John William “Johnny” Carson (October 23, 1925 –
January 23, 2005) was an American
television host and
comedian, known as host of
The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson for 30 years (1962-92). Carson
received six
Emmy Awards including the
Governor Award and a 1985
Peabody
Award; he was inducted into the
Television Academy Hall of
Fame in 1987. He was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom
in 1992, and received
Kennedy
Center Honors in 1993.
Early life and career
Born in
Corning
, Iowa,
Carson grew up in Norfolk
,
Nebraska. He left college after one year to join the
U.S. Navy, being
commissioned an
ensign. He joined the
U.S. Navy on June 8, 1943, as an apprentice seaman enrolled in the
V-5 program, which trained Navy and Marine pilots."Famous
Veterans," Military.com
[14915]
He hoped to train as a pilot, but was sent instead to Columbia
University for midshipman training. He performed magic for
classmates on the side. Commissioned an ensign late in the war,
Carson was assigned to the
USS
Pennsylvania, a battleship on station in the Pacific. He was en
route to the combat zone aboard a troopship when the bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki brought the war to a close.
The Pennsylvania was torpedoed on August 12, 1945 and Carson
reported for duty on the 14th – the last day of the war. Although
he arrived too late for combat, he got a firsthand education in the
consequences of war. The damaged warship sailed to Guam for
repairs, and as the newest and most junior officer, Carson was
assigned to supervise the removal of 20 dead sailors. He later
served as a communications officer in charge of decoding encrypted
messages. He recalls that the high point of his military career was
performing a magic trick for Secretary of the Navy
James Forrestal.
He began
his performing career in 1950 at WOW
radio and
television in Omaha
.
He
appeared on radio with Ken Case, an Omaha
native who was later a news anchor and sportscaster in Monroe
,
Louisiana. Carson soon hosted a morning television program
called
The Squirrel's Nest. One of his routines involved
interviewing pigeons on the roof of the local Court House that
would allegedly report on the political corruption they had seen.
Carson supplemented his income by serving as emcee at local church
dinners, attended by some of the same politicians and civic leaders
that he had lampooned on the radio. The wife of one of the
political figures owned stock in a radio station in Los Angeles and
referred Carson to her brother, who was influential in the emerging
television market in Southern California.
Carson went to work at
CBS-owned Los Angeles television station
KNXT
. He would later joke that he owed his
success to the birds of Omaha.
In 1953, comic
Red Skelton – a fan of
Carson's sketch comedy show
Carson's Cellar, which
appeared from 1951 to 1953 on KNXT – asked Carson to join his show
as a writer. Skelton once accidentally knocked himself unconscious
an hour before his show went on the air live. Carson filled in for
him.
Carson hosted several shows before
The Tonight Show,
including the
game show Earn Your
Vacation (1954), and the variety show
The Johnny Carson Show
(1955–56). He was a regular panelist on the original
To Tell the Truth until 1962, and
hosted the game show
Who Do You
Trust? (1957–62), where he met his future
sidekick Ed
McMahon.
In 1960, Carson was considered to play TV writer "Rob Petrie" in a
sitcom by
Carl
Reiner called
Head of the Family. Reiner starred in
the pilot, but it was decided that someone else should play the
role. However, on the suggestion of producer
Sheldon Leonard,
Dick Van Dyke was given the part, and the
series was retitled
The Dick
Van Dyke Show. He was also a guest star in an episode of
"Get Smart"!
The Tonight Show
Carson became host of
NBC's
The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson, after
Jack
Paar quit in October 1962. His announcer and sidekick was
Ed McMahon throughout the program. His
opening line, "Heeeere's Johnny" became a hallmark.
Most of the later shows began with music and the announcement
"Heeeeeere's Johnny!", followed by a brief monologue by
Carson. This was often followed by comedy sketches, interviews, and
music. Carson's trademark was a phantom golf swing at the end of
his monologues, aimed
stage left where
the
Tonight Show Band was. Guest
hosts sometimes parodied that gesture.
Bob
Newhart rolled an imaginary bowling ball toward the
audience.
