"Floyd R. Turbo", a dimwitted yokel responding to a TV station editorial.
- "Art Fern", the fast-talking host of a "Tea Time Movie" program, who advertised inane products and romanced his attractive blonde assistant, played by Carol Wayne (1971-82) and Teresa Ganzel (1982-91), when the camera was off.
- The fake movies he would introduce usually had a cast of several actors with similar-sounding names, typically topped off by some variation on "Rex, the Wonder Horse."
- On giving directions to a fake store he was touting, he would show a spaghetti-like road map, sometimes with a literal "fork in the road," other times making the joke, "Go to the Slauson Cutoff...", and the audience would recite with him, "...cut off your Slauson!"
- "Aunt Blabby", an old woman whose appearance and speech pattern bore more than a passing resemblance to comedian Jonathan Winters' character "Maude Frickert."
- "Stump the Band", where studio audience members ask the band to try to play obscure songs given only the title. Unlike when this routine was done during the Jack Paar years with the Jose Melis band, Doc's band almost never knew the song, but that did not stop them from inventing one on the spot. Example:
- Guest's request: My Dead Dog Rover
- Doc Severinsen, singing: "My dead dog Rover / lay under the sun / and stayed there all summer / until he was done!"
- "The Mighty Carson Art Players", which spoofed news, movies, television shows, and commercials.
- Example: Johnny, dressed as a doctor, starting to talk about some intimate topic (just as in the real ad) and then being hit by cream pies from several directions at once.
- "The Edge of Wetness", in which Johnny would read humorous plot summaries of a fictional soap opera while the camera panned the audience, stopping on an unsuspecting audience member who Carson claimed was, for example, the butler from the soap.
Programming history
October 1962-December 1966: Monday-Friday 11:15 p.m.-1:00 a.m.
When Carson took over from Jack Paar, he inherited a show that was 105 minutes long. The show was structured to have what appeared to be two openings, with one starting at 11:15 p.m. and including the monologue, and another which listed the guests and announced the host again, starting at 11:30. The two openings gave affiliates the option of having either a fifteen-minute or thirty-minute local news show preceding Carson.
As more affiliates introduced thirty minutes of local news, Carson's monologue was being seen by fewer people. To rectify this situation, from February 1965 to December 1966, Ed McMahon and Skitch Henderson began to co-host the first fifteen minutes of the show without Carson, who would then take over at 11:30.
January 1965-September 1966: Saturday or Sunday 11:15-1:00 a.m. (reruns)
September 1966-September 1975: Saturday or Sunday 11:30-1:00 a.m. (reruns)
January 1967-September 1980: Monday-Friday 11:30 p.m.-1:00 a.m.
September 1980-May 1991: Monday-Friday 11:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
Carson used threats of retirement to convince NBC the show should be shortened to sixty minutes; when Carson re-upped in 1980, the new, shorter length of the show was written into his contract.
May 1991-May 1992: Monday-Friday 11:35 p.m.-12:35 a.m.
The show's start time was delayed by five minutes to allow NBC affiliates to include more commercials during the local news.
Virtually all of the pre-1970 shows, including Carson's debut as host, were lost to history when, following standard procedure at the time, the extremely expensive videotapes were reused. It was rumored that many other episodes were lost in a fire, but NBC has denied this. Other surviving material from the era has been found on kinescopes held in the archives of the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service, or in the personal collections of guests of the program. Longtime New York meteorologist Dr. Frank Field, an occasional guest during the years he was weathercaster for WNBC, showed several clips of his appearances with Carson in a 2002 career retrospective on WWOR-TV; Field had maintained the clips in his own personal archives.
Thirty-minute audio recordings of many of these "missing" episodes are contained in the Library of Congress in the Armed Forces Radio collection. Many 1970s-era episodes have been licensed to distributors of the sort that advertise mail order offers on late-night TV. The later shows are stored in an underground film archive in Kansas.
