Late Show with David Letterman
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| Late Show with David Letterman | |
|---|---|
| Image:Lshowtitle cleaned.png </small> | |
| Genre | Talk show, variety show |
| Picture format | 1080i HDTV |
| Running time | 62 1/2 minutes |
| Executive producer(s) | Robert Morton (1993-1996) Rob Burnett (1996-Present) Barbara Gaines (2000-Present) Maria Pope (2000-Present) |
| Starring | David Letterman Paul Shaffer Bill Wendell (1993-1995) Alan Kalter (1995-Present) |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original channel | CBS |
| Original run | August 30, 1993–Present, renewed through 2009 |
| No. of episodes | 2,666, as of November 29, 2006 |
| Official website | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
The Late Show with David Letterman is an hour-long weeknight comedy talk show broadcast by CBS from the Ed Sullivan Theater on Broadway in New York City. The show debuted on August 30, 1993 and is produced and hosted by David Letterman. The show's music director and bandleader of the house band, the CBS Orchestra, is Paul Shaffer. The head writers are brothers Justin Stangel and Eric Stangel. The announcer is Alan Kalter, who replaced Bill Wendell as announcer in 1995. The show airs at night, but is recorded the afternoon of the broadcast. Each show is recapped in The Wahoo Gazette.
Letterman was previously the host of Late Night with David Letterman (which many news articles still call Letterman's show even today) on NBC from 1982 to 1993. Shaffer, Wendell, and several members of the band were also with the NBC show.
Contents |
[edit] Production
[edit] Episode Structure
Early shows included a cold open, which featured Letterman in a baseball cap interacting with a celebrity. This practice was revived in the Summer of 2006, and features Letterman in the green room, without a jacket on, talking to a Late Show staffer.
After the show's opening credits, which includes introductions from the announcer, each show begins with Letterman's monologue, sometimes making an inside reference to something an audience member said to him during the pre-show Q&A; jokes usually include references to pop culture and politics. This is followed by Letterman's introduction of Paul Shaffer and the CBS Orchestra. Letterman then walks to his desk and begins to tell stories or introduces a running gag, followed by the broadcast's sketch comedy.
Following this, the show turns to guest interviews on the couch with a celebrity, politician, or the latest news hero. Ocassionally there is a short comedy bit in between the first two guests, or the guest will take part in a bit of their own. The final guest of the show is usually either a stand-up comedian or a musical performance.
Letterman ends the show by waving from his desk, "Good night everybody!"
[edit] Sketches
Image:DaveHat.jpg When Letterman moved to CBS and began the Late Show, several of Late Night's long-running comedy bits made the move with him, including his best known bit, the Top Ten List. Letterman renamed a few of his regular bits to avoid legal problems over trademark infringement (NBC cited that what he did on Late Night was 'intellectual property' of the network). For example, "Viewer Mail" on NBC became the "CBS Mailbag", and Larry 'Bud' Melman began to use his real name, Calvert DeForest. However, Letterman did not let NBC have the final laugh on the matter. On the very first show, after Letterman was introduced, Tom Brokaw accompanied him on stage and wished him luck "within reason". Brokaw then proceeded to retrieve a pair of cue cards stating that "These last 2 jokes are the intellectual property of NBC!", and carried them off stage.
The Late Show is well known for its repeated absurdist segments, often taking the form of competitions or audience participation. The charm of these segments is often that they are completely pointless, yet are taken seriously by Letterman and all involved.
The Friday show is known to have the best sketches of the whole week. Sketches like "Johnny Dark", "Will It Float?", "Know Your Current Events", and "Audience Show and Tell" are among the most popular.
[edit] Staff
In 1996, Dave fired longtime producer Robert Morton for an apparent botched attempt to move the show to ABC in place of Nightline. Jay Leno's Tonight Show had also recently overtaken The Late Show in viewers, and director Hal Gurnee, producer Peter Lassally and announcer Bill Wendell also left around this time. Dave seemed to take on a more somber tone from this date forward, though he did promote writer Rob Burnett to Executive Producer, a post he holds to this day. Burnett was absent from the day-to-day operations, however, from 2000-2004, replaced by Barbara Gaines and Maria Pope. While Gaines took over behind-the-scenes duties admirably, Pope insisted on the on-air producer role; she was to be onstage but just out of camera range. The show seemed to suffer greatly due to Pope's presence, and Dave showed a renewed sense of ease with her departure in 2004. Lassally was invited back to the show in January 2005 as a guest shortly after the death of Johnny Carson.
