Johnny Carson
Johnny Carson
Johnny Carson
By
defying
the
TV
reductionism
that
renders
all
things
knowable
and
ultimately
trivial,
Carson
made
himself
into
one
of
the
medium’s
only
characters
worth
watching,
night
after
night.
.
.
.
[W]e
knew
Johnn
Carson
like
we
knew
ourselves.
Which
is
to
say
we
hardly
knew
him
at
all.
Steven
D.
Stark,
Glued
to
the
Set
In
the
early
1990s,
in
a
series
of
Saturday
Night
Live
skits,
Dana
Carvey
and
Phil
Hartman
parodied
their
fellow
NBC
late
night
program,
the
long
running
Tonight
Show
(1954‐
),
As
Johnny
Carson,
the
show’s
host
from
1963
to
1993,
Carvey
reduced
the
talk
show
legend
to
a
series
of
familiar
ticks
and
the
constantly
repeated,
applicable
to
everything,
exclamation
“That’s
wild
stuff”;
mimicking
sidekick/announcer
Ed
McMahon,
Hartman
was
all
boisterous
laughs
and
endlessly
repeated
“Heigh‐o’s.”
For
critic
Ken
Tucker,
the
parodies,
“at
once
mean
and
respectfully
accurate,”
spelled
cultural
doom
for
the
king
of
late
night:
“Carvey
was
pointing
out
the
way
Carson
had
become
increasingly
out
of
it,
seemingly
unaware
of
the
pop
culture
around
him
.
.
.
"
(“Still
Crazy”).
In
a
May
1991
installment
of
the
recurring
sketch,
Carvey
answered
Ed’s
“Here’s
Johnny”
summons
and
emerged
from
behind
the
curtain
not
in
his
usual
dapper
sport
coat
and
slacks,
not
with
short,
graying
hair,
not
to
perform
his
usual
The Collected Works of David Lavery 2
golf‐swing‐punctuated
monologue
and
announce
“We’ll
be
right
back,”
but
as
“Carsenio,”
a
bleached‐blonde,
flat‐topped,
Caucasian‐
version
of
African
American
comedian
Arsenio
Hall,
the
late
night
syndicated
host
whose
fist‐pumping,
hipper
humor
and
more
contemporary
guests
had
begun
to
woo
away
the
younger
end
of
Carson’s
demographic.
The
sight
of
the
Carvey
version
of
the
King
of
Late
Night
stooping
to
emulate
his
distant
rival
could
only
provoke
sadness,
not
laughter,
in
the
longtime‐Tonight
Show‐watcher.
The
spectacle
of
Carson
trying
to
be
the
“terminally
charmless”
(Shales)
Jay
Leno,
his
successor
as
Tonight
Show
host,
or
Carson‐as‐Letterman,
the
loser
in
the
“network
battle
for
the
night”
(Carter)
that
erupted
after
Johnny’s
retirement,
would
be
just
as
distressing.
The
Johnny
Carson
who
had
become
an
American
icon,
“NBC’s
answer
to
foreplay”
(Tynan
315),
“history’s
most
effective
contraceptive”
(People
Weekly
1989),
and
“the
greeter
and
spokesman
for
the
United
States”
(Letterman,
quoted
by
Zehme),
while
remaining
an
essentially
private,
reclusive
individual—“the
Garbo
of
Comedy,
the
Salinger
of
Television”
(Zehme)—
that
Carson
never
really
changed.
“The
idea
that
one
man,
basically
unscripted,
could
last
on
TV
for
30
years,”
a
former
NBC
executive
would
maintain,
“it's
a
freak
of
television"
(quoted
in
Zoglin).
When
Shakespeare
left
the
theatre
for
good,
he
put
the
London
stage
behind
him
completely
and
remained
content
to
be
a
retired
impresario
back
home
in
Stratford;
when
Carson,
the
most
watched
performer
in
the
history
of
entertainment,
his
show
the
biggest
money‐maker
the
medium
had
ever
known,
left
television
after
his
4,530th
show,
he
returned
home
to
Malibu
pretty
much
never
to
be
seen
again.
“Like
sun
and
moon
and
oxygen,”
Bill
Zehme,
contemplating
his
disappearance,
would
write
movingly
in
2002,
”he
was
always
there,
reliable
and
dependable,
for
thirty
years.
Then
he
wasn't
anymore.
And
he
didn't
just
simply
leave:
He
vanished
completely;
he
evaporated
into
cathode
snow;
he
took
the
powder
of
all
powders.”