Guest hosts
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson had guest hosts each Monday for most of the show's run and sometimes for entire weeks during Johnny's frequent vacations. Various people served as guest host, some over fifty times. This list is the most frequent guest hosts of the first 21 years of the show's run; however, a complete list would have Jay Leno, Garry Shandling and Joan Rivers well at the front, as they were the permanent guest hosts from 1987-1992, 1986-1987 and 1982-1986, respectively:
A 1982 episode hosted by Rivers was the first stereo broadcast in television history.
Carson himself had been an occasional guest host during the years when Jack Paar was the regular host, and Paar repeatedly claimed he had been the one to suggest to NBC that Carson replace him when he left the show in 1962.
Starting in September 1983, Joan Rivers was designated Carson's permanent guest host, a role she had been essentially filling for more than a year before then. In 1986, she abruptly left for her own show on the then new Fox Network. This move -- and her failure to inform him personally -- infuriated Carson so much that he banned Rivers from his show, cancelling even the three weeks of guest hosting she was scheduled to do in the remainder of the 1985-86 television season. Unfortunately for Rivers, her new show flopped and was quickly cancelled, and she never appeared on the show with Carson again. In a CNN interview after Carson's death, Rivers revealed that Carson never spoke to her again, even on the occasion when Rivers confronted him in a Los Angeles restaurant.
Carson’s last shows
As his impending retirement approached, Carson tried to avoid too much sentimentality, but would periodically show clips of some of his favorite moments and revisit with some of his favorite guests.
But no one was quite prepared for Carson's next-to-last night, where he hosted his final guests, Robin Williams and Bette Midler. Williams was in top form with his manic energy and stream-of-consciousness lunacy. Midler, in contrast, found the emotional vein of the farewell; this culminated when she slowly sang, sitting next to him, the pop standard "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)." Carson became unexpectedly tearful, and the scene of the two of them was captured by a camera angle from across the set which had never been used before. This penultimate show was immediately recognized as a television classic, and Midler would win an Emmy Award for her role in it.
Carson did not have guests on his final episode of The Tonight Show. An estimated 50 million people watched this retrospective show, which ended with him sitting on a stool alone on the stage, curiously similar to Jack Paar's last show. He gave these final words of goodbye:
- And so it has come to this. I am one of the lucky people in the world. I found something that I always wanted to do and I have enjoyed every single minute of it. I bid you a very heartfelt goodnight.
During his final speech, Carson told the audience that he hoped to return with a project "that will meet with your approval" but ultimately he chose never to return to television with another show of his own. In one of his few post-retirement interviews, Carson hinted in a December 1993 interview with Tom Shales of the Washington Post that he didn't think he could top what he had already accomplished.
Carson appeared briefly on Bob Hope's 90th birthday special on NBC and did a voiceover as himself on The Simpsons on FOX, both in May 1993. He spoke to David Letterman via telephone on Letterman's Late Show on CBS in November 1993. Carson followed that with an appearance on The Kennedy Center Honors on CBS in December 29, 1993 to receive a lifetime achievement award; he never spoke and only sat in the balcony with the Clintons and the other honorees. During Letterman's week of shows in Los Angeles on CBS in May 1994, Carson passed by in a car during a skit early in the week and then walked onto the set on a later show to hand Dave the Top Ten list. He never spoke, citing laryngitis afterward, but received a long standing ovation from the live audience. It was Carson's last new TV appearance ever.
Johnny Carson died of complications from emphysema on January 23, 2005 at age 79.
Anecdotes and trivia
- Carson's announcer and first guest on his first Tonight Show as regular host was Groucho Marx, who had been one of many substitute hosts following the departure of Jack Paar.
- No video of Carson's first appearance on The Tonight Show is known to exist. However, an audio recording of the broadcast has been played on television. Carson began his first monologue reacting to the applause by saying "Boy, you'd think it was Vice President Nixon", and later crying "I want my na-na!"
- Perhaps the most celebrated example of Johnny being quick-on-his feet was the "Ed Ames tomahawk" incident on April 29, 1965. This was a black-and-white kinescope film clip thankfully saved from the New York years, and typically played every year on the anniversary show. Ames was then playing a Native American on the Daniel Boone TV series, starring Fess Parker. Ames was attempting to demonstrate how to throw a hatchet in the air to hit a target, the outline of a cowboy on a piece of plywood. The throw hit the figure in the upper leg, close enough to the crotch for its up-turned handle to look like an erection, and the audience burst into laughter and applause. Ames instinctively started to go retrieve the hatchet, but Carson smoothly held him back. When the laughter had almost died down, Carson remarked, "I didn't even know you were Jewish!" and the audience burst into applause again.
