The Ed Sullivan Show
1 9 4 8 - 1 9 7 1
(USA)
Anyone
who watched television in America between 1948 and 1971 saw Ed
Sullivan. Even if viewers did not watch his Sunday night variety show
regularly, chances are they tuned in occasionally to see a favourite
singer or comedian.
Milton Berle may have been "Mr.
Television" in the early years of TV, but for almost a
quarter-century Sullivan was Mr. Sunday Night. Considered by many to
be the embodiment of banal, middle-brow taste, Sullivan exposed a
generation of Americans to virtually everything there was to offer in
the field of art and entertainment.
Sullivan began as a journalist, and it was his
column in the New York Daily News that launched him as an MC of
vaudeville revues and charity events. This role in turn led to his
selection to front a regular televised variety show in 1948. Known as
the Toast of the Town until 1955, it became The Ed Sullivan
Show, in September of that year.
Ed Sullivan's stiff physical appearance, evident
discomfort before the camera, and awkward vocal mannerisms (including
the oft-imitated description of his program as a "reeeeeelly big
shoe") made him an unlikely candidate to become a television star
and national institution. But what Sullivan lacked in screen presence
and personal charisma he made up for with a canny ability to locate
and showcase talent.
He
did so by booking acts from every spectrum of entertainment -
performers of the classics such as Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev;
comedians such as Buster Keaton, Bob Hope and Joan Rivers; singers
like Elvis Presley, The
Beatles, James Brown and
Sister Sourire, the Singing Nun. Sports stars appeared on the same
stage as Shakespearean actors. Poets and artists shared the spotlight
with dancing bears and trained dogs.
There were the "specialty acts"
too, such as Topo Gigio, the marionette mouse with the thick Italian
accent and Senor Wences, a ventriloquist who talked to his
lipstick-smeared hand and a wooden head in a box. Sullivan's program
was a variety show in the fullest sense of the term.
Elvis
Presley and many other performers had appeared on network
television before ever showing up on the Sullivan program, but taking
his stage once during prime time on Sunday night meant more than a
dozen appearances on any other show.
Although Sullivan relented to the blacklist in
1950, apologising for booking tap dancer and alleged communist
sympathiser Paul Draper, he was noted for his support of civil rights. At
a time when virtually all sponsors balked at permitting black
performers to take the stage, Sullivan embraced Pearl Baily over the
objections of his sponsors. He also showcased black entertainers as
diverse as Nat King Cole,
Louis Armstrong, Richard Pryor, Duke Ellington, Richie Havens and The
Supremes.
Sullivan
attempted to keep up with the times, booking rock bands and young
comedians, but by the time his show was cancelled in 1971 he had been
eclipsed in the ratings by hip variety programs like Rowan and
Martin's Laugh-In and The Flip Wilson Show. Since it
ended in 1971 no other program on American television has approached
the diversity and depth of Sullivan's weekly variety show.
Periodic specials drawing from the hundreds of
hours of Sullivan shows as well as the venue of The Late Show with
David Letterman continue to serve as tribute to Sullivan's unique
place in broadcasting.
Ed Sullivan remained an important figure in
American broadcasting because of his talents as a producer and his
willingness to chip away at the entrenched racism that existed in
television's first decades. Ed Sullivan died in October 1974.
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