Paul Anka wrote the theme song ("Johnny's
Theme"), a reworking of his "Toot Sweet", given lyrics, renamed
"It's Really Love," and recorded by
Annette Funicello in 1959. Anka gave
Carson co-authorship and they split the royalties for three
decades.
The show was originally produced in New York City, with occasional
stints in California. It was not live in its early years, although
during the 1970s, NBC fed the live taping from Burbank to New York
via satellite for editing (see below). The program had been done
"live on tape" (uninterrupted unless a problem occurred) since the
Jack Paar days.
In May 1972 the show
moved from New York to Burbank, California
. Carson often joked about "beautiful downtown
Burbank" and referred to "beautiful downtown Bakersfield
," which prompted Mayor Mary K. Shell to chide Carson and invite him to her
city to see improvements made during the early 1980s.
After the move, Carson stopped doing shows five days a week.
Instead, on Monday nights there was a guest host, leaving Carson to
do the other four each week. Shows were taped in Burbank at 5:30pm
(8:30 pm Eastern time) to be shown that evening at 11:30pm Eastern
time. On September 8, 1980, at Carson's request, the show cut its
90-minute format to 60 minutes;
Tom
Snyder's
Tomorrow
added a half hour to fill the vacant time.
Joan Rivers became the
"permanent" guest host from September
1983 until 1986, when she was fired for accepting a competing show
on
Fox without consulting
Carson.
The Tonight Show returned to using guest hosts,
including comic
George Carlin.
Jay Leno then became the exclusive guest
host in fall 1987. Leno stated that although other guest hosts
upped their fees, he kept his low, assuring himself the show.
Eventually, Monday night was for Leno, Tuesday for the
Best of
Carson, rebroadcasts usually of a year earlier but
occasionally from the 1970s.
Carson had a talent for quick quips to deal with problems. If the
opening monologue fared poorly, the band would start playing
"
Tea for Two" and Carson danced,
to laughs from the studio audience. Alternately, Carson might pull
the
boom mike close to his
face and announce
"Attention K-Mart
shoppers!"
Carson's show was the launch for many performers, notably
comedians. Many got their break on the show, and it was an
achievement to get Carson to laugh and be called to the guest
chair. Carson was successor to
The Ed Sullivan Show as a showcase
for all kinds of talent, as well as continuing
Vaudeville variety-show.
In 1973, Carson had a run-in with psychic
Uri
Geller. Carson, a magician, wanted a neutral demonstration of
Geller's abilities, so, at the advice of his friend and fellow
magician
James Randi, he gave Geller
spoons and asked him to bend them with his psychic powers. Geller
proved unable, and his appearance on The Tonight Show has been
regarded as Geller's fall from glory.

Johnny Carson in 1966
Carson successfully sued a manufacturer of portable toilets who
wanted to call its product "Here's Johnny".
On December 13, 1976, comedian
Don
Rickles was a guest when comedian
Bob
Newhart guest-hosted. While poking fun at Newhart and
improvising an "immigration" bit, Rickles stamped an imaginary
passport, slamming the cigarette box Carson kept on his desk and
breaking it. When Carson returned the next night and discovered
this, he took a camera crew to the studio next door where
CPO Sharkey, a sitcom starring
Rickles, was being taped. Carson barged into the studio, shouting,
"RICKLES!" He disrupted the taping, berating the embarrassed
Rickles with a barrage of insults, in imitation of Rickles's act.
Carson also teased
CPO
Sharkey's African-American actor Harrison Page by speaking
to him in an exaggerated southern dialect. The entire incident
appeared to be spontaneous, but comedy writer Mark Evanier
published an opinion: "Carson's show was taped in Studio 1 at NBC
Burbank. The Rickles sitcom was in Studio 3, where Leno now
tapes... While Johnny did his best to make it all look spontaneous
and unarranged, it had to have been carefully planned. Rickles
probably was not in on it and may have been genuinely surprised,
but Johnny's producers and director must have been prepared for
what transpired, and the producers of
CPO Sharkey almost
certainly knew. At the moment Johnny entered, Don just 'happened'
to be shooting on the set closest to that door. The surprise
wouldn't have worked as well if they'd been on one of the other
sets. It wouldn't have worked at all if they'd been between scenes
or taping a portion of the show that Rickles wasn't in."
