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| File:Entertainer Bette Midler caresses talk
show host Johnny Carson during his next-to-last taping of 'The Tonight
Show' in Burbank, Ca., Thursday, May 21, 1992. Carson died Sunday, Jan.
23, 2005 according to his nephew. He was 79. (AP
photo) | BEIJING, Jan.
24 -- Johnny Carson, the NBC "Tonight Show" TV host from 1962 to 1992,
died early Sunday morning at the age of 79.
Nebraska-born Carson interviewed scores of
celebrities during his three decades with NBC.
The popular late-night talk show king entered the
Television Hall of Fame in 1987 and was awarded the Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 1992.
Starting his career at Nebraska stations in the late
1940s, Carson spent nearly all of his professional life in television.
His final show was seen by an audience of 50 million
across the United States.
Johnny Carson was quick-witted; he was cool,
and he was a master foil for some of the biggest names in show business.
Yet he was most remembered by his peers for humbly
stepping aside and letting others be funny on his "The Tonight Show," a trait
that helped launch scores of comedy careers, among them Joan Rivers, Bill Cosby,
Steve Martin, Richard Pryor and George Carlin.
Comedian David Brenner, who tallied more than 150
appearances on "The Tonight Show," on NBC, recalled having just $3 to his name
the night he debuted on Carson in 1971.
"The next day ... I had $10,000 worth of job offers,"
Brenner told Reuters. "I can't think of anything I've had in my career that
didn't springboard from Johnny Carson, not a single thing."
Brenner also praised Carson as a performer of
impeccable timing and a straight man of few words who knew how to let a fellow
comedian shine.
"He always brought the best out of every guest. He
put his ego in a drawer; he didn't try to top their jokes, make them look
foolish, top their stories," Brenner said.
Carson's death on Sunday, at age 79 from emphysema
triggered an outpouring of tributes from Hollywood to the White House.
GAVE JOAN RIVERS A CAREER
President Bush saluted Carson as a "steady and
reassuring presence in homes across America for three decades."
Movie action hero turned California Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger recounted that Carson had "welcomed me on his show when no one
knew who I was and helped promote the image of bodybuilding."
Bill Cosby, too, remembered Carson as a generous
performer: "Johnny was responsible for the beginning and the rise of success for
more performers than anybody. I doubt if those numbers will ever be surpassed."
Added Bob Newhart: "I guest hosted for Johnny many
years ago ... and experienced first hand just how great he was, making it look
so easy night after night. Once you sat in that chair, you knew there was
nothing easy about it."
Comedian Joan Rivers called Carson "truly the best
straight man ever. He fed you lines ... like nobody else ever did before or
since."
"He gave me my career," Rivers told Reuters. "You
never forget when you've been working as a waitress and an office temporary and
you've been working strip joints at night, and then Carson says to you, 'You're
going to be a star' on the air, and it happens."
LENO CAN'T COMPARE
"Nowadays, with all due respect, you can go on Leno a
hundred times, and they still don't know who you are."
Brenner and Rivers both parlayed regular appearances
on "The Tonight Show" into talk shows of their own, though Rivers' relationship
with Carson was strained after she gave up her gig as Carson's permanent guest
host to launch Fox television's first late-night show opposite his in 1986.
Carson never spoke to her again.
"He was very hurt," Rivers said, adding that when she
tried to patch things up with her former mentor, he never responded.
"It's a small little business, and fewer and fewer of
us that share the same memories," Rivers said. It's terribly, terribly sad."
Off screen, the Nebraska-raised Carson was remembered as humble and quiet,
keeping company with a tight circle of friends and rarely making public
appearances after retiring in 1992.
Even among close friends, few saw signs of the
emphysema that ultimately took his life, said longtime pal and comic Don
Rickles, who last saw Carson six months ago.
"He seemed fine at that time. I would never know he
had that problem except word got out a little bit. He looked great. You would
never know it," Rickles said.
"I feel like Johnny's up there now, delighted we'd be
talking about him, but he wouldn't admit it," Rickles said. "He'd tell us: 'Stop
making a fuss."
(Source:CRIENGLISH.com) |