Braves2005 said:
azumanga said:
Braves2005 said:
I think that the 48 year empire of The Tonight Show is finally fixing to come to an end.
You mean "
58-year empire" -- don't forget Steve Allen, Ernie Kovacs and Jack Paar.
I meant The Tonight Show when they started calling it that in 1962 after Jack Paar left and others took over until Johnny Carson came along. Steve Allen and Jack Paar's shows were called "The Steve Allen Show" and "The Jack Paar Show". They weren't listed on TV grids as The Tonight Show but as Steve Allen or Jack Paar.
According to Brooks & March, Steve Allen's show was called "Tonight" when it debuted as a local show in New York in 1953 and kept that title during his 1954-57 network gig (with Ernie Kovacs doing the show two nights a week in 1956 after Allen's Sunday-night show started).
Format two: "Tonight! America After Dark" was an attempt at a nighttime version of the "Today" show and lasted from January-July 1957.
Format three: they don't say when the show officially became "The Jack Paar Show" but I have seen a picture of Paar with two of his favorite guests, comedienne Dody Goodman and singer Genevieve; in the background is a sign reading, "Jack Paar Show, Monday-Friday 11:15 PM, Channel 4." (Channel 4 is, of course, Channel 4 in New York.)
Format four: "The Tonight Show"--the six-month interim in 1962 between Paar's departure and Carson's arrival.
Format five: "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson," although they don't say if that was the title from the start.
Format six: "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno."
I don't have an edition (if one has even come out) with Conan as host of "The Tonight Show."
And yes, TV Guide listed the show as "Jack Paar," "Johnny Carson," and "Jay Leno." I don't have any from the Allen era, so I don't know if they listed it as "Steve Allen" or reserved that for his Sunday-night show.
So the "Tonight" name has been in use for 57 years.