An oft-repeated story—since dismissed as an "urban legend"—involved
a guest appearance by
Zsa Zsa Gabor
carrying a white Persian cat. Gabor is said to have asked Johnny if
he would like to
"pet my pussy?" During a 1989 appearance,
Jane Fonda noted that her son had
repeated the claim, and "my son said that you said, uh, 'I'd love
to, if you'd remove that damned cat!' Is it true?" Carson denied
the episode on-air saying, "No, I think I would recall that..." He
and Gabor both responded to researchers stating the event "never
happened." Despite widespread insistence by people who claim to
have seen the episode, no audio or video has ever been
produced.
However, a bit of adult humor was not beyond Carson. During an
interview with
Dolly Parton, in
reference to her large bust, she said,
"People are always
asking if they're real and .... I'll tell you what, these
are mine." Carson replied,
"I have certain guidelines on
this show. But I would give about a year's pay to peek
under there."
In a 1980
Rolling Stone
article, Carson caused quite a public backlash when he called the
Brian Wilson-penned (
Beach Boys) song "Johnny Carson" from
1977's
Love
You album "not a work of art". Wilson wrote the song
tribute citing the fact no such song had existed previously about
the 'king of late night'.
Carson made several routine jokes at the expense of other
celebrities, like
Wayne Newton (after
Newton had performed on Carson's show several times). Newton
claimed in his 1991 autobiography, among other times including a
1989 interview with Phil Donahue, that the circumstances led to a
confrontation in Carson's dressing room where Newton threatened a
physical altercation if Carson didn't cease the barrage of jokes
with homosexual connotations. In a November 29, 2007 interview on
Larry King Live, Wayne Newton said, "I'm going to say something
I've never said on television, Mr. King. Johnny Carson was a
mean-spirited human being. And there are people that he has hurt
that people will never know about. And for some reason at some
point, he decided to turn that kind of negative attention toward
me. And I refused to have it."
Another famous feud came on the heels of an appearance by iconic
author
Truman Capote in 1966. The
diminutive writer was already embroiled in a public feud with
fellow novelist
Jacqueline Susann
when he told Johnny – and millions of viewers – that Susann looked
"like a truckdriver in drag." The remark was not censored from the
broadcast, and made headlines the next day. Capote subsequently
issued a public apology to truckdrivers.
Carson reportedly loathed what he felt was disloyalty among
friends. The comedian was displeased when former "Tonight Show"
guest hosts John Davidson and Joan Rivers got their own talk shows.
Rivers' FOX show directly competed with Carson during the 1986–87
season, but died a quick death. On June 24, 2009 following Ed
McMahon's passing, Rivers lauded McMahon on "Larry King Live" but
stated that Carson "never again spoke to me, up to his death".
Another guest host, Jay Leno, was treated cooly for being perceived
as ushering Carson into retirement. Leno's agent ignited the then
false rumor in Hollywood circles that Carson's retirement was
pending, and Leno was heir to the "Tonight Show". Carson vowed not
to return to the show while Leno headed it.
Some of Carson's good-natured barbs were directed at his friends.
Ronald Reagan's hair and
Frank Sinatra's temper and mob connections
were frequent topics. Carson humorously chided
Nancy Reagan for falling down and "breaking her
hair."
Comic characters
Carson played several continuing characters on sketches during the
show, including
- Art Fern, the "Tea Time Movie" announcer
(always selling strange or shoddy merchandise). The character was
based on late-show TV hosts who would deliver commercials
throughout the movie. Carson originally played the fast-talking
huckster in his own voice (as Honest Bernie Schlock or Ralph
Willie), and finally settled on a nasal, high-pitched, smarmy drone
reminiscent of Jackie Gleason's
"Reginald Van Gleason III" character. The character, now
permanently known as Art Fern, wore a lavish toupee, loud jackets,
and a pencil mustache. Actress Carol
Wayne became famous for her 100+ appearances (1971–1982) as
Art's buxom assistant, the Matinée Lady. While Art gave his spiel,
she would enter the stage behind him. Art would react to her
attractive body, wincing loudly, "Ho....leeeee!". After
Carol Wayne's death, Carson kept Art Fern off the air for most of
the next year, and finally hired Danuta Wesley and then Teresa
Ganzel to play the Matinée Lady. Carson also used these sketches to
poke fun at the intricate Los Angeles interstate system, using a
pointer and map to give confusing directions to shoppers (often
including points where he would unfold the cardboard map to point
out, via the appropriate picture, when the shopper would arrive at
"the fork in the road". Another freeway routine in the same theme
centered around the somewhat uniquely named "Slauson Cutoff." Art
Fern would advise drivers to take some road until they reached the
Slauson Cutoff, and then "Cut Off Your Slauson!", often accompanied
by the audience to peals of laughter, led by McMahon).
