Search Results
314 records found for Jack Paar
1970-10-05, NBC, 60 min.
Host Jack Paar takes a look at the European population and their love affair with the automobile.
#17047: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-01-08, ABC, 90 min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guests: Goldie Hawn, Jonathan Winters. Series Premiere. Includes commercials.
#VV2: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-01-08, ABC, min.
January 8, 1973 - November 16, 1973 Premiere Show. Jack Paar returned to the late-night scene with a one-week-a-month stint. "Expect the unexpected," says producer Bob Carmen. Peggy Cass is Jack's sidekick. Charles Randolph Grean leads the orchestra.
#17047A: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-01-09, ABC, min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Second show of series.
#17243: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-02-06, ABC, min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guests: Dr. Michael Meyers, Jack Lemmon, Rich Little. Peggy Cass announcer.
#17246: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-02-08, ABC, min.
- Jack Paar
- Hugh Downs
- Peggy Cass
- Lorna Luft
- Wilfred Hyde-White
- Mule Deer and Moon Dogg Show
- Milton Younger
- Ben Vereen
- Renee Taylor
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guests: Hugh Downs, Lorna Luft, Wilfred Hyde-White, Ben Vereen, Renee Taylor, Judge Milton Younger, mule,deer, and moon dog show. Peggy Cass announcer.
#200004: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-07-26, ABC, min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guest: Senator Howard Baker.
#20004: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-07-26, ABC, min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guest: Senator Howard Baker.
#10030: "JACK PAAR TONITE."
Order1973-08-21, ABC, 55 min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973. Jack Paar returned to late-night television after an 11-year absence on a one week per month basis for ABC as part of their monthly umbrella series, ABC'S WIDE WORLD OF ENTERTAINMENT. Peggy Cass served as Paar's announcer and sidekick. Joined in Progress. We hear Jack Paar’s monologue and there is a segment where editing a speech can change its meaning 360 degree, funny. Guests are jazz pianist Eubie Blake, author Truman Capote, and comedian Jimmie Walker, Peggy Cass is co-host. Truman Capote in an extended interview with Paar discusses his books and interviews with death row inmates, and the "Jet Set"...Jimmy Walker does a stand-up comedy routine and talks with Jack...and 86-year-old Eubie Blake plays a little piano but discusses with Jack Paar his early life, professionally and family and slavery (his father was 19 years older than his mother). NOTE: At the time of this appearance, Eubie Blake was America's oldest living composer.
#17475: JACK PAAR TONITE
Order1973-10-18, ABC, min.
January 8th, 1973-November 16th, 1973 Jack Paar returned to late night TV after an 11 year absence on a one-week-per-month basis as part of ABC's "Wide World Of Entertainment" series.This ninety-minute talk show featured Peggy Cass as Paar's announcer. Guest: Robert Morley.
1974-12-27, WFRV, 28 min.
A memorial tribute to the late comedian Jack Benny, with anchor Tom Snyder, from Los Angeles. There are reminisces from Sheldon Leonard, Dennis Day, Mel Blanc, and musician John Green. From New York, Edwin Newman interviews Isaac Stern and Jack Paar.1975-02-22, NBC, 120 min.
- Jack Paar
- Gene Kelly
- Danny Kaye
- Dinah Shore
- Fred MacMurray
- George Burns
- Jack Lemmon
- Richard Chamberlain
- Joanne Woodward
- Florence Henderson
- Hal Linden
- Isaac Stern
- Freddie Prinze
- Sandy Duncan
- Don Rickles
- Anthony Newley
- Rosalind Russell
- Flip Wilson
- Ben Vereen
- Marvin Hamlisch
- George C. Scott
- Peter Falk.
- Roz Clark
The 1975 Entertainment Hall Of Fame Awards. Host: Gene Kelly.
1977-10-14, WNBC, 56 min.