In
January
2005
the
news
broke
that
Carson,
who
had
spent
almost
his
entire
career
on
NBC,
was
occasionally
providing
jokes
for
David
Letterman’s
Late
Show
monologue
on
rival
CBS.
Soon
after,
on
January
23rd,
2005,
came
the
shocking
news
that
Johnny
Carson
was
dead
from
emphysema,
having
passed
away
while
these
pages
were
being
written.
Judging
by
The Collected Works of David Lavery 3
some
of
the
hagiographies
that
appeared
in
the
media
after
his
death,
critic
David
Edelstein
would
justifiably
complain,
“You'd
think
that
Carson
was
some
sort
of
egoless
saint
of
television.”
More
than
just
a
celebrity
(defined
by
Boorstin
as
someone
merely
“known
for
his
well‐knownness”
[57]),
the
“Greatest
Generation”
(Shales)
Carson
once
represented
something
distinctly
American.
"More
people
look
at
Johnny,"
an
NBC
press
agent
once
bragged
about
its
prize
commodity,
"than
look
at
the
moon"
(People
Weekly
1989).
But
what
did
they
see?
As
television
scholar
Jimmie
Reeves
once
observed,
Carson
was
never
a
simple
star
in
the
firmament:
“It’s
[Carson’s]
elusivity
that
keeps
him
fresh.
.
.
.
We
can
put
ourselves
into
him.
He’s
familiar
enough
to
be
recognizable,
yet
unique
enough
to
be
interesting.
There’s
more
to
Johnny
Carson
than
meets
the
eye”
(quoted
in
Stark
184).
In
private,
Johnny
Carson
was,
by
all
reports,
a
loner,
uncomfortable
in
social
situations,
seemingly
ill‐suited
to
the
life
of
celebrity.
The
screenwriter
George
Axelrod
once
observed
that
“Socially,
[Carson]
doesn’t
exist.
The
reason
is
that
there
are
no
television
cameras
in
living
rooms.
If
human
beings
had
little
red
lights
in
the
middle
of
their
foreheads,
Carson
would
be
the
greatest
conversationalist
on
earth”
(quoted
in
Tynan
312).
(The
camera,
Tynan
quipped,
“act[ed]
on
him
like
an
addictive
and
galvanic
drug”
[311].)
Critics
like
Richard
Poirier
have
documented
the
pronounced
tendency
of
key
figures
in
American
literature,
culture,
and
politics
to
create
imaginary
public
personas
often
at
odds
with
their
private
selves.
Though
Carson’s
long‐time
producer
Fred
de
Cordova
once
insisted
that
while
“George
Burns
and
Jack
Benny
assumed
a
façade,”
his
star
was
himself
“not
a
character
named
Johnny
Carson”
(quoted
by
Stark
185),
was
it
not
in
fact
his
“negative
capability”
that
enabled
him
to
become
not
only
Carnac
the
Magnificent
and
Aunt
Blabby,
Art
Fern
and
Floyd
R.
Turbo,
but
also
his
greatest
creation:
Carson
the
congenial
conversationalist?
A
year
after
Carsenio
made
his
appearance,
Carson
ended
his
run
just
short
of
three
decades
behind
the
desk.
His
final
two
shows,
cultural
spectacles
comparable
to
the
series
finales
of
M*A*S*H,
Seinfeld,
and
Friends,
drew
huge
audiences
(50
million
watched
the
last
one,
a
guest‐less
retrospective
clip
show,
on
May
21,
1992),
but
it
was
the
penultimate
one,
in
which
Bette
Midler
crooned
“One
More
for
My
Baby
(and
One
More
for
the
Road)”
to
an
obviously
moved
Carson,
that
everyone
The Collected Works of David Lavery 4
remembers,
producing
as
it
did
what
David
Bianculli
called
“a
perfect
moment
of
television,
a
guaranteed
tearjerker,
and
a
fitting
finale
(even
if
it
was
a
day
early)
to
one
of
the
most
durable
and
impressive
careers
in
show
business”
(342).
Television
scholar
David
Marc
would
see
in
Carson’s
retirement
the
end
of
an
era:
“For
30
years,
prime
time
was
bracketed
by
two
men:
Walter
Cronkite,
who
gave
the
news
in
his
daily
report,
and
Johnny
Carson,
who
reviewed
the
news
in
his
daily
monologue.
.
.
.
Johnny,
like
Walter,
is
part
of
the
lost
world
of
three‐channel
culture"
(quoted
in
Tucker,
“Johnny’s
Last
Laugh”).