- Carnac the
Magnificent, a turbaned psychic who could answer
questions before seeing them. (This same routine had been done by
Carson's predecessor, Steve Allen, as "The Question Man.") Carnac
had a trademark entrance in which he always "tripped" going up the
step to Carson's desk. (In one episode, technicians rigged Carson's
desk to fall apart when Carnac fell into it.) Ed McMahon would hand
Carnac a series of envelopes, containing questions. Carnac would
place each envelope against his forehead and predict the answer,
such as "Gatorade." Then he would read the question: "What does an
alligator get on welfare?" Some of the jokes were feeble, and
McMahon used pauses after terrible puns and audience groans to make
light of Carnac's lack of comic success ("Carnac must be used to
quiet surroundings"), prompting Carson to return an equal insult.
McMahon would always announce near the end, "I hold in my hand the
last envelope," at which the audience would applaud
wildly, prompting Carnac to pronounce a comedic "curse" on the
audience, such as "May your sister elope with a camel!" (In fact,
"Carnac the Magnificent" was the stage name Johnny used in his
magic act as a youth.)
- Floyd R. Turbo American (with
no pause between words). A stereotypical redneck wearing a plaid
hunting coat and cap, who offered "editorial responses" to
left-leaning causes or news events. Railing against women's rights
in the workplace, for example, Turbo would shout, "This raises the
question: kiss my Dictaphone!"
- Aunt Blabby, a cantankerous and sometimes
amorous old lady, invariably being interviewed by straight man Ed
McMahon about elder affairs. McMahon would innocently use a common
expression like "check out," only to have Aunt Blabby warn him,
"Don't say 'check out' to an old person!" Aunt Blabby was an
obvious copy of Jonathan Winters’
most famous creation, Maude Frickert, including her black spinster
dress and wig.
- El Mouldo, mentalist, who ventured into the
audience to perform mind-reading and mind-over-matter feats, all of
which failed.
Carson uncensored on satellite
Even though Carson's program was based in Burbank, NBC's editing
and production services for the program were located in New York,
resulting in the requirement that Carson's program be transmitted
from Burbank to New York. Beginning in 1976 NBC utilized the
Satcom 2 satellite to do this, feeding the
live taping (which usually took place in the early evening)
directly to New York, where it would be edited prior to the normal
broadcast. This live feed lasted usually from two to two-and-a-half
hours a night, and was uncensored and commercial-free. During the
commercial breaks the audio and picture would be left on, capturing
at times risque language and other events that would certainly be
edited out later going out over the feed.
At the same time, however, satellite earth stations owned by
private individuals began to appear, and some managed to find the
live feed. Satellite dish owners began to document their sightings
in technical journals, giving viewers knowledge of things they were
not meant to see. Carson and his production staff grew concerned
about this, and pressured NBC into ceasing the satellite
transmissions of the live taping in the early 1980s. The satellite
link was replaced by microwave landline transmission until the
show's editing facilities were finally moved to Burbank.
Business ventures
Carson was a major investor in the ultimately failed
DeLorean Motor Company. (Manufacturer
John DeLorean was involved in a drug
scandal, causing Carson's guest
Red
Skelton to quip, "The DeLorean, is that a hopped-up
car?")
