THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW

(Redirected from Toast of the Town)

'''The Ed Sullivan Show''' is an American television variety show that ran from June 20, 1948 to June 6, 1971, and was hosted by former entertainment columnist Ed Sullivan. It ran on CBS every Sunday night at 8pm, and is one of the few shows to have been run in the same time slot, weekly on the same day of the week, and on the same network, for more than two decades. Virtually every type of entertainment appeared on the show; opera singers, rock stars, songwriters, comedians, ballet dancers, and circus acts were regularly featured. The format was essentially the same as vaudeville, and although vaudeville had died a generation earlier, Sullivan presented many ex-vaudevillians on his show.
The show was originally entitled '''Toast of the Town''', but was widely referred to as ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' for years before September 25 1955, when that became its official name. In its debut, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis performed along with Broadway composers Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II previewing the score to ''South Pacific''.
The show was broadcast live from CBS-TV Studio 50 in New York City, which is now named The Ed Sullivan Theater and is the home of ''The Late Show with David Letterman''.The last Ed Sullivan Show was episode# 1071, aired on March 28, 1971. It featured the following musical acts: Melanie, Joanna Simon, Danny Davis and the Nashville Brass and Sandler and Young.

Contents
Background
Famous performances
Elvis Presley
The Beatles
Controversies
Broadway
Parodies
Celebrity Guests
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1955
References
External Links

Background


Along with the new talent Sullivan booked each week, he also had recurring characters appear many times a season, such as his "Little Italian Mouse" puppet sidekick ''Topo Gigio'', who debuted April 14, 1963, and ventriloquist Señor Wences. While most of the episodes aired live from New York City, the show also aired live on occasion from other nations, such as the United Kingdom, Australia, and Japan. For many years, ''Ed Sullivan'' was a national event each Sunday evening, and was the first exposure for foreign performers to the American public.
On the occasion of the show's ten-year anniversary telecast, Sullivan commented on how the show had changed during a June 1958 interview syndicated by the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA):
:The chief difference is mostly one of pace. In those days, we had maybe six acts. Now we have 11 or 12. Then, each of our acts would do a leisurely ten minutes or so. Now they do two or three minutes. And in those early days I talked too much. Watching these kines I cringe. I look up at me talking away and I say "You fool! Keep quiet!" But I just keep on talking. I've learned how to keep my mouth shut.
The program did not shy away from airing performances from black entertainers. Sullivan also commented on this during his NEA interview:
:The most important thing [during the first ten years of the program] is that we've put on everything but bigotry. When the show first started in '48, I had a meeting with the sponsors. There were some Southern dealers present and they asked if I intended to put on Negroes. I said yes. They said I shouldn't, but I convinced them I wasn't going to change my mind. And you know something? We've gone over very well in the South. Never had a bit of trouble.
The show included frequent performances from black entertainers such as Diahann Carroll, Sammy Davis Jr., Nat King Cole, Bo Diddley, The Fifth Dimension, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Mahalia Jackson, The Supremes, The Four Tops, Nina Simone and The Temptations.
In that same 1958 NEA interview, Sullivan noted his pride about the role that the show had had in improving the public's understanding of mental illness. Sullivan considered his May 17 1953 telecast to be the single most important episode in the show's first decade. During that show, a salute to the popular Broadway director Joshua Logan, the two men were watching in the wings and Sullivan asked Logan how he thought the show was doing. According to Sullivan, Logan told him that the show was dreadfully becoming "another one of those and-then-I-wrote shows;" Sullivan asked him what he should do about it, and Logan volunteered to talk about his experiences in a mental institution. Sullivan took him up on the offer, and in retrospect believed that several advances in the treatment of mental illness could be attributed to the resulting publicity, including the repeal of a Pennsylvania law about the treatment of the mentally ill and the granting of funds for the construction of new psychiatric hospitals.
The show enjoyed phenomenal popularity in the 1950s and early 1960s. As had occurred with Amos 'n Andy on the radio in the early 1930s, the family ritual of gathering around the television set to watch Ed Sullivan became almost a U.S. cultural universal. Ed Sullivan was regarded as a kingmaker, and performers considered an appearance on his program as a guarantee of stardom. The show's iconic status is illustrated by a song from the 1960 musical, ''Bye Bye Birdie''. In the song, "Hymn for a Sunday Evening," a family of viewers expresses their regard for the program in worshipful tones.
In the late 1960s, Sullivan remarked that his program was waning as the decade went on. He realized that to keep viewers, the best and brightest in entertainment had to be seen, or else the viewers were going to keep on changing the channel. Along with declining viewership, ''Ed Sullivan'' attracted a higher median age for the average viewer as the seasons went on. These two factors were the reason for the show's cancellation in 1971. Sullivan would produce one-off specials for CBS until his death in 1974.