Though
he
came
to
be
a
Hollywood
gatekeeper
with
the
power
to
make
or
break
careers—scores
of
comics,
from
Roseanne
Barr
to
Jerry
Seinfeld
credited
him
with
their
first
big
break—Carson
never
shed
his
image
as
a
Midwestern
boy
(born
in
Iowa,
he
grew
up
in
Nebraska).
Watch
Johnny
Goes
Home
on
The
Ultimate
Collection
DVDs,
narrated
by
and
starring
Carson
as
he
wanders
about
Norfolk,
NE,
even
sitting
down
for
a
refresher
penmanship
lesson
by
his
now‐elderly
grade
school
teacher,
and
it
becomes
apparent
that
Johnny
had
not
succeeded,
nor
perhaps
even
attempted,
to
take
the
farm
out
of
the
boy.
If
fellow
Nebraskan
talk
show
host
Dick
Cavett
would
discern
in
his
one‐time
boss
and
later
rival
“that
wonderful
naughty‐fraternity‐boy
quality
.
.
.
he
never
outgrows"
(quoted
in
Zoglin),
Carson’s
impish
taste
for
the
risqué,
his
adeptness
at
double
entendré,
were
equally
apparent
to
any
alert
viewer.
As
Edelstein
insisted
in
a
discerning
obituary,
When
Carson
succeeded
Steve
Allen
and
Jack
Paar
as
host
of
.
.
.
the
Tonight
Show,
the
shift
in
tone
was
radical.
Although
Allen
was
underappreciated
as
a
satirist,
he
had
a
fundamentally
earnest
presence,
and
Paar
was,
if
anything,
overearnest
(to
the
point
of
bathos).
But
Carson
was
cutting:
There
was
always
a
chill
behind
the
twinkle.
If
he
cultivated
the
look
of
a
boyish
Midwesterner
.
.
.
,
he
could
turn
into
a
bad
boy
(or
a
smutty‐minded
boy)
in
an
instant.”
Although
no
one
seems
able
to
confirm
(and
Carson
himself
denied
it)
that
he
once
responded
to
a
Persian‐cat‐toting
Zsa
Zsa
Gabor’s
invitation
“to
pet
my
pussy?”
with
“Sure,
if
you
move
that
damn
cat
The Collected Works of David Lavery 5
out
of
the
way!”
(Cox
77),
he
very
definitely
did
tell
the
voluptuous
Dolly
Parton
that
he
would
“give
about
a
year’s
pay
to
take
a
peek
under
there”
(Cox
84),
and
who
can
forget
his
wide‐eyed
response,
captured
in
close‐up,
when
the
late
Madeline
Kahn
responded
to
his
inquiry
about
her
phobias
with
“I
do
not
like
balls
coming
toward
me.”
Carson’s
use
of
“the
camera
as
a
silent
conspirator,”
Kenneth
Tynan
once
observed,
was
his
“most
original
contribution
to
TV
technique.”
But
it
was
not
his
only
one.
Writing
in
USA
Today,
Wes
Gehring
would
offer
an
astute
analysis
of
Carson’s
comic
style:
[B]ecause
Carson
was
such
a
student
of
laughter,
he
often
existed
as
a
pluralist
comedian,
gifting
audiences
periodically
with
such
signature
expressions
as
Oliver
Hardy's
embarrassed
tie‐fiddling
look,
Stan
Laurel's
teary
elongated
face,
Benny's
direct
address
(staring
at
the
camera)
deadpan,
and
a
Groucho
Marx
eyebrow
twitch
after
a
mildly
suggestive
double
entendré.
What
made
these
and
other
assorted
funny
footnotes
all
Carson
was
the
ease
with
which
he
segued
through
such
shtick.
It
was
a
tour
de
silly
each
night
of
the
week.
(68)
He
was
a
superb
physical
comedian,
as
good
at
pratfalls
as
a
Chevy
Chase,
willing
to
get
down
on
all
fours,
pretending
to
be
a
dog
gobbling
the
Alpo
a
real
dog
had
rejected,
saving
Ed
McMahon’s
live
ad.
Wonderfully
uneasy
with
the
parade
of
animals
the
San
Diego
Zoo
brought
to
the
show,
he
could
secure
uproarious
laughter
from
a
face‐off
with
an
orangutan,
a
marmoset
urinating
on
his
head,
a
boa
constrictor’s
tail
surprisingly
emerging
between
his
legs.
