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- <text id=92TT0594>
- <title>
- Mar. 16, 1992: And What a Reign It Was
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 16, 1992 Jay Leno
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 62
- COVER STORIES
- And What a Reign It Was
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In his 30 years, Carson was the best, providing a bedtime blanket
- of amusing rituals and quirks, and a barometer of the national
- mood
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/Los
- Angeles and William Tynan/New York
- </p>
- <p> Darrell Vickers and Andrew Nicholls, head writers for The
- Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, are sitting in a cluttered
- room at the end of a long, nondescript suite of offices at
- NBC's Burbank headquarters, getting ready to tackle El Moldo.
- It is noon on Wednesday, and they have already had their morning
- phone conversation with Carson about tonight's show (he has
- asked for a few more jokes about Ed McMahon's recent wedding and
- some on the Michelangelo computer virus), and they have
- finished a draft of the opening monologue. Theirs is one of six
- full-length monologues prepared by the show's eight staff
- writers (including two writing pairs) that Carson will get when
- he arrives at the office between 2 and 3 p.m. From this bounty,
- Carson will pick the best 15 or 20 gags, put them in order and
- deliver them later that day to a studio audience of 500 people
- and a TV audience of nearly 12 million.
- </p>
- <p> But El Moldo awaits. A few days earlier, Carson had asked
- his writers to come up with a new bit for the hoary character,
- a fake psychic, who dubs himself the "master of mentalism."
- It's just one of several classic Carson routines that are being
- trotted out for a final appearance as his departure nears.
- Carnac the Magnificent, the turbaned answer-and-question man,
- showed up a few weeks ago for the last time. (Carson himself
- wrote more than half the gags.) Art Fern will introduce his
- final Tea Time movie in a bit scheduled for this week. There may
- even be a comeback for lovable old--old--Aunt Blabby. But
- Vickers and Nicholls, a pair of laid-back Canadians in their
- mid-30s who joined the Carson staff in 1986, barely remember El
- Moldo. Except for a one-night reprise in 1989, Carson hasn't
- done him since 1983. But there's one thing Nicholls does
- remember: "It's Ed's favorite spot."
- </p>
- <p> Of such stuff is the end of TV eras made. It has been nine
- months since Johnny Carson became America's most famous lame
- duck by announcing that he would retire from the Tonight show
- this year, at the end of his 30th season. Now, as the
- long-awaited finale draws near, a show that has always depended
- for its appeal on the offhand, the spontaneous and the ephemeral
- is acquiring an air of great moment. Hollywood stars are
- clamoring to be on with Johnny for one last time. Elizabeth
- Taylor appeared last month for the first time ever, thanking
- Johnny for "30 years of brilliant entertainment." Regular
- Tonight visitors too seem less interested in plugging their new
- movie than in paying homage to the departing king. Tom Hanks
- settled himself next to Johnny a few nights back and observed,
- "It is still the most exciting moment in show business to walk
- out from that curtain and sit in this chair."
- </p>
- <p> It will all end on Friday night, May 22, when Johnny will
- appear without guests and reminisce with a selection of clips
- from past shows--"a collage," says executive producer Fred de
- Cordova, "of what the years have meant to Johnny."
- </p>
- <p> Around the Tonight offices, the sentiment is starting to
- get thick. "Everyone in the country has been tied together by
- Johnny Carson," says co-executive producer Peter Lassally, who,
- along with De Cordova, will depart from the show when Carson
- does. "A part of Americana is leaving." Says bandleader Doc
- Severinsen, who started out in the trumpet section of the
- Tonight show orchestra in 1962: "In a way, it's agonizing. The
- ending is going on and on. The pain is being extended--and
- there is pain."
- </p>
- <p> Carson's competitors are getting nostalgic as well. "The
- best guy who ever did it is stepping down," says Dennis Miller,
- host of a new late-night show that hopes to pick up some of the
- viewers that Carson leaves behind. "I've been doing this for 30
- shows, and he did it for 30 years. It's a tough gig, and he
- still looks like he enjoys it." Dick Cavett, who once wrote for
- Carson and later squared off against him as a rival host,
- praises Carson's skills both onstage and off. "He has the
- ability to pick good material, to budget his energy, to fire the
- right people," says Cavett. "But finally it comes down to
- personality. He's easy to take, and he's got that wonderful
- naughty-fraternity-boy quality that he never outgrows."
- </p>
- <p> In a business where success is fleeting and burnout comes
- fast, Carson's durability is not only unprecedented, it is
- almost unimaginable. An Iowa-born, Nebraska-raised standup comic
- and host of a popular game show, Who Do You Trust?, Carson
- replaced Jack Paar as host of NBC's Tonight show on Oct. 1,
- 1962. His tenure on the program has lasted for two-thirds of the
- time that national TV has existed. He has hosted the show long
- enough to have had Judy Garland, Groucho Marx, Joan Crawford and
- Hubert Humphrey as guests. If Jay Leno lasts as long, he won't
- be leaving until the year 2022.
- </p>
- <p> Carson's nightly rituals and idiosyncrasies have become as
- comforting to millions of viewers as warm wool pajamas:
- McMahon's booming, endlessly imitated introduction ("Heeeeeere's
- Johnny"); the natty golf swing that signals the end of the
- opening monologue; Carson's nervous tics (fiddling with his tie,
- drumming a pencil on the desk), which have provided grist for
- impressionists from Rich Little to Dana Carvey. The program has
- had moments of great theater, from Tiny Tim's wedding to Miss
- Vicki to Michael Landon's poignant last appearance to discuss
- his terminal cancer. But mostly the show has succeeded because
- of its cozy familiarity. Critic Kenneth Tynan once suggested
- that during the turbulent 1960s, Carson may have become "the
- nation's chosen joker because, in Madison Avenue terms, he was
- guaranteed to relieve nervous strain and anxiety more swiftly
- and safely (ask your doctor) than any competing brand of wag."