Famous performances


''The Ed Sullivan Show'' is especially known to today's generation for airing breakthrough performances by Elvis Presley and The Beatles.
Elvis Presley

On September 9 1956, Presley made his first appearance on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' (after earlier appearances on shows hosted by the Dorsey Brothers and Steve Allen) even though Sullivan had previously vowed never to allow the performer on his show. At the time Presley was filming ''Love Me Tender'' so Sullivan's producer Marlo Lewis flew to Los Angeles, California to supervise the Hollywood side of the show taping. Sullivan, however, was not able to host his show in New York City because he was recovering from a near fatal automobile accident. Oscar-winner Charles Laughton guest-hosted in Sullivan's place. Laughton appears in front of plaques with gold records and states, "These gold records, four of them... are a tribute to the fact that four of his recordings have sold, each sold, more than a million copies. And this by the way is the first time in record making history that a singer has hit such a mark in such a short time. ... And now, away to Hollywood to meet Elvis Presley".
Once on camera, Elvis cleared his throat and said, “Thank you Mr Laughton, ladies and gentlemen. Wow”, and wiped his brow. “This is probably the greatest honor I’ve ever had in my life. Ah. There’s not much I can say except, it really makes you feel good. We want to thank you from the bottom of our heart. And now.." Don't Be Cruel, which was, after a short introduction by Elvis, followed by Love Me Tender.
Elvis's second set in the show consisted of "Ready Teddy" and a short on air comment to Sullivan, “Ah, Mr Sullivan. We know that somewhere out there you are looking in, and, ah, all the boys and myself, and everybody out here, are looking forward to seeing you back on television.” Next, Elvis declares, “Friends, as a great philosopher once said, “You ain’t nothin’ but a Hound Dog...”, as he launches into a short (1:07) version of the song. [1] The show was viewed by a record 60 million people which at the time was 82.6% of the television audience and the largest single audience in television history.
Sullivan hosted a second appearance by Presley on October 28 later the same year. Elvis performed Don't Be Cruel, then Love Me Tender. Sullivan then addresses the audience as he stands beside Elvis, who begins shaking his legs, elicting screams from the audience. By the time Sullivan turns his head, Elvis is standing motionless. After Presley leaves the stage, Sullivan states, “I can’t figure this darn thing out. You know. He just does is this and everybody yells.” Elvis appears a second time in the show and sings Love Me.
Hound Dog October 28, 1956
Still later he does a nearly four minute long verison of Hound Dog and is shown in full the entire song.
For the third and final appearance, January 6 1957 Presley performed a medley of Hound Dog, Love Me Tender, and Heartbreak Hotel, followed by a 50 second version of Don't Be Cruel. For a second set later in the show he did "Too Much" and "When My Blue Moon Turns to Gold Again". For his last set he sang Peace in the Valley.
Although much has been made of the fact that Elvis was shown only from the waist up, except for the short section of Hound Dog, all of the songs on this show were ballads.
Sullivan praised Elvis at the end of the show, saying "This is a real decent, fine boy. We've never had a pleasanter experience on our show with a big name than we've had with you.... You're thoroughly all right." [[1]]
Many television historians consider Elvis Presley's appearances on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' as helping to bridge a large generation gap between Great Depression and World War II era parents and their baby boomer children. Later performers would use this bridge to introduce themselves to millions of American households. Among them were The Rolling Stones, The Doors, and The Beatles.
The Beatles