Carson was head of a group of show biz and business people who
purchased and operated two television stations: channel 5 KVVU-TV
Henderson (Las Vegas) NV now owned by Meredith Broadcasting and
channel 23 KNAT Albuquerque, NM. KVVU had been the earliest Las
Vegas independent station and was sort of a local in-joke for its
threadbare operation and ragtag program line up. Many thought it
ironic that a leading entertainer like Carson (along with Sal
Durante, Neil Simon and others) would own such a station. There was
talk at the time that the station would become the NBC affiliate as
then long-time affiliate KORK-TV was in the process of being
replaced by KVBC-TV, but it never happened. KNAT started at exactly
the wrong time. Several new channels 2, 9, 11, 14, 23 were lighting
up in the southwest and the race for good syndicated shows was
fierce. KNAT was later sold to Trinity Broadcasting.
Carson's other business ventures included a successful clothing
line, through which his turtlenecks became a fashion trend, and a
failed restaurant franchise.
Retirement
Carson retired from show business on May 22, 1992, when he stepped
down as host of
The Tonight
Show. His farewell was a major media event, and stretched
over several nights. It was often emotional for Carson, his
colleagues, and the audiences, particularly the farewell statement
he delivered on his 4,531st and final
Tonight Show:
NBC gave the role of host to the show's
then-current permanent guest host,
Jay
Leno. Leno and
David Letterman
were soon competing on separate networks.
Post-retirement appearances

Carson, 1994
At the end of his final
Tonight Show appearance, Carson
indicated that he might, if so inspired, return with a new project,
but instead chose to go into full retirement, rarely giving
interviews and declining to participate in NBC's 75th Anniversary
celebrations. He made the occasional cameo appearance, including
voicing himself on a 1993 episode of
The Simpsons ("
Krusty Gets Kancelled") and appearing
in the 1993 NBC Special
Bob Hope: The
First 90 Years. On May 13, 1994, Carson appeared on
The Late Show
with David Letterman. During a week of shows from Los
Angeles, Letterman was having Larry "Bud" Melman (
Calvert DeForest) deliver his "Top Ten
Lists" under the guise that a famous personality would be
delivering the list instead. On the last show of the week,
Letterman indicated that Carson would be delivering the list.
Instead, DeForest delivered the list, insulted the audience (in
keeping with the gag), and walked off to polite applause. Letterman
then indicated that the card he was given did not have the proper
list on it and asked that the "real" list be brought out. On that
cue, the real Johnny Carson emerged from behind the curtain (as
Letterman's band played "Johnny's Theme"), an appearance which
prompted a standing ovation from the audience. Carson then
requested to sit behind Letterman's desk; Letterman obliged, as the
audience continued to cheer and applaud. After some moments, Carson
departed from the show without having spoken to the audience. He
later cited acute
laryngitis as the
reason for his silence. This night turned out to be Carson's last
television appearance.
Letterman
Just days before Carson's death, it was revealed that the retired
"King of Late Night" occasionally sent jokes to Letterman.
Letterman would then use these jokes in the monologue of his show,
which Carson got "a big kick out of" according to
Worldwide Pants, Inc. Senior Vice-President
Peter Lassally, who formerly produced
both men's programs, also claimed that Carson had always believed
Letterman, not Leno, to be his "rightful successor". Letterman
frequently employs some of Carson's trademark bits on his show,
including "Carnac" (with band leader
Paul
Shaffer as Carnac), "Stump the Band," and the "Week in
Review."
Personal life
Carson was
born in Corning
, Iowa, to
Homer "Kit" Lloyd Carson, a power company manager, and Ruth Hook
Carson. He grew up in southwest Iowa until the age of
8, when the family moved to Norfolk
,
Nebraska. There he learned to perform magic tricks, debuting
as "The Great Carsoni" at 14.
He attended Millsaps College in Jackson
, Mississippi, where he received V-12 officer training,
and then served in the Navy from
1943 to 1946. He served in
USS Pennsylvania in the final days
of the war. Carson then attended the
University of Nebraska in Lincoln
where he joined
Phi Gamma Delta
fraternity, graduating with a bachelor of arts degree in radio and
speech with a minor in physics in 1949.
Carson was famously shy off-camera.
Marriages
Carson married his college sweetheart Joan "Jody" Wolcott on
October 1, 1949. The marriage was volatile, with infidelities by
both parties, finally ending in divorce. They had three sons. Their
son Richard died in a car accident on June 21, 1991.