Virtually
every
recognizable
figure
from
entertainment
and
politics,
both
fellow
icons
and
lesser
lights,
from
Martin
Luther
King
to
Dean
Martin,
Richard
Nixon
to
Bob
Hope,
Shelley
Winters
to
Carl
Sagan,
Bill
Clinton
to
Tiny
Tim,
sat
down
beside
him.
"It
is
still
the
most
exciting
moment
in
show
business
to
walk
out
from
that
curtain
and
sit
in
this
chair,"
Tom
Hanks
has
confessed
(Zoglin).
He
was
absolutely
wonderful
with
children
and
the
elderly,
and
with
ordinary
Americans
(deemed
“civilians”
by
the
show’s
staff),
he
could
be
the
perfect
host,
hardly
ever
condescending,
though
often
playful
(that
time,
for
example,
when
he
pretended
to
eat
one
of
the
prized
potato
chips
in
which
a
woman
had
found
a
variety
of
animal
The Collected Works of David Lavery 6
and
human
faces).
With
Dragnet’s
Jack
Webb,
he
could
do
tongue‐twisting
verbal
humor
about
copper
clappers
and
kleptomaniacs,
or,
as
President
Reagan,
revisit
Abbott
and
Costello,
Hu,
Watt,
and
Yasser
Arafat
replacing
Who,
What,
and
friends.
The
Ultimate
Collection
Carson
DVDs
are
full
of
such
moments
of
clever,
imaginative,
often
literate
comedy.
In
one
particularly
memorable
skit,
Carson,
dressed
in
Renaissance
garb,
plays
Hamlet,
reciting,
or
so
it
seems,
the
famous
“To
be
or
not
to
be”
and
“Alas,
Poor
Yorick”
soliloquies,
but
Shakespeare’s
powerful
words
turn
out
to
be
mere
product
placement
for
a
shameless
series
of
commercials:
“sleep
no
more”
inspires
a
plug
for
Sominex;
“The
heartache,
and
the
thousand
natural
shocks/That
flesh
is
heir
to”
(my
italics)
leads
to
an
ad
for
Aamco;
“ay,
there's
the
rub,”
turns
out
to
be,
of
course,
a
set‐up
for
promotion
of
Mentholatum
Deep
Heat
Rub.”
Yorick,
in
turn,
is
warned
not
to
leave
Denmark
without
his
American
Express
Card.
But
it
was,
of
course,
Carson’s
monologues
that
were
his
comic
signature.
Whether
his
one‐liners
produced
laughs
or
bombed
(he
was
a
master
at
transforming
even
his
failures
into
hilarity),
his
opening
litany
of
jokes,
almost
certain
to
include
gags
about
Ed’s
drinking,
bandleader
Doc
Severinsen’s
wardrobe
(or
substitute
Tommy
Newsom’s
drabness),
and
his
own
former
wives,
was
often
the
highlight
of
the
show
and
sometimes
the
only
part
of
the
show
for
which
sleepy
Americans
could
stay
conscious.
Carson
“dealt
with
topical
events
as
reliably
as
Walter
Cronkite,”
Bianculli
has
observed,
“and
the
impact
of
his
monologue
made
Carson
the
TV
equivalent
of
Will
Rogers:
one
joke
could
make
all
the
difference
in
indicating
whether
someone
(or
something)
was
up
or
down,
in
or
out”
(341).
It
should
not
surprise
us
that
Carson’s
monologue
came
to
possess
such
influence,
for
as
Stark
notes,
“like
an
anchorman
(or
a
president),
Carson
was
one
of
the
few
performers
whom
TV
etiquette
allowed
to
address
the
camera
directly—the
culture's
ultimate
sign
of
respect
and
authority”
(183).
In
perhaps
the
most
discerning
piece
ever
written
on
Carson,
Kenneth
Tynan
articulates
the
dilemma
that
faced
Carson
both
the
performer
and
the
icon:
“Singers,
actors,
and
dancers
all
have
multiple
choices:
they
can
exercise
their
talents
in
the
theatre,
on
TV,
or
in
the
movies.
But
a
talk‐
show
host
can
only
become
a
more
successful
talk‐show
host.
There
is
no
place
in
the
other
media
for
the
gifts
that
distinguish
him—most
specifically,
for
the
gift
of
re‐inventing
himself,
night
after
night,
without
rehearsal
or
repetition.
Carson,
in
other
words,
is
a
grand
master
of
the
one
show‐
business
art
that
leads
nowhere.
He
has
painted
himself
not
into
a
The Collected Works of David Lavery 7
corner but onto the top of a mountain” (353‐54).
If
television
had
a
Mount
Rushmore,
Johnny
would
be
on
it.
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___.
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