In late 1963, Sullivan found himself among a throng of 15,000 excited kids at Heathrow Airport in London who were there to see a young British recording group, the Beatles. Sullivan was intrigued. In December, 1963, Beatles manager Brian Epstein arranged for the group, still relatively unknown in the United States, to appear 3 three times on the show at $4000 per appearance. Epstein was then able to convince Capitol Records to mount a publicity campaign for the Beatles arrival, and to release ''I Want to Hold Your Hand''.
The Beatles appeared on 3 consecutive Sundays in February, 1964, to great anticipation and fanfare as [''I Want to Hold Your Hand'' had swiftly risen to #1 in the charts. Their first appearance on February 9 is considered a milestone in American pop culture and the beginning of the British invasion in music. The broadcast drew an estimated 73 million viewers, at the time a record for an American television program, and was characterized by an audience composed largely of screaming teenage girls in tears. The Beatles followed Ed's show opening intro, performing ''All My Loving'', ''Till There Was You'', and ''She Loves You''. Then, late in the hour, they returned to perform ''I Saw Her Standing There'' and ''I Want to Hold Your Hand''.
The Beatles returned to the show, this time broadcast from Miami Beach, on February 16. A crush of people nearly prevented the boys from making it on stage in time. A wedge of policemen was needed, and the band began playing ''She Loves You'' only a few seconds after reaching their instruments. They continued with ''This Boy'', and ''All My Loving'', and returned later to close the show with I Saw Her Standing There'', ''From Me to You'' and ''I Want to Hold Your Hand''.
They were shown on tape February 23 (this appearance had been taped earlier in the day on February 9 before their first live appearance). They followed Ed's intro with ''Twist and Shout'' and ''Please Please Me'' and closed the show once again with ''I Want to Hold Your Hand''.
The Beatles appeared for the final time on September 12 1965 and earned Sullivan a 60% share of the nighttime audience for one of the appearances. This time, they followed 3 acts before coming out to perform ''I Feel Fine'', ''I'm Down'' and ''Act Naturally'', then closed the show with ''Ticket to Ride'', ''Yesterday'' and ''Help!''
Although the appearances by The Beatles and Elvis are considered the most famous rock and roll performances on ''Ed Sullivan'', several months before Elvis debuted, Sullivan invited Bill Haley & His Comets to perform their then-current hit "Rock Around the Clock" in early August 1955. This was later recognized by CBS and others (including music historian Jim Dawson in his book on "Rock Around the Clock") as the first performance of a rock and roll song on a national television program.

Controversies


On November 20, 1955, Bo Diddley was the first African-American to appear on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'', only to infuriate him ("I did two songs and he got mad." Bo Diddley later recalls, "Ed Sullivan said that I was one of the first colored boys to ever double-cross him. Said that I wouldn't last six months."). Diddley had been asked to sing Tennessee Ernie Ford's hit "Sixteen Tons". But when he appeared on stage, he sang his #1 R&B hit "Bo Diddley." He was banned from further appearances.
In 1962, Jackie Mason allegedly gave Sullivan the finger on air. A tape of the incident shows Mason doing his stand-up comedy act and then looking toward Sullivan, commenting that Sullivan was signaling him. Sullivan was reportedly telling Mason to wrap it up, since CBS was about to cut away to show a speech by President John F. Kennedy. Mason began working his own fingers into his act and pointed toward Sullivan with his middle finger slightly separated. After Mason left the stage, the camera then cut to a visibly angry Sullivan. Sullivan argued with Mason backstage, then terminated his contract. Mason denied knowingly giving Sullivan the finger and later filed a libel suit. Sullivan publicly apologized to Mason when he appeared on the show a year later. Mason dropped the lawsuit, but never appeared on the show again.
Bob Dylan was slated to make his first nationwide television appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on May 12, 1963, and intended to perform "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues," a song he wrote lampooning the John Birch Society and the red-hunting paranoia associated with it. During the afternoon rehearsal that day, CBS officials told Dylan they had deemed the song unacceptable for broadcast and wanted him to substitute another. "No; this is what I want to do," Dylan responded. "If I can't play my song, I'd rather not appear on the show." He then left the studio, walking out on the stint.
On September 17 1967 The Doors appeared on the show. The show's network censors demanded the group to change its lyrics for their hit song ''Light My Fire'', altering the line "Girl, we couldn't get much higher" because of what the censors said was a reference to drugs. Jim Morrison, the band's lead singer, didn't agree and sang the original line instead with no notice to the show's producers. Morrison insisted that it was an accident, and that he meant to change the lyric but was so nervous about performing on live television that he forgot to change it when he was singing. Sullivan was reportedly so furious that he refused to shake their hands. They were never invited back.
In contrast, the Rolling Stones were instructed to change the title of their "Let's Spend the Night Together" single for the band's January 15 1967 appearance. The band complied, with Mick Jagger ostentatiously rolling his eyes heavenward whenever he reached the song's one-night-only, clean refrain, "Let's spend some time together."

