johnny carson death
Ed McMahon (left) shook hands with host Johnny Carson during the final taping of "The Tonight Show" on May 22, 1992. McMahon died today at age 86.
By Mark Feeney, Globe Staff
Ed McMahon, whose nearly three decades as Johnny Carson’s sidekick on “The Tonight Show” and innumerable appearances as television pitchman and master of ceremonies made him one of the medium’s most ubiquitous figures, died today. He was 86.
Publicist Howard Bragman told the Associated Press that Mr. McMahon died at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center surrounded by his family. Bragman didn't give a cause of death, saying only that the entertainer had a "multitude of health problems the last few months."
“My talent is making it seem I have no talent,” Mr. McMahon once wrote. “It took me years of hard work to convince an audience that I wasn’t working.”
Implacably genial, Mr. McMahon’s persona was one of abundant bonhomie and reputed bibulousness. His booming voice made him a natural announcer, and his even more booming laugh made him a natural straight man.
“If I could fake that much laughter, I’d be the finest actor in the world,” Mr. McMahon once said. “I thought Johnny Carson was very funny.”
Carson and Mr. McMahon were a match made in late-night heaven. Where Carson was slight, coiled, preternaturally quick, Mr. McMahon was oversized (6 feet 4 inches tall, and usually well over 200 pounds) and the soul of unhurried amiability.
His trademark response of “Hi-yo!” to a particularly racy Carson line was a boys-will-be-boys battle cry, and his nightly introduction of Carson, “Heeeere’s Johnny!,” became one of the best-known catchphrases in popular culture. When Jack Nicholson’s homicidal maniac in the 1980 film “The Shining” used it to announce an ax-wielding assault, everyone in the audience got the joke.
Getting the joke was fine, but Mr. McMahon’s fonder wish was that everyone in the audience buy the product. Among the companies he was associated with as spokesman were Budweiser, Alpo (he claimed to have served it to some 4,000 dogs on camera), and American Family Publishers’ sweepstakes. Indeed, the words most associated with Mr. McMahon might not have come from “The Tonight Show” but were instead the sweepstakes’ come-on, “You may have already won $10 million!”
A series of financial and medical setbacks left Mr. McMahon flirting with bankruptcy last year, which he averted with the sale of his house.
Mr. McMahon had few if any peers as a pitchman. By his estimate, he did more than 60,000 commercials on radio and television. “Of all the things I am, most of all I’m a salesman,” he declared in his 1998 memoir, “For Laughing Out Loud.” “I’ve always said with great pride, if I can hold it up or point to it, I can sell it.”
Mr. McMahon, who was born in Detroit on March 6, 1923, came by that talent as a birthright. His father, Edward Leo Peter McMahon Sr., was at various times a traveling salesman, entrepreneur, charity fund raiser, and sideshow operator. The one professional constant was movement. By the time he was 5, Mr. McMahon and his mother, Eleanor (Russell) McMahon, had accompanied his father to some 40 states.
The closest thing Mr. McMahon had to a home was Lowell, where his paternal grandparents lived. He spent summers there, as well as attending a year of junior high school and his final two years of high school.
While still in school, Mr. McMahon worked as a bingo caller. His dream, though, was to be a radio announcer. He took elocution classes at Emerson College and got a job on Lowell’s WLLH. As part of the Navy’s V-5 program, Mr. McMahon then enrolled at Boston College, where he was freshman class president. He served as a Marine flight instructor in Florida during World War II.
Rather than returning to BC, he enrolled at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., because he could major in speech and drama there.
Upon graduation, Mr. McMahon hosted several television programs in Philadelphia. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean War, flying 85 combat missions in an artillery-spotting plane.
Back in Philadelphia, Mr. McMahon resumed his television career and began commuting to New York to do commercials. In 1957, he was offered the job of announcer for a daytime game show called “Who Do You Trust?” The host was Carson.
Mr. McMahon later described his introduction to Carson as “about as exciting as watching a traffic light change.” Yet it led to television history. The next five years amounted to a giant dress rehearsal for “The Tonight Show,” with Carson and Mr. McMahon perfecting their onscreen chemistry.
“We developed,” Carson later wrote, “a unique relationship — similar to that which married couples often experience — an unspoken method of communication.... By a look a pause, body language, or tone of voice we could tell each other the direction to go.”
“My role on the show was never strictly defined,” Mr. McMahon said of his “Tonight Show” years. “I did what had to be done when it had to be done. I was there when he needed me, and when he didn’t I moved down the couch and kept quiet.”
Over the years, Mr. McMahon also performed in a nightclub act, hosted television quiz shows, presented compilations of television bloopers and practical jokes, took on the occasional film or stage role, and assisted Jerry Lewis with his annual muscular dystrophy telethon.
The best-known of these ancillary activities was “Star Search,” a syndicated television talent show that ran from 1983-1995. Among the then-unknown performers who appeared on the show were Rosie O’Donnell, Martin Lawrence, Britney Spears, and Drew Carey.
“I am one of the very fortunate people who grew up to do exactly what I spent my whole childhood dreaming of doing,” Mr. McMahon once wrote, “even if no one is quite sure exactly what it is that I do.”
Mr. McMahon leaves his wife, Pamela (Hurn); a stepson, Lex; from his first marriage, he leaves two daughters, Claudia and Linda, and son, Jeffrey (another son, Michael, died in 1995); from his second marriage, to Victoria (Valentine), he leaves a daughter, Katherine Mary.
