- Paar, Jack Harold
-
▪ 2005American humorist (b. May 1, 1918, Canton, Ohio—d. Jan. 27, 2004, Greenwich, Conn.), defined the format for late-night television during his years (1957–62) as host of The Tonight Show (eventually The Jack Paar Show), adopting a simple set made up of sofa and desk and introducing the use of an opening monologue and friendly banter with the announcer. With his wit, urbanity, and conversational skills—punctuated with his signature “I kid you not,” which became a popular catchphrase—he engaged his guests, many of whom got their boost to stardom on his show, in intelligent, entertaining chats and set the standard for TV talk shows. Paar quit school when he was 16 and went to work first as a radio announcer and later as a comic and disc jockey on a series of radio stations. He entered the army in 1942 and spent the remainder of World War II as a disc jockey and entertainer, delighting his audience of enlisted men by skewering authority figures, especially military officers. After the war Paar performed on radio as a vacation replacement for Jack Benny and Arthur Godfrey, had a few short-lived shows, and had small parts in a few movies, and in 1954 he began an 11-month stint as host of the CBS Morning Show. Despite the fact that none of his shows had lasted long, he was chosen to replace Steve Allen as host of The Tonight Show. He caught the public's attention immediately and held it not only with fascinating guests and features—he went to Cuba to interview Fidel Castro, and he showed film clips that gave Americans their first glimpse of the Beatles—but also with unpredictable behaviour. The emotional Paar even quit the show abruptly once during a broadcast in 1960 when an NBC censor cut a humorous story because it contained the term W.C., for “water closet,” but he returned a few weeks later, beginning his opening statements with a simple “As I was saying.…” After leaving the show, he served as host of a weekly TV show until 1965. Paar wrote four books, including I Kid You Not (1960; with John Reddy) and Three on a Toothbrush (1965).
* * *
Universalium. 2010.