- One memorable Tonight Show featured Charles Nelson Reilly performing Hamlet, as featured in the 2006 motion picture, The Life of Reilly*, a film of the life story of Mr. Reilly. Reilly was a frequent guest of Johnny's, appearing in over 100 episodes.
- George Carlin was a frequent guest on The Tonight Show, so when the debut of Saturday Night Live was in preparation there was supposedly an agreement that SNL's producers would not have Carlin on their show. As it happened, Carlin appeared on the very first airing of SNL. Johnny Carson was incensed over this, and when he asked why Carlin had been hired, he was told "because he is punctual and fills out forms well."
- Zoologists such as Joan Embry of the San Diego Zoo and Jim Fowler of Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom were recurring guests who would bring with them often exotic animals that he could interact with to comedic effect. In one frequently-shown clip, he leaned over a little too closely to the cage of a panther, which swiped its claws at him. Carson ran across the stage and jumped into Ed McMahon's arms.
- Carson and Paul Anka are both credited with co-writing "Johnny's Theme", the well-known title music for his show. Anka later revealed that Carson and his management demanded a 50% cut of the song's publishing in exchange for choosing it as the theme song. Both men collected millions of dollars on the arrangement.
- The Tonight Show received an enormous audience on December 17, 1969, when Tiny Tim married Miss Vicki during the show. It's the 2nd-highest rated episode of The Tonight Show, behind only Carson's final episode.
- In 1973, Carson had a legendary run-in with popular psychic Uri Geller when he invited Geller to appear on his show. Carson, an experienced stage magician, wanted a neutral demonstration of Geller's alleged abilities, so, at the advice of his friend and fellow magician James Randi, he gave Geller several spoons out of his desk drawer and asked him to bend them. Geller proved unable to do so, and that appearance has since been regarded as the beginning of Geller's fall from glory.
- A monologue tradition evolved over the years in which Carson would say a phrase in his monologue such as "It was so (hot/cold/dark/etc.)...". and someone in the audience would invariably call out, "How
was it?" which would set up Carson's rejoinder "It was so
, that ...." and complete the joke.
- Occasionally, off-color language would sneak into jokes and discussion. Rather than simply bleep the offending words, the tape would instead be garbled, making it sound as if Johnny (or whomever) momentarily spoke gibberish. One notable example of this occurred when a Carnac skit flopped one night. After yet another joke failed, Carson uttered "holy shit" and played up the moment by trying to carry his desk offstage. Television viewers, however, instead heard the words "holy palooga." One rare exception to this self-censorship occurred during a stunt Carson participated in that involved him being suspended high above the stage. At one point, however, Carson was unexpectedly dropped several feet (part of the stunt) and Carson, caught off guard, shouted "Shit!" This was not censored and later in the broadcast, Carson apologized for his language. Skeptic and friend James Randi, in an interview with Penn and Teller for the 1st Season DVD of Bullshit!, told of a time when Carson had the reverend Peter Popoff on his show. When a clip played of how Popoff pulled off his psychic tricks, Randi claims Carson said a "very harsh word, even worse than the title of your show "*"."
- One of the more memorable moments during Carson's stint as Tonight Show host came in 1987, when elderly Myrtle Young ("the potato chip lady") was invited to show off her collection of chips that resembled animals and famous people. While Young was distracted by McMahon, Carson crunched on a chip — not from her collection, but from a bowl beside his desk. Young turned back towards Carson with a horrified expression, but saw nothing missing; she sighed with apparent relief when Carson showed her the bowl. He then apologized for the joke.
External links
NBC network shows | Variety television series | Television talk shows | Tonight Show | 1960s TV shows in the United States | 1970s TV shows in the United States | 1980s TV shows in the United States | 1990s TV shows in the United States
The Tonight Show | The Tonight Show | The Tonight Show