Ed McMahon Passes Away At 86

The quintessential sidekick succumbed to a “multitude of health problems"
June 23rd, 2009

Very sad news to pass along today … Ed McMahon, most famously known as Johnny Carson’s sidekick during his tenure as host of The Tonight Show, passed away early Tuesday morning. Altho his publicist did not give an exact cause of death, he did reveal that McMahon suffered from a “multitude of health problems the last few months.” Ed McMahon was 86 years old:


Ed McMahon, who for nearly 30 years was Johnny Carson’s affable second banana on “The Tonight Show,” introducing it with his ringing trademark call, “Heeeere’s Johnny!,” died early Tuesday in Los Angeles. He was 86. His publicist, Howard Bragman, told NBC that Mr. McMahon died at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center surrounded by his family. Mr. Bragman did not give a cause of death, saying only that Mr. McMahon had a “multitude of health problems the last few months.” A person close to Mr. McMahon, speaking anonymously because he was not authorized to release information, said Mr. McMahon had bone cancer, among other ailments, The Associated Press reported. In February he had been hospitalized with pneumonia, Mr. Bragman told CNN. With his broad, genial, regular-guy features, Mr. McMahon had the face of someone you would buy a used car from. Indeed, for decades he was one of television’s most ubiquitous pitchmen, selling everything from boats to beer. But it was in the role of the faithful Tonto to Carson’s wry Lone Ranger that Mr. McMahon made his sideman’s mark. After he rolled out his introduction like a red carpet for the boss, and after Carson delivered his nightly monologue, Mr. McMahon, in jacket and tie, would take his seat on the couch beside the host’s desk, chat and banter with Carson a bit before the guests came on and almost invariably guffaw at his jokes, even when he was the butt of them. When the guests did arrive, he would slide over to make room and rarely interrupt. The work paid handsomely — some reports said $5 million a year — and it made Mr. McMahon a familiar face, and voice, in millions of households. “The Tonight Show” became the country’s most popular late-night television diversion, and the “Heeeere’s Johnny” introduction became a national catchphrase. “I laugh for an hour and then go home,” Mr. McMahon once said. “I’ve got the world’s greatest job.” Off camera he and Carson were friends and occasional drinking buddies, although Mr. McMahon noted that Carson, who died in 2005, was not terribly social. “He doesn’t give friendship easily or need it,” he said. “He packs a tight suitcase.” Mr. McMahon rarely ran the risk of upstaging Carson. “To me, he’s the star and I’m on the sidelines, just nudging him a bit,” he said. But early in their association he slipped up. It happened one night when Carson was telling the audience about a study concluding that mosquitoes preferred to bite “warm-blooded, passionate people.” Before Carson could deliver his punch line, Mr. McMahon slapped his own arm, as if crushing a mosquito. The audience roared. Carson coolly produced a giant can of insect spray from under his desk and said, glaring at Mr. McMahon, “I guess I won’t be needing this prop, will I?” It was a rare flare-up in an association that began in the late 1950s, when Carson was the host of the ABC comedy quiz show “Do You Trust Your Wife?” and Mr. McMahon was hired to announce the show and read the commercials. (The title was later changed to “Who Do You Trust?”) In 1962, when Carson moved to “The Tonight Show,” replacing Jack Paar, he took Mr. McMahon with him. Mr. McMahon warmed up the studio audience, read commercials and served as Carson’s straight man until Carson left the show in 1992. Though Mr. McMahon sometimes projected the image of an amiable lush and got laughs for it, the cup that was always before him on “The Tonight Show” held only iced tea, he said. Years later, he said he had missed only three tapings in 30 years, because of colds or the flu. Edward Leo Peter McMahon Jr. was born in Detroit on March 6, 1923 … And for more than 40 years, Mr. McMahon appeared with Jerry Lewis on Mr. Lewis’s Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon over Labor Day Weekend. He did some acting as well. Among the movies he appeared in were “The Incident” (1967), in which he played a passenger brutalized by young thugs on a New York subway train; “Slaughter’s Big Rip-Off” (1973); and “Fun With Dick and Jane” (1977). After leaving “The Tonight Show,” Mr. McMahon appeared in summer stock and kept his hand in television. He was the host of the talent show “Star Search”; he joined Dick Clark on “TV’s Bloopers and Practical Jokes”; he was Tom Arnold’s sidekick on the short-lived sitcom “The Tom Show.” For the USA Radio Network, he broadcast “Ed McMahon’s Lifestyles Live” weekly from his home … Despite his many business ventures, Mr. McMahon encountered hard times in his last years. He was forced to sell his Beverly Hills mansion last year after falling behind in payments on $4.8 million in mortgages, and a former lawyer sued him for nonpayment of fees. Mr. McMahon blamed two divorces, bad money management and bad investments for his woes. “I made a lot of money, but you can spend a lot of money,” he said by way of explanation … Mr. McMahon regarded his friendship with Johnny Carson as a marriage of sorts. “Most comic teams are not good friends or even friends at all,” he wrote in “Here’s Johnny.” “Laurel and Hardy didn’t hang out together, Abbott and Costello weren’t best of friends.” But, he added, “Johnny and I were the happy exception.” “For 40 years Johnny and I were as close as two nonmarried people can be,” he wrote. “And if he heard me say that, he might say, ‘Ed, I always felt you were my insignificant other.’”

Very, very sad news :( While many people remember Ed McMahon as Carson’s sidekick, I will always remember him first as the host of Star Search. That show was the American Idol of the 1980’s … McMahon helped cultivate the careers of Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Xtina Aguilera, Destiny’s Child, Tiffany, Alanis Morrissette, Usher and more — all of these stars were contestants on Star Search back in the day. News of his recent money troubles was very sad to me … I’m pained to learn that he was suffering from medical ailments as well. Ed McMahon was a swell guy … he will be missed.

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7 Responses to “Ed McMahon Passes Away At 86”

  1. Bleeding Ears Says:

    I met Ed in LAX one time and he was a pleasant guy, his young bodyguard – not so much… it’s not like I tried to rush Ed and touch him or anything, I just walked up and said ‘Hey Ed, what’s happening?’ and the bodyguard stepped on my toes and asked me to keep a ‘polite distance’. But I digress…

  2. Jadedkitten Says:

    OMG D: RIP :(

  3. Marisa Says:

    sooo sad… R.i.P.

  4. Sarah Says:

    Damn. All the great’s from the Golden Age of movies and television are leaving us. Everybody is getting elderly and moving on to a better place and all, but I’m going to miss them all so much. :(

  5. nae Says:

    so sad
    i LOVED star search!!!!

  6. CB Says:

    Star Search forever!

  7. By the way, did you know……………. « Callsign Snoopys Doghouse Says:

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