Steve Allen
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Stephen Valentine Patrick William Allen (December 26, 1921 – October 30, 2000) was an American musician, comedian, and writer who was instrumental in innovating the concept of the television talk show. Allen is called the Father of TV Talk Shows.
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Biography
Allen was born on St Stephen's Day (hence his first name) to Carroll Allen and Belle Montrose, Irish-American Catholics. Milton Berle once called Belle Montrose "the funniest woman in vaudeville."
After years in radio, Allen conceived a local New York talk-variety TV program in 1953 for what is now WNBC-TV. The following year, on September 27, 1954, the show went on the full NBC network as The Tonight Show, with fellow radio personality Gene Rayburn as the original announcer/sidekick. The show ran from 11:15 pm to 1:00 am on the East Coast.
While Pat Weaver, the developer of The Today Show, is often credited as Tonight's creator as well, Allen often pointed out that the show had already been "created"—by himself—as a local show.
"This is Tonight, and I can't think of too much to tell you about it except I want to give you the bad news first: this program is going to go on forever," Allen told his nationwide audience that first evening. "Boy, you think you're tired now. Wait until you see one o'clock roll around."
Allen also joked that they selected the Hudson Theatre on 44th Street in Manhattan for the program because "I think it sleeps around 800 people."
It was as host of The Tonight Show that Allen pioneered the "man on the street" and audience-participation comedy bits that have become commonplace in late-night TV.
In 1956, while still hosting Tonight, Allen added a Sunday-evening variety show. The Allen programs helped nurture the careers of singers Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme and Sammy Davis, Jr. Allen also provided a nationwide audience for his famous "man on the street"— comics such as Ernie Kovacs, Pat Harrington, Jr., Don Knotts, Louis Nye, Bill Dana, Dayton Allen, and Tom Poston.
Allen remained host of Tonight until 1957, when he left. (After an ill-fated nightlife-oriented replacement Tonight! America After Dark, the old Tonight format returned later in the year with Jack Paar at the helm.) Allen amassed a huge windfall for his work because he had opted to be paid in Polaroid stock.
John Antonelli's 1985 documentary Kerouac, the Movie starts and ends with footage of Kerouac reading from On the Road as Allen accompanies on soft jazz piano, on The Steve Allen Plymouth Show in 1959. "Are you nervous?" Allen asks him, and Kerouac answers, nervously, "Naw."
In his introduction to Lenny Bruce on April 9, 1959, Allen gave a powerful warning: "We get a great deal of mail from our viewers commenting on our sketches, indicating their dislikes, and whether you realize it or not, there is just about no joke or sketch, particularly of a satirical sort, that will not offend somebody, a cowboy or a drunk. I don't want to equate those two; already I can see the cards coming in! Here is how we are going to face the problem, we have decided that once a month we will book a comedian who will offend everybody. Then, we'll get it over with, see? A man who will disturb a great many social groups. I'm serious, his satirical comments refer to many things not ordinarily discussed on TV; it serves you right. That way the NBC mail department will know in advance that complaints are coming in, they hire a few extra girls, and they get the answers ready, "We're very sorry, we didn't mean a thing", and the who thing is handled with neatness and dispatch. So, ladies and gentlemen, here is the very shocking comedian, the most shocking comedian of our time, a young man who is skyrocketing to fame, Lenny Bruce!"
Allen went on to host a slew of television programs up until the 1980s, including the game show I've Got a Secret and The New Steve Allen Show in 1961. He was a regular on the extremely popular panel game show What's My Line? from 1953 to 1954 and returned as a guest panelist until the series' end in 1967.
Allen was also a composer who supposedly wrote over 7,000 songs. In one famous stunt, he made a bet with singer-songwriter Frankie Laine that he could write fifty songs a day for a week. Composing on public display in the window of a Hollywood music store, Allen met the quota, winning $1,000 from Mr. Laine. One of the songs "Let's Go to Church Next Sunday" was recorded by both Perry Como and Margaret Whiting. Allen's best known songs are "This Could Be the Start of Something Big" and "The Gravy Waltz," which won a Grammy Award in 1963 for best jazz composition. Allen was also an actor, appearing in such films as The Benny Goodman Story, starring as Benny Goodman, in 1955.
Allen was also the producer of the award-winning PBS series Meeting of Minds, a "talk show" with notable historical figures, with Steve Allen serving as host. This series pitted Socrates, Marie Antoinette, Thomas Paine, Sir Thomas More, Attila the Hun, Karl Marx, Emily Dickinson, Charles Darwin, Galileo Galilei, and other historical figures in dialogue and argument. A proposed revival of this show was rejected as "too cerebral."
He was also an accomplished comedy writer and author of over fifty books, including Dumbth, a commentary on the American educational system and Steve Allen on the Bible, Religion, and Morality.