In 1963, Carson got a "quickie"
Mexican
divorce from Joan and married Joanne Copeland on August 17,
1963. After a protracted divorce in 1972, Copeland received nearly
half a million dollars in cash and art and US$100,000 a year in
alimony for life.
Joanne Copeland recently discovered 39 episodes of the debut season
of
The Johnny Carson Show which were originally telecast
in 1955 and 1956. She then made an arrangement with
Shout! Factory
to produce and distribute selected programs on DVD. The two-disk
DVD set contains Johnny's "top 10" episodes. Johnny's first wife
Joan and the couple's three sons appear in the first episode on the
DVD.
At the Carson
Tonight Show's 10th anniversary party on
September 30, 1972, Carson announced that he and former model
Joanna Holland had been secretly married that afternoon, shocking
his friends and associates. Carson kidded that he had married three
similarly named women to avoid "having to change the monogram on
the towels." A similar joke was made by
Bob
Newhart during Carson's Roast by
Dean
Martin. On March 8, 1983, Holland filed for divorce. Under
California's community property laws, she was entitled to 50
percent of all the assets accumulated during the marriage, even
though Carson earned virtually 100 percent of the couple's income.
(Since, under the community property provisions of California law,
each party legally earns half for themself and half for their
spouse.) During this period, he joked on
The Tonight Show,
"My producer,
Freddy de
Cordova, really gave me something I needed for Christmas. He
gave me a gift certificate to the Law Offices of Jacoby &
Meyers." The divorce case finally ended in 1985 with an 80-page
settlement, Holland receiving $20 million in cash and
property.
Carson married Alexis Maas on June 20, 1987; Johnny was 61, Alexis
35.
Children
Carson's
son from his first marriage, Richard, died on June 21, 1991, when
his car plunged down a steep embankment along a paved service road
off Highway 1 near Cayucos
, a small town north of San Luis Obispo. Apparently, Richard
had been taking photographs when the accident occurred. Carson was
deeply shaken by his son's death. On his first show after Ricky's
death, he gave a stirring tribute in the final minutes of his show
as samples of his son's photographic work (and images of Ricky,
himself) were displayed with the music accompaniment of "
Riviera Paradise" by blues guitarist
Stevie Ray Vaughan. In addition,
the final image — as well as some "More To Come" bumpers — of
Carson's last show in May 1992 featured a photo Richard had
taken.
Donations
In November 2004, Carson announced a $5.3 million gift to the
University of Nebraska Foundation to support the
Hixson-Lied
College of Fine and Performing Arts' Department of Theatre
Arts, which created the Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film.
Another
$5 million donation was announced by the estate of Carson to the
University of Nebraska
following his death.
Carson also donated to causes in his hometown of Norfolk, including
the Carson Cancer Center at Faith Regional Health Services, the
Elkhorn Valley Museum, and the Johnny Carson Theater at Norfolk
Senior High School.
Other events
Carson
was cited in a 1982 drunk driving incident while driving a De Lorean DMC-12 sportscar in Beverly
Hills
. Represented by
Robert Shapiro, he pleaded
no contest to the charges, and played off
the incident by having a uniformed police officer escort him on to
the
Tonight Show stage.
Carson, an amateur astronomer, was close friends with astronomer
Carl Sagan, who often appeared on
The
Tonight Show. The unique way Sagan had of saying certain
words, like "billions" of galaxies, would lead to Carson ribbing
his friend, imitating his voice and saying
"BILL-ions and
BILL-ions", a phrase soon erroneously attributed to Sagan
himself. According to Sagan's biographer, Keay Davidson, Carson was
the first person to contact Sagan's wife with condolences when the
scientist died in 1996. He owned several telescopes, including a
Questar, considered at
the time an expensive and top-of-the line telescope.
Also a talented amateur drummer, Carson was shown on a segment of
60 Minutes practicing at home on
a drum set given to him by close friend jazz legend
Buddy Rich who was the jazz musician with the
most frequent appearances on
The Tonight Show. Writer
Gore Vidal, another frequent
Tonight
Show guest and personal friend, writes about Carson's
personality in his 2006 memoirs.
