some 4,500 shows, Carson turned The
Tonight Show into a pre-sleep ritual, launched a thousand
stand-up careers, and reached the kind of fame where last names
were unnecessary: "Heeeeere's Johnny!" was enough.
When Carson started, the show originated from New York and was
taped on the same evening that it aired. Johnny was on air all
five nights a week and began his monologue when the show began, at
11:15 P.M.
On his very first show, Carson was introduced by Groucho Marx;
Johnny's first words, reacting to applause as he walked onstage
for the first time were, "Boy, you would think it was Vice
President Nixon".
In February 1965 Johnny refused to do the 11:15-11:30 P.M.
segment any longer, leaving that to Ed McMahon and Skitch
Henderson. On January 2, 1967 this first fifteen minutes was
dropped from the show altogether, leaving the show at 90 minutes.
The show would remain at 90 minutes in length until 1980 when
it was further cut back to only one hour. Features that were used
on his show with varying frequency included "Stump the
Band," in which members of the studio audience would ask the
band to try to play obscure songs by giving them only the titles;
"Carnac the Magnificent," with Carson as an inept
magician; "Aunt Blabby," with Carson as a gossiping
little old lady; "The Mighty Carson Art Players,"
spoofing movies, commercials, TV shows, and events in the news;
"Floyd R. Turbo," with Carson as a super-patriot; and
"The Art Fern Tea Time Movie," with Carol Wayne as the
original "Matinee Lady."
Perhaps the most celebrated telecast, and certainly the one
with the most enormous audience, was that of December 17, 1969, on
which Tiny Tim married Miss Vicki (pictured at right).
In May 1972 the show was moved permanently from New York to
Burbank, California. It was also around this time that Carson
started cutting back on his appearances. He would now do the show
only four nights per week, leaving the Monday night show to a
guest host.
The most frequent guest hosts during the first 21 years were
Joey Bishop (177 times), Joan Rivers (93 times), Bob Newhart (87
times), John Davidson (87 times), David Brenner (70 times), McLean
Stevenson (58 times), Jerry Lewis (52 times), and David Letterman
(51 times). Joan Rivers was the "permanent" (and only)
guest host from September 1983 until 1986.
The Tonight Show reverted to various guest hosts after
Joan left, with Jay Leno the most frequent.
Leno then became the
exclusive guest host in the fall of 1987, a position he held for
the remainder of Johnny's rein.
A typical Carson moment occurred on 16 October 1987. Carson
always took a special delight in people with eccentric hobbies,
and on this night he had a guest named Myrtle Young from Fort
Wayne, Indiana, whose hobby was collecting potato chips that
looked like other objects - an angry dog, a sleeping bird, a
candle . . .
While Myrtle proudly showed off her fine (and fragile)
collection, Ed McMahon distracted her momentarily and as she was
turned away there was a resounding "crunch" from Carson.
All eyes turned to the host who has just bitten into a potato
chip!
Myrtle
(pictured at right) is in a state of shock, clutching her chest with her
mouth agape and her eyes wide with shock and betrayal. How could
Johnny munch one of her works of art?!?
Ever the grand-master of
timing, Carson allowed the gag to play out for a while before
assuring Myrtle and reaching down to hold up a big bowl of chips
he had behind his desk in preparation for the prank.
The laughter
went on for several minutes.
Johnny's final telecast (22 May 1992) was a national event. A
quiet reflection of the shows golden moments over the past 30
years.
He was replaced by stand-up comedian Jay Leno.
NBC's decision to hire Leno did not sit well with David
Letterman who had also coveted the Tonight Show job.
Industry insiders guessed that Letterman would soon take his
sarcastic sense of humour to another network. He moved to CBS in
1993 to go head to head with Tonight with Jay Leno.
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