Allen was a secular humanist and Humanist Laureate for the Academy of Humanism, a member of CSICOP and the Council for Secular Humanism. He was a student and supporter of general semantics, recommending it in Dumbth and giving the Alfred Korzybski Memorial Lecture in 1992. Allen was a supporter of world government and served on the World Federalist Association Board of Advisers. [1]
In spite of his liberal position on free speech, his later concerns about the smuttiness he observed on television caused him to make proposals restricting the content of programs, allying himself with the Parents Television Council. He was also notoriously contemptuous of rock 'n' roll music. On one occasion, in a spirit of not-so-subtle mockery, he had Elvis Presley wear a top hat and tails while singing "Hound Dog" to an actual hound, who was similarly attired. Allen also was known to "interpret" the lyrics of actual rock songs to his audience as little more than a series of grunts.
Allen's second wife was actress Jayne Meadows, by whom he had one son. They were married from 1954 until his death in 2000. He died of a cardiac disease triggered by a previous minor traffic accident the same day (October 30, 2000) at the age of 78 and is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park at Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles, California.
Steve Allen has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: a TV star at 1720 Vine St. and a radio star at 1537 Vine St.
Shows
- Songs for Sale (1950- 1952)
- The Steve Allen Show (1950)
- The Tonight Show (1954 - 1956, NBC)
- The Steve Allen Show
- Talent Patrol (1953 - 1955)
- What's My Line? (regular panelist from 1953 - 1954)
- I've Got a Secret (1964 -1967)
- Meeting of Minds (1977 - 1981, PBS)
- Steve Allen Comedy Hour (1980 - 1981)
- The Start of Something Big (1985 - 1986)
Songs
- "This Could Be the Start of Something Big"
- "The Gravy Waltz"
Books
- Bop Fables (1955)
- Fourteen for Tonight (1955)
- Short story collection
- The Funny Men (1956)
- Wry on the Rocks (1956)
- Poetry
- The Girls on the Tenth Floor and Other Stories (1958)
- 1970 printing: ISBN 0836936086
- The Question Man... (1959)
- Mark It and Strike It: An Autobiography (1960)
- Not All of Your Laughter, Not All of Your Tears (1962)
- Dialogues in Americanism (1964)
- Letter to a Conservative (1965)
- The Ground is Our Table (1966)
- Bigger Than A Breadbox (1967)
- The Flash of Swallows (1969)
- The Wake (1972)
- Princess Snip-Snip and the Puppy-Kittens (1973)
- Curses! or...How Never to Be Foiled Again (1973)
- What To Say When It Rains (1974)
- Schmock-Schmock! (1975)
- Meeting of Minds (1978)
- ISBN 0517533839
- 1989 printing: ISBN 0879755504
- Chopped-Up Chinese (1978)
- Ripoff: A Look at Corruption in America (1979)
- Meeting of Minds, Second Series (1979)
- ISBN 0517538946
- 1989 printing: ISBN 0879755652
- Explaining China (1980)
- Funny People (1981)
- Beloved Son: A Story of the Jesus Cults (1982)
- More Funny People (1982)
- How to Make a Speech (1986)
- How to Be Funny: Discovering the Comic You (1987)
- With Jane Wollman
- ISBN 0070011990
- 1992 printing: ISBN 0879757922
- 1998 revised edition: ISBN 1573922064
- The Passionate Nonsmoker's Bill of Rights: The First Guide to Enacting Nonsmoking Legislation (1989)
- "Dumbth": And 81 Ways to Make Americans Smarter (1989)
- ISBN 0879755393
- 1998 revised edition: ISBN 1573922374
- Meeting of Minds, Vol. III (1989)
- Meeting of Minds, Vol. IV (1989)
- The Public Hating: A Collection of Short Stories (1990)
- Steve Allen on the Bible, Religion & Morality (1990)
- Hi-Ho, Steverino: The Story of My Adventures in the Wonderful Wacky World of Television (1992)
- ISBN 0942637550
- large-print edition: ISBN 1560545216
- More Steve Allen on the Bible, Religion & Morality (1993)
- Make 'em Laugh (1993)
- Reflections (1994)
- The Man Who Turned Back the Clock, and Other Short Stories (1995)
- The Bug and the Slug in the Rug (1995)
- But Seriously...: Steve Allen Speaks His Mind (1996)
- Steve Allen's Songs: 100 Lyrics with Commentary (1999)
- Steve Allen's Private Joke File (2000)
- Vulgarians at the Gate: Trash TV and Raunch Radio--Raising the Standards of Popular Culture (2001)
Allen's series of mystery novels "starring" himself and wife Jayne Meadows was actually ghostwritten by Walter J. Sheldon, and later Robert Westbrook)
- Murder in Manhattan (1990)
- Murder in Vegas (1991)
- The Murder Game (1993)
- Murder on the Atlantic (1995)
- Murder on the Glitter Box (1989)
- The Talk Show Murders (1982)
- Wake Up to Murder (1996)
- Die Laughing (1998)
- Murder in Hawaii (1999)
Quote
"How many humanists does it take to screw in a lightbulb? Ten: one to screw in the lightbulb and nine to fight for the right to do so!"
Other
- Steve Allen showed up on two episodes of the series The Simpsons, in Separate Vocations in the third season, and 'Round Springfield in the sixth season. He also appeared in the Family Guy movie: Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story.
External links
- The Official Website of Steve Allen
- Steve Allen tribute (Skeptical Inquirer January 2001)
- Record for Steve Allen at Findagrave.com
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