[edit] High-definition broadcasts
The show began broadcasting in HDTV on Monday August 29, 2005. About two weeks later, Tim Kennedy, the show's Technical Director, commented on the transition in the show's official newsletter:
- The biggest challenge in the HD conversion was to renovate and upgrade our old control room, audio room, videotape room, and edit room while still doing five shows a week....This entailed pulling a remote production truck on 53rd Street running somewhere in the neighborhood of 50,000 feet of video and audio cable just to tie the truck to the existing technical plant....
- The coolest piece of equipment is our new control room Virtual Wall. We have done away with the conventional monitor for every video source and replaced it with four 70-inch rear projection screens and within those screens we can "virtually" place as many video images as we want, anywhere we want them, and when we want it.
Kennedy and his crew won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series" during the nearly-four-month-long transition to HDTV.
[edit] Host
[edit] Physical comedy
Letterman himself is known for his quirky physical comedy, which he has used in varied degrees throughout the years. Examples are throwing his blue note cards through the window behind him, throwing pencils at the camera, pausing to take a long drink of his coffee, showing the inside lining of his suit, showing his receding hairline, long awkward moments to organize his note cards on his desk, flipping pencils upward and trying to catch them one-handed (à la Johnny Carson), wiggling his tie, adjusting the height of his chair, stirring his guests' coffee with a pencil before they arrive, and pausing to clean his glasses.
Though Letterman is typically well-attired and neat; a common 'Dave gag' is pretending to eat or drink excessive amounts of both edible and non-edible items, for instance, eating mayonnaise straight from the jar, allowing it to slop onto his face and onto the front of his suit. During a cooking segment with Martha Stewart there was a table set up with ingredients to demonstrate how to prepare some sort of meal. Letterman feigned clumsy disinterest, measuring the wrong amounts, throwing raw eggs at the band, gulping down bottles of wine, eating half a stick of butter, and generally wreaking havoc in an attempt to fluster his guest. Stewart tried to nonchalantly continue her cooking presentation, until finally, in an apparent "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" moment, succumbed to the fun, taking a big bite of butter herself.
[edit] Memorable guests
[edit] Johnny Carson
On May 13, 1994, Carson was lured out of his retirement to make a rare televison appearance on the Late Show. The appearance is regarded as one of the best moments in the series' history, and probably in late night history. Carson had not appeared on TV since his departure from The Tonight Show in 1992. The appearance occurred during a week of episodes in Los Angeles.
[edit] Madonna
In March 1994, pop star Madonna appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman. The unofficial 'Queen of Pop', who is known for controversy, infamously swore thirteen times throughout the interview and refused to leave at the end. Letterman, who asked her questions on various topics including her nose ring, music and love life was soon branded a 'sick fuck', after he suggested Madonna kiss a member of the audience. Madonna went on to ask if Letterman was wearing a 'rug', whether he wanted to smell a pair of underwear she brought on the show, or whether he thought the microphone was sexually big. In between this, Madonna often swore and referred to sexual themes including her vagina, saying: 'Did you know it's good to pee in the shower?' Eventually, she swore so much that the producers went to commercials and showed comedic monologues of Madonna. At the end of the interview, when Madonna refused to leave, Letterman cut to a break, and when they returned, Madonna was gone. Letterman has since stated, in USA Today: 'I'm not pleased with the way I handled it. I should have said, "You say that word one more time and you're gone. That's it. Adiós." And I didn't.' Madonna appeared days later on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, predictably mellow. Her return to Letterman was in 2000, while promoting her album Music.
[edit] Drew Barrymore
In a 1995 edition, as a birthday present, actress Drew Barrymore stood on Letterman's desk and flashed her breasts, as part of an erotic dance. (The cameras only showed her from the back, during the flash). The dance shocked the usually unflappable Letterman; it was reportedly a gift from Barrymore, for his birthday. Letterman later said, 'I couldn't have been more pleased.'
