PRXI

By the 1970s, Johnny Carson had become the “King of Late Night Television,” an undisputed ratings winner in the “Tonight Show” time slot, and a frequent guest on Bob Hope specials. Hope appeared regularly as Johnny’s guest, usually to promote an upcoming special.In 1980, Johnny was signed to appear on our two-hour special entitled “Hope For President,” playing a campaign PR-man delivering Hope’s life story to the media. He would read Hope’s biography while displaying photographs (mostly comic scenes from his early movies) displayed on a large easel. Since I had written the jokes that matched the pictures, I was sent over to Johnny’s office to rehearse the segment with him. While I had never spoken to him, he had to have seen me around since we often stood in the wings with his writers to watch his mon Naruto Episodes ologue. And here I was, a fellow-jokesmith working for a comedy icon, someone in the same business ? someone around whom you’d imagine he’d be able to relax. Instead, he was ? I clearly remember thinking at the time ? as taught as a violin string. He was stiff, erect ? the exact antithesis of his idol, Jack Benny. And it wasn’t because I was from another show; I was told he was that way around his own writers ? and a bundle of nerves in any social situation including the annual “Tonight Show” Christmas party where he’d appear briefly, exchange a few nervous comments with the staff, and go home. Johnny often admitted to interviewers that, unlike the fear most people have of speaking in public, he was just the opposite — the only time he felt comfortable was onstage, in total control, delivering jokes.

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