Broadway


The show is also famous for showcasing original cast members of Broadway shows performing hit numbers from the musicals in which they were then appearing, at a time when this was rare. There were appearances from Broadway celebrities such as Carol Lawrence and Larry Kert singing ''Tonight'' from ''West Side Story'', Julie Andrews singing ''Wouldn't It Be Lovely?'' from ''My Fair Lady'' as well as ''What Do The Simple Folk Do?'' (with Richard Burton) from ''Camelot'', and Richard Kiley singing ''The Impossible Dream'' from ''Man of La Mancha''. ''La Mancha'' leading lady Joan Diener also made an extremely rare television appearance in her stage role of Aldonza/Dulcinea, singing the song ''What Does He Want of Me?''
All of these artists performed their songs wearing the same makeup and costumes that they wore in the shows, in order to preserve the illusion that one was actually seeing the musical in question. This was also extremely rare on television at the time. (Several of these performances have recently been released on a DVD).

Parodies


Due to the program's legacy, many musicians have parodied ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' over the years in countless music videos. Among the notable include:

L.A. Guns' "Never Enough"

Billy Joel's "Tell Her About It"

Nirvana's "In Bloom"

Outkast's "Hey Ya"

★ the Red Hot Chili Peppers's "Dani California"

★ opens their concerts with prerecorded footage of a man doing an intentionally poor Ed Sullivan impression in black and white and then intoducing the band, which plays the first part of the show with an exact recreation of the set the Beatles used.