Funeral arrangements were pending.
By Mark Feeney, Globe Staff
Ed McMahon, whose nearly three decades as Johnny Carson’s sidekick on “The Tonight Show” and innumerable appearances as television pitchman and master of ceremonies made him one of the medium’s most ubiquitous figures, died today. He was 86.
Publicist Howard Bragman told the Associated Press that Mr. McMahon died at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center surrounded by his family. Bragman didn't give a cause of death, saying only that the entertainer had a "multitude of health problems the last few months."
“My talent is making it seem I have no talent,” Mr. McMahon once wrote. “It took me years of hard work to convince an audience that I wasn’t working.”
Implacably genial, Mr. McMahon’s persona was one of abundant bonhomie and reputed bibulousness. His booming voice made him a natural announcer, and his even more booming laugh made him a natural straight man.
“If I could fake that much laughter, I’d be the finest actor in the world,” Mr. McMahon once said. “I thought Johnny Carson was very funny.”
Carson and Mr. McMahon were a match made in late-night heaven. Where Carson was slight, coiled, preternaturally quick, Mr. McMahon was oversized (6 feet 4 inches tall, and usually well over 200 pounds) and the soul of unhurried amiability.
His trademark response of “Hi-yo!” to a particularly racy Carson line was a boys-will-be-boys battle cry, and his nightly introduction of Carson, “Heeeere’s Johnny!,” became one of the best-known catchphrases in popular culture. When Jack Nicholson’s homicidal maniac in the 1980 film “The Shining” used it to announce an ax-wielding assault, everyone in the audience got the joke.
Getting the joke was fine, but Mr. McMahon’s fonder wish was that everyone in the audience buy the product. Among the companies he was associated with as spokesman were Budweiser, Alpo (he claimed to have served it to some 4,000 dogs on camera), and American Family Publishers’ sweepstakes. Indeed, the words most associated with Mr. McMahon might not have come from “The Tonight Show” but were instead the sweepstakes’ come-on, “You may have already won $10 million!”
A series of financial and medical setbacks left Mr. McMahon flirting with bankruptcy last year, which he averted with the sale of his house.
Mr. McMahon had few if any peers as a pitchman. By his estimate, he did more than 60,000 commercials on radio and television. “Of all the things I am, most of all I’m a salesman,” he declared in his 1998 memoir, “For Laughing Out Loud.” “I’ve always said with great pride, if I can hold it up or point to it, I can sell it.”
Mr. McMahon, who was born in Detroit on March 6, 1923, came by that talent as a birthright. His father, Edward Leo Peter McMahon Sr., was at various times a traveling salesman, entrepreneur, charity fund raiser, and sideshow operator. The one professional constant was movement. By the time he was 5, Mr. McMahon and his mother, Eleanor (Russell) McMahon, had accompanied his father to some 40 states.
The closest thing Mr. McMahon had to a home was Lowell, where his paternal grandparents lived. He spent summers there, as well as attending a year of junior high school and his final two years of high school.
While still in school, Mr. McMahon worked as a bingo caller. His dream, though, was to be a radio announcer. He took elocution classes at Emerson College and got a job on Lowell’s WLLH. As part of the Navy’s V-5 program, Mr. McMahon then enrolled at Boston College, where he was freshman class president. He served as a Marine flight instructor in Florida during World War II.
Rather than returning to BC, he enrolled at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., because he could major in speech and drama there.
Upon graduation, Mr. McMahon hosted several television programs in Philadelphia. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean War, flying 85 combat missions in an artillery-spotting plane.
Back in Philadelphia, Mr. McMahon resumed his television career and began commuting to New York to do commercials. In 1957, he was offered the job of announcer for a daytime game show called “Who Do You Trust?” The host was Carson.
Mr. McMahon later described his introduction to Carson as “about as exciting as watching a traffic light change.” Yet it led to television history. The next five years amounted to a giant dress rehearsal for “The Tonight Show,” with Carson and Mr. McMahon perfecting their onscreen chemistry.
“We developed,” Carson later wrote, “a unique relationship — similar to that which married couples often experience — an unspoken method of communication.... By a look a pause, body language, or tone of voice we could tell each other the direction to go.”
“My role on the show was never strictly defined,” Mr. McMahon said of his “Tonight Show” years. “I did what had to be done when it had to be done. I was there when he needed me, and when he didn’t I moved down the couch and kept quiet.”
Over the years, Mr. McMahon also performed in a nightclub act, hosted television quiz shows, presented compilations of television bloopers and practical jokes, took on the occasional film or stage role, and assisted Jerry Lewis with his annual muscular dystrophy telethon.
The best-known of these ancillary activities was “Star Search,” a syndicated television talent show that ran from 1983-1995. Among the then-unknown performers who appeared on the show were Rosie O’Donnell, Martin Lawrence, Britney Spears, and Drew Carey.
“I am one of the very fortunate people who grew up to do exactly what I spent my whole childhood dreaming of doing,” Mr. McMahon once wrote, “even if no one is quite sure exactly what it is that I do.”
Mr. McMahon leaves his wife, Pamela (Hurn); a stepson, Lex; from his first marriage, he leaves two daughters, Claudia and Linda, and son, Jeffrey (another son, Michael, died in 1995); from his second marriage, to Victoria (Valentine), he leaves a daughter, Katherine Mary.
Funeral arrangements were pending.
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