searadiofreak said:
I had the great opportunity to attend a Carson taping, definitely the highlight of my young life to that point. As I recall, Fred DeCordova did the initial warm-up, then he introduced Ed, but Johnny never came out until show time. However, I did catch him peek out from the curtains, something I since have learned was something he almost always did. I remember the show had a different audio "feel" in that Burbank studio. Eveything seemed kind of muted, including Johnny when he did the monologue and interviews. Johnny didn't talk much with the guests during the commercials. The show I attended Johnny did an "in-audience" bit, and I believe I was briefly on camera. Just a surreal experience. Miss that performer greatly.
When did you see Carson?
I was at a taping in
late 1978 -- It was either between Christmas and new years, or right after the first of the year in
early January 1979. The guests were Mohammed Ali and Robert Blake, and some forgettable impressionist. Johnnie did a Floyd Turbo routine. We were seated in that section directly up the stairs from the desk, in the second tier.
First, Freddie DeCordova warmed up the audience. Then he introduced Doc. Doc did a little warm-up, then he introduced Ed. Ed did the final warm-up, which lasted right up until you saw the "slate" on the monitors -- which was probably 30 seconds before the show began. They all seemed so calm, though in 30 seconds they'd be taping a network show. The slate hangs for 10 seconds. Then when it goes off, the monitors are in black. Ed takes the mic he was holding, walks over to his spot, and puts that mic in the stand. I don't remember anyone telling the audience to "stand by", or "here we go"...Just, suddenly, the audience falls silent -- as if it knew what to do. I remember at that point, looking to my right, over the audience -- and how quiet it suddenly was, and reveling in the moment.
Then you see Doc's arm go up in the characteristic maestro "ready" pose, and then the drum riff.
During breaks, the lights on the set are turned down -- I don't remember what Johnnie did during the breaks, aside from tapping his pencils.
At one point,
in the third half hour, Johnnie mentioned New York for some reason. The three of us, being from NY, applauded, as was the tradition when some locale was mentioned. We watched the show in our motel room later that night -- and years later, in
1982 or 83, the show was repeated -- I was watching it with my college roommates -- and I heard our applause again. Freaky.