|


|
THE TONIGHT SHOW
 Jack Paar (right) with Hugh Downs  Jay Leno  Steve Allen  Johnny Carson (center with Doc Severinsen and Ed McMahon) THE
TONIGHT SHOW
September
1954-January 1957
HOST
Steve
Allen
Ernie Kovacs (1956-1957)
REGULAR
PERFORMERS
Gene
Rayburn
Steve Lawrence
Eydie Gorme
Pat Marshall (1954-1955)
Pat Kirby (1955-1957)
Hy Averback (1955)
Skitch Henderson and His Orchestra
Peter Handley (1956-1957)
Maureen Arthur (1956-1957)
Bill Wendell (1956-1957)
Barbara Loden (1956-1957)
LeRoy Holmes and Orchestra (1956-1957)
TONIGHT! AMERICA AFTER DARK
28 January 1957-26 July 1957
HOST
Jack
Lescoulie (January-June)
Al "Jazzbo" Collins (June-July
THE
JACK PAAR SHOW
July 1957-March 1962
HOST
Jack
Paar
REGULAR PERFORMERS
Hugh
Downs
Jose Melis and Orchestra
Tedi Thurman (1957)
Dody Goodman (1957-1958)
THE TONIGHT SHOW
2 April 1962-28 September 1962
ANNOUNCER
Hugh
Downs
John Haskell
Ed Herlihy
REGULAR
PERFORMERS
Skitch
Henderson and His Orchestra
THE
TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JOHNNY CARSON October 1962-May
1992
HOST
Johnny Carson
REGULAR
PERFORMERS
Ed McMahon
Skitch Henderson (1962-1966)
Milton Delugg (1966-1967)
Doc Severinsen (1967-1992)
Tommy Newsom (1968-1992)
THE
TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO
May
1992--
HOST
Jay Leno
REGULAR
PERFORMERS
Branford
Marsalis (1992-1995)
Kevin Eubanks (1995--)
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
September 1954-October 1956
Monday-Friday
11:30-1:00 A.M.
October 1956-January 1957
Monday-Friday
11:30-12:30 A.M.
January 1957-December 1966
Monday-Friday
11:15-1:00 A.M.
January 1965-September 1966
Saturday
or Sunday 11:15-1:00 A.M.
September 1966-September 1975
Saturday
or Sunday 11:30-1:00 A.M.
January 1967-September 1980
Monday-Friday
11:30-1:00 A.M.
September 1980-August 1991
Monday-Friday
11:30-12:30 A.M.
September 1991 Monday-Friday
11:35-12:35 A.M.
U.S. Talk/Variety
A
long-running late night program, the Tonight Show was the
first, and for decades the most-watched, network talk program on
television. Since 1954 NBC has aired a number of versions of the
show which has, as of the mid-1990s, seen four principle hosts and
one consistent format except for a brief diversion in its early
days. What started out as a music, comedy and talk program first
hosted by Steve Allen became, for a time, a magazine-type program,
broadcasting news and entertainment segments from various correspondents
located in different cities nationally. That short-lived format,
however, lacked the appeal of a comedy-interview show revolving
around one dynamic host. From mid-1957 until the present, Jack Paar,
Johnny Carson and Jay Leno have all three followed Allen's lead
and hosted a show of celebrity interviews, humor and music, each
host leading his show with signature style. Late night talk in the
first three decades of television was dominated by the Tonight
Show, and for the majority of that time by Johnny Carson. However,
during the 1980s and early 1990s the late-night landscape began
to change as more talk shows took to the air. Change was accelerated
by the appeal of David Letterman and a combination of other factors,
including inexpensive production, audience interest in celebrity
and entertainment gossip, and an overall increased reliance on the
talk show as forum for information and debate about the important
as well as unimportant issues of the day. The late-night talk genre
expanded as network competitors and comrades sought the kind of
success that was originally the province of the Tonight Show.
Each
of the Tonight Show principal hosts brought his own unique
talent and title to the program. All of the shows featured an opening
monologue, a sidekick or co-host, in-house musicians and cadre of
guest hosts. Steve Allen's Tonight! featured his musical talents
and penchant for unique comedy. He was well known for performing
his own musical numbers on the piano and for humorous antics such
as on-the-street improvisations and bantering with the audience,
both of which were forerunners to the kinds of comedy stunts that
became a staple much later on Late Night with David Letterman,
also on NBC. In 1957 Allen left Tonight! to concentrate on
another variety show he hosted on Sunday evenings. Allen's version
of the show was immediately followed by the unsuccessful magazine
format, Tonight: America After Dark, which lasted only a
few weeks. That show was led by Jack Lescoulie, but he was never
the central figure Allen had been. Essentially, Lescoulie introduced
the segments and correspondents around the nation.