[edit] Oprah Winfrey
Letterman and Oprah Winfrey have had a peculiar public relationship. Although Winfrey appeared twice on Letterman's Late Night show in the 1980s, she had never appeared on The Late Show and Letterman had never appeared on Winfrey's show. Winfrey had described her visits to Late Night as difficult. Despite Letterman's jocular attempts to woo Winfrey onto his show, Winfrey did not visit the Late Show from 1989 until December 1, 2005. 'I want you to know, it's really over, whatever you thought was happening,' said Winfrey during the broadcast, and presented him with an autographed picture of herself and Uma Thurman to commemorate his 'Uma... Oprah...' debacle at the 1995 Academy Awards. About 13.4 million people, according to preliminary Nielsen Ratings, tuned in to watch. The Late Show last attracted as large an audience in February 1994, when it had the Winter Olympics face-off between figure skaters Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding as a lead-in. It drew its best adults 18-49 rating (4.4) since Letterman's return to the show following heart surgery in February 2000.[edit] Bill O'Reilly
On January 4, 2006, Bill O'Reilly appeared on the David Letterman program, a forum he previously claimed to be one of the toughest interviews on TV. When O'Reilly began a discussion on the alleged War on Christmas, Letterman replied, "I think that this is something that happened here, and it happened there, and so people like you are trying to make us think that it's a threat." Letterman accused O'Reilly of making up some of his claims on particular points on the supposed War, and O'Reilly replied with, "Then I could write for your show." Later research proved that one supposed example of the "War on Christmas" cited by O'Reilly (and met with an incredulous Letterman, who stated "I don't believe you") was, in fact, false[1] When O'Reilly criticized the views of Cindy Sheehan, Letterman said O'Reilly had never lost a family member in a war, and therefore O'Reilly should have nothing but sympathy for Sheehan. When asked if Letterman agreed with Sheehan's comparison of terrorist insurgents in Iraq to "freedom fighters" and how other parents of fallen soldiers feel about such an assertion, Letterman responded "well, what about why are we there in the first place?" Letterman then continued "I'm not smart enough to debate you point-for-point, but I have the feeling that about 60 percent of what you say is crap," to which O’Reilly replied, "Listen, I respect your opinion. You should respect mine."
[edit] Courtney Love
In March 2004 rock singer Courtney Love flashed David Letterman six times — once while standing on his desk. The next day she was arrested in New York City for throwing a microphone stand at a man.
[edit] Farrah Fawcett
The former model and 1970s sex icon Farrah Fawcett made headlines in late July 1997 when she notoriously appeared on Letterman's show appearing confused and disoriented, making bizarre and nonsensical statements. At the end of the show, Letterman thanked Fawcett for 'almost being here'.
[edit] Janet Jackson
Pop icon Janet Jackson appeared on the show on March 20, 2004 - over a month after her nipple was controversially revealed at the Super Bowl. The headline story, which sparked much debate, spurred many viewers to watch the episode which featured Jackson in a red dress. Its revealing nature was pointed out by Letterman. Janet Jackson had to be blocked during the episode when she said 'Jesus Christ' after being asked about the event. Ratings, however, were Letterman's highest in years - Jackson's first network appearance since the Super Bowl performance - were up 20 percent in overnight markets over the program's usual weeknight opener.
[edit] Warren Zevon
Warren Zevon was a frequent guest and occasional substitute bandleader on Letterman's television shows since Late Night first aired in 1982. In 2002, he was diagnosed with lung cancer. On October 30, 2002, Zevon was featured on the show as the only guest for the entire hour. Appearing very underweight and weakened, Zevon performed and spoke at length about his illness. It was this show where Zevon offered his insight on facing death: "enjoy every sandwich." He performed three songs (his last ever before an audience): "Genius", "Mutineer" and a rousing version of his classic "Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner." Zevon regarded Letterman as "the best friend my music ever had." He died on September 7, 2003.
[edit] Bill Hicks
On October 1, 1993, Bill Hicks was to appear on the David Letterman show for the twelfth time, but his appearance was cancelled somewhat controversially. At the time, Hicks was doing a routine about pro-life organizations, where he encouraged them to "lock arms and block cemeteries" instead of medical clinics, but his routine was cut from the show. Both the show's producers and CBS denied responsibility for the cut, but the reason appeared obvious to many during the following week's Letterman show when a commercial for a pro-life organization was aired. For many fans, this reinforced one of Bill's recurring themes, that America was being sanitized and manipulated in the name of corporate sponsorship. Hicks himself felt betrayed, and wrote a 32-page letter of complaint. Later, Letterman expressed regret at the way Hicks had been handled.
