View Full Version: Johnny Carson Passed Away...

Da Wrestling Board > TV and Movies > Johnny Carson Passed Away...



Title: Johnny Carson Passed Away...


Scrooge McSuck - January 23, 2005 07:08 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
January 23, 2005 · Last updated 11:00 a.m. PT

Johnny Carson, king of late night, dies

By JEFF WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES -- Johnny Carson, the "Tonight Show" TV host who served America a smooth nightcap of celebrity banter, droll comedy and heartland charm for 30 years, has died. He was 79.

"Mr. Carson passed away peacefully early Sunday morning," his nephew, Jeff Sotzing, told The Associated Press. "He was surrounded by his family, whose loss will be immeasurable. There will be no memorial service."

Sotzing would not give further details, including the time of death or the location.

The boyish-looking Nebraska native with the disarming grin, who survived every attempt to topple him from his late-night talk show throne, was a star who managed never to distance himself from his audience.

His wealth, the adoration of his guests - particularly the many young comics whose careers he launched - the wry tales of multiple divorces: Carson's air of modesty made it all serve to enhance his bedtime intimacy with viewers.

"Heeeeere's Johnny!" was the booming announcement from sidekick Ed McMahon that ushered Carson out to the stage. Then the formula: the topical monologue, the guests, the broadly played skits such as "Carnac the Magnificent."

But America never tired of him; Carson went out on top when he retired in May 1992. In his final show, he told his audience: "And so it has come to this. I am one of the lucky people in the world. I found something that I always wanted to do and I have enjoyed every single minute of it."

His personal life could not match the perfection of his career. Carson was married four times, divorced three. In 1991, one of his three sons, 39-year-old Ricky, was killed in a car accident.

Nearly all of Carson's professional life was spent in television, from his postwar start at Nebraska stations in the late 1940s to his three decades with NBC's "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson."

Carson choose to let "Tonight" stand as his career zenith and his finale, withdrawing into a quiet retirement that suited his private nature and refusing involvement in other show business projects.

In 1993, he explained his absence from the limelight.

"I have an ego like anybody else," Carson told The Washington Post, "but I don't need to be stoked by going before the public all the time."

Mad Dog - January 24, 2005 01:27 AM (GMT)
This is going to sound really horrible but I wasn't even sure he was still alive the last few years.

Anyways, it's a shame. Those clowns Leno, Jimmy and Letterman aren't even worthy of being pissed on by Carson.

dynamite kido - January 24, 2005 03:02 PM (GMT)
Carson will always be kind of a soft spot for me personally.

I remember staying up late and watching him with my Grandparents when I was a little kid. I always got a kick out of it......

Mad Dog - January 24, 2005 03:07 PM (GMT)
They had some special with some of his skits last night and I was laughing my ass off. I wish ABCFamily would start playing reruns of his show again.

Scrooge McSuck - January 24, 2005 03:23 PM (GMT)
In a weird coincidence, I was watching the Simpsons episodes Krusty Gets Kanceled (or whatever) the night before, and of course, Johnny Carson was a guest star who was written in as superman.




Hosted for free by InvisionFree