In July 1957 Jack Paar took over as new host of The Jack Paar
Tonight Show. Paar brought the show back to its in-studio interview
format. More a conversationalist than comedian, audiences were drawn
to Paar's show because of the interesting guests be brought on,
from entertainers to politicians, and for the controversy that occasionally
erupted there. Paar did not shy away from politics or confrontation,
and often became emotionally involved with his subject matter and
guests. He had a few stormy run-ins, both on camera and off, and
finally left the show following controversy surrounding his broadcast
from the Berlin Wall in 1962. With another change in hosts came
a complete change in tone and style.
In October, 1962 Johnny Carson took over as host of The Tonight
Show Starring Johnny Carson. Carson was more emotionally detached
and less political than Paar. He, like Allen, was a comic. Named
the king of late night, Carson hosted the show for thirty years,
from 1962 to 1992. During that time the show moved from New York
City to Burbank, California. Carson was known for his glib sense
of humor and his middle-American appeal, and quickly recognized
his increasing popularity as well as the strain of doing comedy
and talk five nights a week. He threatened to leave the show, but
was lured back with a generous offer that included a huge salary
increase and more time off. Guest hosts during Carson's tenure included
c
When Carson retired Jay Leno was appointed the next principal host
of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Leno, a well-known stand-up
comedian, brought to the show his own writers and comic style, showcasing
it in his opening monologues and banter with guests.
Changes
in Leno's show reflected other major changes in television since
its earlier days. By the late 1980s late-night talk had become slightly
less a white male domain. Joan Rivers hosted her own talk show for
a short time, and popular black comedian Arsenio Hall had his own
show which enjoyed a wide following, attracting mostly a young black
audience, a segment previously ignored in late night talk. The first
leader of Jay Leno's late night studio band was the accomplished
black jazz musician Branford Marsalis. The second band leader and
Leno sidekick was Kevin Eubanks, also black. A big change for The
Tonight Show during Leno's tenure was its first serious competition.
Starting
in the mid- to late-1980s, television talk shows, both daytime and
late-night, multiplied in number. The in-studio talk program was
inexpensive to produce and audiences were increasingly drawn to
the sensationalism and celebrity showcased each day and night on
television. Some late-night talk shows--including those hosted by
Joan Rivers, Chevy Chase and Pat Sajak on the FOX network--came
and went quickly. Arsenio Hall's show was on the air for several
years before cancellation. Especially successful in late night was
the up-and-coming David Letterman. Late Night with David Letterman
started out on NBC, airing immediately after The Tonight Show
from 1982 until 1993. Passed over for the host position on The
Tonight Show when Leno was chosen for the post, Letterman moved
to CBS where his new show ran in direct competition with Leno.
For
the first time The Tonight Show shared the late-night spotlight.
The two host/comedians, Leno and Letterman, were polished performers
with large audiences. They became, as Carson had been, the gauge
by which mainstream entertainment and politics were measured. On
both programs comedy was delivered--and guests and issues of day
treated--the same way, as gossip and light entertainment. After
four decades The Tonight Show was still outlining and defining,
even when not at the forefront of, the essence of contemporary televised
culture.
-Katherine
Fry
FURTHER
READING
Carter,
Bill. The Late Shift: Letterman, Leno, and the Network Battle
for the Night. New York: Hyperion, 1994.
Cox,
Stephen. Here's Johnny!: Thirty Years of America's Favorite Late-Night
Entertainment. New York: Harmony, 1992.
De
Cordova, Frederick. Johnny Came Lately: An Autobiography.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988.
Metz,
Robert. The Tonight Show. New York: Playboy, 1980.
Munson,
Wayne. All Talk: The Talkshow in Media Culture. Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania: Temple University Press, 1993.
Smith,
Ronald L. Johnny Carson: An Unauthorized Biography. New York:
St. Martin's, 1987.
Tynan,
Kenneth. Show People. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1979.
See
also Allen,
Steve; Carson,
Johnny; Downs,
Hugh; Leno, Jay;
Letterman,
David; National
Broadcasting Company; Paar,
Jack; Talk Shows
Return to T index Return to main index |
|
Join our efforts to build a new world-class museum in Chicago. Click here to donate now. | |
More than 8,500 digitized TV and radio programs are available once again for public viewing in the MBC archives. Search the archives! | |
Starting or adding to your TV on DVD collection is the best way to enjoy your favorite shows. Choose from over 5,000 TV on DVD series, seasons, episodes and soundtracks. Visit the MBC store now! | |
Own the most extensive look at the history of television. Relive great moments and learn about the people and shows that made television what is today. Purchase the 2nd edition now! |
|