- A bit overstated, perhaps, but it is true that TV never devised
- a better bedtime companion.
- </p>
- <p> The history of Carson's years at the Tonight show is, to
- a large degree, the history of television. In 1972, after 10
- years in New York City, he moved the program to Burbank,
- reflecting an industry-wide migration from the East to the West
- Coast. In 1980 the show was cut from 90 minutes to an hour,
- creating a tighter entertainment package out of the more
- free-flowing gabfest that had become, in some ways, a relic of
- an earlier TV era. (One element that was lost: book authors, who
- had often been slotted in the final 15 minutes but who
- disappeared from the show almost entirely.) One by one,
- competing talk-show hosts--Merv Griffin, Joey Bishop, Cavett,
- Alan Thicke, Joan Rivers, Pat Sajak--fell away. Even Arsenio
- Hall, whose show has captured a new and younger audience, has
- failed to dislodge Carson from atop the late-night ratings
- mountain.
- </p>
- <p> For standup comics, a Tonight gig has always been TV's
- most important, door-opening break. Says comedian Robert Klein,
- who got his TV start with Carson: "He'll help a young comedian
- by saying `Funny stuff' or `Boy, that's funny' or by laughing
- a lot. The audience practically takes its signal from him." For
- Hollywood celebrities, the show is a friendly, high-visibility
- place to plug a new movie or TV program. As an interviewer,
- Carson has never been particularly tough or adventurous, and
- even after 30 years he can still sound clumsy trying to make
- prepared questions sound like real conversation. But unlike many
- of his competitors, Carson listens well and puts the primary
- focus on the guest, not the host. Even when he ventures into
- potentially troubling waters ("So what about those rumors...?"), his question usually comes equipped with a ready-made
- canoe that the guest can paddle to shore ("...or did the
- tabloids get it wrong again?"). Carson has succeeded by being
- the ideal cocktail-party host; his job is to keep the
- conversation flowing, embarrass nobody and send the guests home
- happy.
- </p>
- <p> What made Carson's show a nightly must-view, however, was
- not his weightless interviews but his opening monologue. For
- years, Carson's comedic take on the events of the day has been
- the most reliable barometer of the public's mood--and
- sometimes a shaper of it as well. When he began making jokes
- about Nixon's duplicity during Watergate, it has been suggested,
- the President's fate was sealed. At least one former U.S.
- Senator, the late S.I. Hayakawa of California, gave as one
- reason for his retirement the pain of finding himself the butt
- of too many Carson jokes. Even now, the drop in President Bush's
- approval ratings is reflected in the rising tide of ridicule
- being directed at him by Carson. (Last Wednesday, after noting
- Bush's apology for breaking his no-new-taxes pledge, Carson
- commented, ``Today he made a new pledge--`Read my lips: No new
- promises.' ") "If you've made the Carson show three or four
- nights in a row, you better start to worry," says Doug Bailey,
- co-publisher of the Hotline, an influential Washington
- newsletter. "Nothing undoes a candidate more certainly than if
- he or she is the object of unremitting ridicule in the
- monologues."
- </p>
- <p> Carson has always steered a careful middle course in his
- political barbs, aiming them equally at the left and right. "Who
- am I to foist my opinions on the public?" he asked back in
- 1967, and his sentiment hasn't changed. Says De Cordova: "If I
- were to be asked today, `Is Johnny Carson a Republican or a
- Democrat?,' I honestly still would not know." In truth, few of
- Carson's political gags are motivated by political views of any
- kind; most are simply stock put-downs pegged to the latest
- unfortunate fall guy. Is it too farfetched to suggest that the
- nondenominational cynicism popularized by Carson's monologues--all politicians are created equal in the sight of the
- comedian--is one source of the voter disaffection that has
- gripped American politics?
- </p>
- <p> If Carson created a nation of political cynics, he has
- also fostered a nation of show-business insiders. Not simply
- because of the parade of Hollywood celebrities who troop onto
- his show each week, but because of the intimate, conspiratorial
- style of his TV persona. What Carson discovered that set him
- apart from talk-show predecessors like Steve Allen (who created
- some of the bits that Carson later adapted) was that the very
- act of hosting a talk show could be the subject of comedy.
- Carson enlisted the audience as collaborators, with everything
- from the chorus of straight lines that arose from the studio
- audience whenever he complained about the weather ("How hot was
- it?") to his ubiquitous savers--the ad libs meant to salvage
- jokes that have bombed. The subtext of Carson's comedy is always
- his own plight: How foolish, he says to the audience, to be a
- grown man earning a living trying to make people laugh.
- </p>
- <p> Oddly, Carson, one of the most intimate of comedians, has
- always been one of the most remote of public personalities. More
- than most celebrities, he is wary of the press and aloof from
- the Hollywood social scene. Indeed, that may be another reason
- for his uncanny longevity. The few glimpses the audience has
- had of Carson's private life--notably his three divorces,
- which he frequently uses as comedy material--make it eager for
- more. Though he was on TV almost every night, Carson was one of
- the rare celebrities who never got overexposed.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the Johnny Carson phenomenon will probably
- never be fully explainable. "The idea that one man, basically
- unscripted, could last on TV for 30 years--it's a freak of
- television," marvels Jeff Sagansky, a former NBC program
- executive and now president of CBS Entertainment. And like most
- freak accidents, it probably will never happen again. Carson's
- retirement is another milestone in the slow withering of the
- network mass audience. Even if Leno manages to succeed, much of
- Carson's audience will undoubtedly disperse to other hosts and
- other shows. TV's late-night living room will never be quite so
- inviting again.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-