Death and tributes
On March 19, 1999, Carson, then 73, suffered a severe heart attack
at his home in Malibu, California. Carson was sleeping when he
suddenly awoke with severe chest pains. He was rushed to a hospital
in nearby Santa Monica where he underwent quadruple-bypass
surgery.
At 6:50 AM
PST on January 23,
2005, Carson died at Los Angeles'
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, of
respiratory arrest arising from
emphysema. He was 79 years old. Carson had
revealed his illness to the public in September 2002. Following
Carson's death his body was cremated, and the ashes were given to
his wife. In accordance with his family's wishes, no public
memorial service was held. There were countless tributes paid to
Carson upon his death, including a statement by then President
George W. Bush, all recognizing the deep and enduring
affection held for him.
Tributes published after his death confirmed that he had been a
chain-smoker. While
The Tonight Show was broadcast live,
he would frequently smoke cigarettes on the air; it was reported
that Carson had said
"these things are killing me" as far
back as the 1970s.
On January 24, 2005,
The Tonight Show with Jay
Leno paid tribute to Carson with guests
Ed McMahon,
Bob
Newhart,
Don Rickles,
Drew Carey and
K.D.
Lang. Letterman followed suit on January
31 with former
Tonight Show executive producer
Peter Lassally and bandleader
Doc Severinsen. During the beginning of this
show, Letterman said that for 30 years no matter what was going on
in the world, no matter whether people had a good or bad day, they
wanted to end the day by being "tucked in by Johnny." Letterman
also told his viewers that the monologue he had just given had
consisted entirely of jokes sent to him by Carson in the last few
months of his life. Doc Severinsen ended the Letterman show that
night by playing one of Carson's two favorite songs, "
Here's That Rainy Day" (the other was
"
I'll Be Seeing You"). It
had been reported over the decades of Carson's fame that he was,
off-camera, so intensely private that he had never once invited
McMahon to his home. After Carson's death, though, McMahon disputed
those rumors and claimed that a close friendship existed. On his
final
Tonight Show appearance, Carson himself said that
while sometimes people who work together for long stretches of time
on television don't necessarily like each other, this was not the
case with him and McMahon: they were good friends who would have
dinner together, and the camaraderie that they had on the show
could not be faked. Carson and McMahon were friends for 30
years.
A week or so after the tributes,
Dennis
Miller was on the
Tonight Show and told
Jay Leno about the first time he tried to do a talk
show, and how miserably it went. He said that he got a call right
after the first show, from Carson, telling him,
"It's not as
easy as it looks, is it, kid?"
The 2005 film
The
Aristocrats was dedicated to Carson.
References
- Johnny Carson. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. (2009). In
Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved July 30, 2009.
- The Official Tonight Show starring Johnny
Carson
- http://articles.latimes.com/2007/oct/11/business/fi-nbc11
- Carson v. Here's Johnny Portable Toilets, Inc., 810 F.2d 104,
105 (6th Cir. 1987)
- http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/600.html
- Reader's
Digest September 2005, p. 178; Book Bonus: Ed McMahon
Here's Johnny, Berkley Trade, 2006 ISBN
978-0425212295
- Pleading Poverty and Demanding Money, Johnny
Carson's First Wife Tells the Sad Secrets of Her Troubled
Marriage By Michelle Green, Sue Carswell, Eleanor Hoover May 7,
1990 Vol. 33 No. 18 People Magazine
- Biography for Johnny Carson
- Longtime host of ‘Tonight Show’ dies at 79 Associated
Press, February 8, 2005
- Net mourns death of Johnny Carson Jeff Pelline
CNET News February 8, 2005
- Quotations on Johnny Carson's Death Associated
Press January 23, 2005
- Tribute To Johnny Carson Friends Return To Stage
Where They And Johnny Carson Made TV Magic By Chris Hawke CBS
News Burbank, Calif. Jan. 25, 2005
- Letterman Pays Special Tribute to Carson
February 1, 2005 Associated Press
- Fort Lauderdale By Jack Drury
- HBO The Aristocrats Synopsis
Further reading
Accounts on work and life
Humor material collections
External links
Obituaries