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The Dick Cavett Show

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The Dick Cavett Show has been the title of many talk shows hosted by Dick Cavett on several television networks, including:

Show History

When used without qualification, the title most often refers to the first three shows on ABC and especially the late-night show, which ran opposite NBC's popular The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Cavett took the time slot over from Joey Bishop. The Cavett show is generally acknowledged as the most noble and worthy attempt to go head-to-head with the unassailable Carson. The Dick Cavett Show was also the name of a short-lived radio show.

While Cavett and Carson shared many of the same guests, Cavett was receptive to rock and roll artists to a degree unusual at the time, as well as authors, politicians, and other personalities outside the entertainment field. (On The Tonight Show, such guests seldom took center stage, but would be booked last in order to fill the remaining time, if they appeared at all.) The wider variety of guests, combined with Cavett's literate and intelligent approach to comedy, appealed to a significant enough minority of viewers to keep the show running for several years despite the competition.

On all three of the early ABC shows, the bandleader was Bobby Rosengarden and the announcer was Fred Foy of The Lone Ranger fame. The morning show was produced by Woody Fraser, the late-night show by John Gilroy. Cavett's writer (when any was needed) was Dave Lloyd.

The late-night show's 45-minute midpoint would always be signaled, in between commercials, by "Glitter and Be Gay" from Leonard Bernstein's Candide. The Candide snippet has since become Cavett's theme song, used as the intro to his later PBS series (recorded by a Rosengarden-led combo) and played by the house band on his various talk-show appearances over the last 30 years.

The very first show (in daytime) featured Gore Vidal, Muhammad Ali, and Angela Lansbury, though this show was aired second, as ABC executives were unhappy with it. ABC pressured Cavett to "get big names," even though the shows without them got higher ratings and more critical acclaim.

In addition to the usual monologue, Cavett opened each show reading selected questions written by audience members, to which he would respond with witty rejoinders. ("'What makes New York so crummy these days?' Tourists.")

Notable moments

The show was often unpredictable and produced some notoriously tense moments.

Trivia

DVD Release

In August 2005, a three-disc DVD set was released, The Dick Cavett Show—Rock Icons, featuring complete show episodes that included appearances by Bowie, David Crosby, George Harrison, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Joni Mitchell, The Rolling Stones, Ravi Shankar, Paul Simon, Sly & the Family Stone, Stephen Stills, Stevie Wonder, and other guests. This was followed by a 2 DVD set called the 'John and Yoko Collection' which contained both appearances by John Lennon and Yoko Ono from 1971–72.

Celebrity guests

listed alphabetically

References

External links

 


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