Celebrity Guests


Note: Year indicates first appearance on the show.
1948


Richard Rodgers

Oscar Hammerstein II

Dean Martin

Jerry Lewis

Monica Lewis

Harry Hershfield

Peggy Lee

Irving Berlin

Bob Hope

Ezzard Charles

Hope Emerson

Nanette Fabray

Nellie Lutcher
1949


Sidney Blackmer

Johnny Farrell

Arthur Murray

The Ravens

Rudy Vallee

Luise Rainer

Sammy Cahn

Skitch Henderson

Lon McCallister

Doretta Morrow

Gene Nelson

Jule Styne

Forrest Tucker

Tony Martin

Jackie Gleason

W.C. Handy

Diana Barrymore

Faye Emerson

Vincent R. Impellitteri

Patricia Morison

Larry Storch

Charles Laughton

Buddy Baer

Anne Jeffreys

Nat King Cole

John Carradine

Jarmila Novotná

Sigmund Romberg

Paul Winchell

Kitty Kallen

Zero Mostel

Harold Lloyd

Vincent Richards

Sam Levenson

Juanita Hall

Carmen Cavallaro

Ethel Smith

Sarah Vaughan

Bobby Riggs

Cab Calloway

Stan Musial

Jackie Robinson

Buddy Rogers

Edward Everett Horton

Hazel Scott

Sonny Tufts

Phil Foster

Louis Prima

Victor Borge

George Kirby

Fletcher Henderson

Peter Lawford

Ethel Waters

Billy Wilder

Pearl Bailey

Joey Bishop

Buddy Young

Oran Page

Jack E. Leonard

Peggy Ann Garner

Georgia Gibbs

Vaughn Monroe

Fran Warren

Billy Eckstine

Adolph Green

Maude Nugent

Johnny Marks
1950


Frankie Laine

Lillian Roth

Vic Damone

Alice Pearce

Dinah Shore

Teresa Brewer

Mel Tormé

Ted Williams

Diana Wynyard

Gordon Jenkins

Margaret O'Brien

The Ink Spots

Sammy Kaye

Virginia Gibson

Bernard Delfont

Don Cornell

Eileen Barton

Milton Berle

Robert Q. Lewis

Ken Murray

Jan August

Willie Mosconi

Kay Thompson

Anna Maria Alberghetti

Ames Brothers

Katherine Dunham

Patti Page

Pauline Betz

Norman Evans

Ben Hogan

Edward Arnold

Perry Como

Jane Froman

Ray Middleton

Kay Starr

Henny Youngman

Eddie Bracken

Eleanor Steber

Mel Allen

Tommy Hanlon Jr

Smith & Dale

Chester Gould

Hedy Lamarr

Pat O'Brien

Gloria Swanson

Bert Lahr

Brandon De Wilde

Julie Harris

Reginald Gardiner

Leonard Warren

Sarah Churchill

Myron Cohen

Lauritz Melchior

John O'Hara

Flora Robson

Jerome Hines

Cornelia Otis Skinner

Margaret Truman

Buster Keaton

Jimmy Nelson

Arthur Lake

Victor Moore

Rudolf Friml

Nancy Walker

Phil Rizzuto

Princeton Triangle Club

Ted Mack

David Niven
1951


Jack Carter

Sugar Ray Robinson

Moira Shearer

Sam Snead

Jan Murray

Roland Young

Margot Fonteyn

Judith Anderson

Dick Haymes

Irv Kupcinet

Ray McKinley

Molly Picon

Hume Cronyn

Jessica Tandy

Jo Sullivan

Bobby Van

Alan Young

Helen Forrest

Eva Le Gallienne

Risë Stevens

Lucienne Boyer

Paul Hartman

Terry-Thomas

Jack Dempsey

Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.

Les Paul

Mary Ford

Donald Crisp

John Gielgud

Sidney Kingsley

Claude Rains

Peter Lind Hayes

Jan Peerce

Jean Babilée

Ralph Bellamy

Marc Connelly

Eddie Arcaro

Pinky Lee

Robert Alda

Menasha Skulnik

Johnny Desmond

Bil Baird

Walter Abel

Arthur Godfrey

Robert Merrill

Eddie Anderson

Jane Morgan

Yul Brynner

Jersey Joe Walcott

Professor Backwards

Rose Marie

Tony Fontane

Jeanette MacDonald

Gene Raymond

Sammy Davis Jr.

Maria Tallchief

Dolores Gray

Wally Cox

Lena Horne

Charles Winninger

Otto Harbach

Gertrude Lawrence

Elsa Lanchester

Sal Maglie

Evelyn Knight

Helen Hayes

Martha Scott

Bobby Thomson

Allie Reynolds

Eddie Stanky

Humphrey Bogart

Lauren Bacall

Michael Bentine

Yogi Berra

José Greco

Gil McDougald

Constance Bennett

Broderick Crawford

Guy Mitchell

Jack Pearl

April Stevens

Morton Downey

Rocky Marciano

Dane Clark

Helen Gallagher

Alfred Lunt

James Mason

Raymond Massey

Robert E. Sherwood

Sophie Tucker

Ramon Novarro
1952


Paul Henreid

Mahalia Jackson

Bert Wheeler

Audrey Hepburn

Beatrice Lillie

Gilbert Miller

Toni Arden

Monty Woolley

Virginia Grey

Eddie Dowling

Ted Lewis

Eddie Fisher

Rex Harrison

Tony Bennett

Marian Anderson

Dorothy Kirsten

Errol Flynn

Paulette Goddard

Dorothy Dandridge

Eartha Kitt

Yehudi Menuhin

Elizabeth Kenny

Vivienne Segal

Celeste Holm

Cloris Leachman

Ray Middleton

John Raitt

Jack Cassidy

Billy Daniels

Orson Bean

Leroy Anderson

Cedric Hardwicke

Will Rogers, Jr.

Roger Price

Joel Grey

William Bendix

Lucille Ball
1955

William Warfield

References



★ Joe Garner, ''Stay Tuned: Television's Unforgettable Moments'' (Andrews McMeel Publishing; 2002) ISBN 0-7407-2693-5

Slate article about the Beatles' appearances on the Ed Sullivan show

External Links





TV.com episode listing

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves