John William CARSON
|
First Generation
1. John
William CARSON "Johnny"1
was born2 on 23 Oct 1925 in Corning, Adams, Iowa. He
died3 on 23 Jan 2005 in
Burbank, Los Angles, California. The
cause of death was emphysema.
Johnny Carson, the legendary "King of Late
Night TV" who dominated the medium's nether
hours for three decades, was born in Corning,
Iowa, but moved with his family to nearby
Norfolk, Nebraska when he was eight years old.
It was in Norfolk, where he lived until he was
inducted into the US Navy in 1943, that he
started his show business career. At age 14,
Carson began appearing as the magician "The
Great Carsoni" at local venues.
In 1962, Carson was chosen by NBC to succeed the
controversial Jack Paar on "The Tonight
Show" after Paar's resignation over what he
deemed censorship, particularly as regards his
on-air enthusiasm for Cuban dictator Fidel
Castro. Carson would never be controversial like
Paar, preferring to good-naturedly skewer
politicians and celebrities in his opening
monologue and staging stunts such as the
on-stage marriage of retro-singer Tiny Tim to his
Miss Vicky in 1969. His popularity with the
late-night audience became so great, and the
income from advertising on his show so
profitable, that in 1967, NBC had to lure Johnny back
to "The Tonight Show" after a walkout
with a three-year contract guaranteeing him a minimum
of $4 million. In the early 1970s, TV Guide
reported that Carson was earning $2 million a year,
making him the highest paid TV entertainer ever,
a record he repeatedly surpassed, pulling
down a then-record $5 million annual salary in
the 1980s.
Carson created a sense of intimacy with his
guests and audiences that made him the
unvanquished "King of Nighttime TV."
Countless talk shows hosted by the likes of Joey
Bishop and Dick Cavett and other non-talk show
programs were launched against him year
after year only to fail, with the notable
exception of ABC's "Night Line" half-way through his
reign. Aside from his loyal audience, Carson was
beloved by his guests and the legions of
young comics whose careers were launched on
"The Tonight Show," colloquially known as "
The Johnny Carson Show." His tempestuous
love-life, which included two high-profile
divorces, became the fodder of such celebrity
staples as "The National Enquirer" and later "
People" Magazine, and he was even the
subject of a roman a clef pulp novel in the early
1970s. There have been at least seven published
biographies of Carson.
Carson's career was exclusively in television,
starting with work at Nebraska TV stations in
the late 1940s which preceded his 1951-53 skit
program "Carson's Cellar" (1953) on Los
Angeles station KNXT-TV. Attracting the
attention of the industry, he was hired as a comedy
writer for "The Red Skelton Show"
(1951) which provided him with a career breakthrough
when Skelton was injured backstage and Carson
substituted for him, delivering his first
monologue before a national audience. This led
to a stint as the host of the quiz show "Earn
Your Vacation" (1954) in 1954 and the
variety showcase "The Johnny Carson Show" (1955) in
1955-56. The man who would soon become the most
famous late-night TV personality in
history hosted the daytime game show "Who
Do You Trust?" (1956) from 1957-62, teaming up
with long-time sidekick Ed McMahon in 1958.
Before his triumph on "The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson" (1962), Carson tried his
hand at dramatic acting, appearing in
"Three Men on a Horse" (episode # 1.29) during the
inaugural season of "Playhouse 90"
(1956) in 1957. In 1960, he shot a pilot for a prime-time
TV series, "Johnny Come Lately," that
was not picked up by a network. Carson had sat in for "
Tonight Show" host Jack Paar in 1958, and
when Paar left the show four years later, NBC
chose Carson as his replacement, taking over the
cat bird seat on Oct. 2, 1962. "The Tonight
Show Starring Johnny Carson" (1962) became
a major phenomenon in American pop culture
in the 1960s and beyond. Sidekick McMahon's
"Heeeeere's Johnny!!!" introduction of Carson
became a cultural catchphrase, memorably
reprised by Jack Nicholson in Stanley Kubrick's
The Shining (1980) . Woody Allen's character in
the Best Picture Academy Award-winning
Annie Hall (1977), stand-up comic Alvy Singer,
is recognized in front of a movie theater by a
street tough due to his appearance on "The
Tonight Show."
Aside from his banter with celebrities, he
amused his audience for 30 years with broadly
played skit comedy by his "Mighty Carson
Players" and his spoof clairvoyant "Carnac the
Magnificent." A master at quick repartee,
Carson was a relaxed host with a pleasant,
ingratiating manner and was quite funny as a
skit comedian, but it was the monologue in
which Carson's comic genius flourished. He made
memorable put-downs of politicians and
celebrities, a format still used by his
successors Jay Leno and David Letterman and legions of
comics who came after him.
But it was his ironic self-awareness that made
him radically different from such monologists
as Bob Hope. When a joke bombed during his
monologues, Carson would do a wounded
double-take as the audience jeered, fully aware
of the awfulness of the joke he had just
unloaded. Following these bombs with a sly,
self-deprecating remark engendered a sense of
intimacy between Carson and his fans. Carson
typically moved the blame for a groaner onto
his joke writers, which created a "We're in
this together" camaraderie with his audience that
spawned a whole new era of self-referential
comedy, perhaps best epitomized by Letterman,
the man he wanted to succeed him on "The
Tonight Show."
A liberal in the increasingly liberal age of the
1960s and `70s, so powerful were his opening
monologues that by the early 1970s, he could
actually effect society at large outside of the
pop culture realm. A joke about a shortage of
industrial grade toilet paper caused a national
panic and a run on all grades of t.p., with a
resulting shortage of the product that he had
kidded about. Playing off current events such as
the Watergate crisis, his comic evisceration
of President Richard Nixon was credited with some
critics as exerting such a drag on Nixon's
approval rating that it made his resignation
possible, if not inevitable. After Carson's reign, it
became increasingly de rigueur for politicians
to appear on late-night TV talk shows and bear
the a host's jibes in order to stump for votes.
Carson's connection with the American culture
was so absolute, it contributed to one of his
few failures, the rejection of "The Tonight
Show" in the early 1980s by British audiences who
could not understand the topical references of
his monologues. And his audience's
identification of Johnny with the "Tonight
Show" effectively stopped him from work in other
media. In the mid-1960s, Carson's agents wanted
to trade on his vast popularity to position
him in motion pictures as the "New Jack
Lemmon," but Carson never made the foray outside
of television. His connection with the movie
industry remained his hosting of three
generations of stars and his memorable turns as
the host of five Academy Awards telecasts
from 1979 to 1984. In that role, he generally is
regarded as the best successor to long-time
Oscar host Bob Hope. He did stretch his wings as
a producer, his Carson Productions
producing TV pilots and series, TV movies and
"Late Night with David Letterman" (1982) in
addition to his own talk show.
The six-time Emmy-winner considered a follow-up
to "The Tonight Show," but nothing caught
his interest and he spent the last decade of his
life in a quiet retirement in Malibu, California,
as befitted his private nature. Thus, it was
"The Tonight Show" that remains his creative
legacy. Unlike every other TV star, he remained
on top until the very end, the show winning
its ratings period every year for 30 years. When
Carson retired, his last appearance was one
of the highest rated late night TV shows ever.
"I have an ego like anybody else,"
Carson told The Washington Post in 1993, "but I don't
need to be stoked by going before the public all
the time." 'Fred de Cordova' , the producer of
"The Tonight Show" throughout Carson's
30-year run, believed that Johnny never pressured
himself to launch a follow-up as he already had
achieved unprecedented success on TV. "He
is one of a kind, was one of a kind," De
Cordova said in 1995. "I don't think there's any reason
for him to try something different."
Carson, who was suffering from emphysema and had
quadruple bypass surgery in 1999, died
peacefully at the age of 79 on the morning of
Sunday, January 23, 2005, surrounded by his
family and friends. In terms of career
longevity, popularity, peer respect and impact on the
medium, Carson ranks with Lucille Ball and
'Jackie Gleason' as one of the greatest stars of
television. Not only will Johnny be sorely
missed, he WAS sorely missed by his legions of
fans after his retirement.
Bio from the Internet Movie database,
http://www.imdb.com/
Sources
1. Sharon,
World Connect Project pages of Sharon,
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GED&db=royalancestors.
2. Find
A Grave (http://www.findagrave.com/).
3. Find
A Grave .
No comments:
Post a Comment