- Steve Allen
- Jack Paar
- Johnny Carson
- Dave Garroway
- Sonny Fox
- Mike Douglas
- Tom Snyder
- Pat Weaver
- Don Rickles
- Mort Werner
- Tom Brokaw
- Dan Aykroyd
- Dave Tebet
- Bob Citron
"The Tomorrow Show" with Tom Snyder is NOT AVAILABLE FOR SALE. October 15, 1973-January 28, 1982. This is the "Fourth Anniversary Show" broadcast. An hour-long talk show hosted by Tom Snyder. Network television's first entry into late-late-night programming on weeknights Monday thru Thursday, usually broadcasting on tape 1 AM to 2 AM. "Tomorrow" was expanded to 90 minutes on September 16, 1980. On this special 4th anniversary broadcast Tom Snyder's solo guest is Mort Werner relates anecdotes working as NBC TV producer with Steve Allen, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson and Tom Snyder. It was Werner who was instrumental in getting the TOMORROW SHOW on the air. Tom Snyder re-runs a two and half minute excerpt clip related to the Tomorrow Show pilot broadcast (October 5, 1973) which was never broadcast. Both Snyder and Sonny Fox who was in the studio prevail as many mishaps occur during a phone call to Bob Citron making this pilot unacceptable for airing. Tom Snyder runs complete credits at the beginning of this broadcast to a musical rendition from "Annie." Mort Werner, instrumental for the success of The Today Show, Home, and The Tonight Show remembers the challenges keeping the Tomorrow Show on the air during the first year. He was the first to predict that there would be on television "all night programming." He states to Tom Snyder many anecdotes related to working with Dave Garroway, Steve Allen on the original Knickerbocker Show (1953) a local late night show broadcast locally in New York segueing to the Nationally broadcast The Tonight Show beginning in September 1954. and The Steve Allen Show in 1957. Mort Werner talks about the greatness of Pat Weaver...many anecdotes about working with Jack Paar, and Johnny Carson. References are made related to Dave Tebet and the six months of Tonight Show broadcasts with substitute host after Paar left the air and before Carson would host permanently beginning October 1, 1962. As a surprise to Tom Snyder, Mort Werner has prepared a 6 minute congratulatory anniversary tribute film with many celebrities, including Don Rickles, Mike Douglas, Dan Aykroyd, and Tom Brokaw as well as staff me members, fans and others, chiming in both humorously and with satirical anecdotes of their own, directed at Snyder, who enjoys the tribute tremendously. Tom and Mort discuss the challenges incurred when taping a broadcast which Snyder prefers vs broadcasting live which Werner prefers, and how society has changed from the 1950's to the 1970's. Finally, Mort Werner talks about some of his other short lived broadcasting ventures, including "Let's Look Over the News at Midnight," and "My Mother the Car" which he produced. Complete with commercials.
1977-12-02, WNBC, 56 min.
"The Tomorrow Show" with Tom Snyder is NOT AVAILABLE FOR SALE. October 15, 1973-January 28, 1982. Tom Snyder's solo guest is Hugh Downs who remembers his time as host of The Today Show, why he left the show, missing the show at first, anecdotes about autographs, discussion of his new series Over Easy and focus on aging, original broadcasting career beginning at WLOK in Iowa when he was 19 years of age, first job at NBC affiliate at age 22 working on staff, original challenges doing auditions, his stint working on The Home Show, meeting Jack Paar for the first time (subbing for Tex McCrary on Tex and Jinx with Paar as a guest), remembrances of Jack Paar's walk off, preferred guests to personally interview, funny stories about priests and dentists, guests who froze when interviewing them, working with a supportive Barbara Walters on the Today Show, subject of bisexuality, outside interests as an author, scuba diver, glider...love of reading and music, and his long term consultancy for the center for democratic developments. Broadcast signs off to the Broadway song, form Annie, "Tomorrow." An hour-long talk show hosted by Tom Snyder. Network television's first entry into late-late-night programming on weeknights Monday thru Thursday, usually broadcasting on tape 1 AM to 2 AM. "Tomorrow" was expanded to 90 minutes on September 16, 1980.