[edit] Memorable episodes
[edit] February 21, 2000
On January 14, Letterman made on The Late Show the announcement that he was under going a angiogram the following day, after doctors had recently been concerned about his high cholesterol and family history (his father died of a heart attack at 52). Soon it was discovered that he had blocked arteries and had to undergo a quintuple bypass. During his hiatus, the show had been off the air for a few weeks after which, while he was still recovering the show was being hosted by guests for the following weeks. On his first show after recovering, Dave brought out all the doctors and nurses on the show who had helped him during his surgery and recovery. Despite nearly breaking out in tears during the show, Dave seemed to find humor in his situation; while referring to one of his nurses, Dave said: "This woman saw me naked!". He continued to joke about the event for weeks after his return.
See also David Letterman's heart surgery.
[edit] September 17, 2001
On September 17, 2001, The Late Show returned to the television airwaves six days after the September 11th attacks, a high-profile appearance given the anxiety and grief still felt by many at the time, especially in New York City. Letterman reportedly was considering not resuming the show, and credited "the reason that I am doing a show and the reason I am back to work is because of Mayor Giuliani.... Rudolph Giuliani is the personification of courage."
Instead of the usual opening sequence, the episode began with an image of the American flag, followed by a silent image of the exterior of the Ed Sullivan Theater with the Late Show marquee. Letterman came out to subdued applause and began by indicating that there were things he needed to say, especially if the show was to continue:
- "The reason we were attacked, the reason these people are dead, these people are missing and dead ... They weren't doing anything wrong, they were living their lives, they were going to work, they were traveling, they were doing what they normally do. Uh, as I understand it -- and my understanding of this is vague, at best -- another smaller group of people stole some airplanes and crashed them into buildings. And we're told that they were zealots fueled by religious fervor, religious fervor. And if you live to be a thousand years old, will that make any sense to you? Will that make any goddamned sense?"
That night Letterman hosted Dan Rather and Regis Philbin. The Dan Rather interview was one of the most emotional interviews in the history of the show, with both David and Dan Rather holding back tears while speaking about the attacks.
Since then, the regular opening, which had previously made fun of New York City, has consistently led with "From New York… the greatest city in the world…" These words have been omitted from the opening of each episode with a guest host, however.
[edit] January 31, 2005
Letterman's first show after long-time friend Johnny Carson had died. The show had been on a one week hiatus since his death, this being the second time in history the Late Show missed a broadcast (the other time being after 9/11). As a tribute, Letterman's opening monologue included jokes written by Carson as well as clips shown from The Tonight Show. While describing how he felt about the news, Letterman stated: "There are so many things you miss about Johnny Carson... I was nearly this sad when the guy retired... Johnny Carson was like a public utility. At the end of the day, that's who you wanted to be there. The way that you know that Johnny was such a tremendous part of your life was when there was a guest host. You would be waiting all day to see Johnny and you'd tune in and there would be a guest host. And it would make you angry. And you'd be steaming mad, [though] not at Johnny, you would always take out your anger at the guest host."
[edit] November 20, 2006
Jerry Seinfeld and Michael Richards appeared on the Late Show, just three days after Richards' racist remarks were made at a Los Angeles comedy club after hecklers interrupted his show. Seinfeld, who was previously scheduled to appear, encouraged Richards to appear on the show via satellite transmission. During a six-minute segment, Richards offered his apology to all who were offended, and expressed regret about the entire incident, saying that he was not a racist. "For me to be in a comedy club and flip out and say this crap, I'm deeply, deeply sorry," Richards said. The segment, featuring an unscripted dialogue between Richards and Letterman and Seinfeld, was a decidedly awkward departure from the character that viewers knew Richards as.
[edit] International broadcasts
| Country | Broadcaster |
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| Middle East |
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| Australia |
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| Brazil |
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| Canada | |
| Denmark | |
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| United Kingdom |
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[edit] Awards
[edit] Primetime Emmy Awards
- 1993-94 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
- 1997-98 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
- 1998-99 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
- 1999-00 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
- 2000-01 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
- 2001-02 Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series
[edit] Notes
<references/>
[edit] External links
- Barbara Gaines Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Maria Pope Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Paul Shaffer Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Alan Chez Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Will Lee Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Sid McGinnis Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Anton Fig Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Felicia Michele Collins Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Bruce Kapler Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Tom "Bones" Malone Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Alan Kalter Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Biff Henderson Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Calvert DeForest Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Mujibur Rahman Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Sirajul Islam Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Rupert Jee Bio at CBS - Late Show
- David Letterman Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Rob Burnett Bio at CBS - Late Show
- Jump The Shark - Late Show with David Letterman
- Fan sites:
- Media:
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