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Ed Sullivan

Edward Vincent Sullivan (September 28, 1901 – October 13, 1974) was an American television host, impresario,[2] sports and entertainment reporter, and syndicated columnist for the New York Daily News and the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate. He was the creator and host of the television variety program The Toast of the Town, which in 1955 was renamed The Ed Sullivan Show. Broadcast from 1948 to 1971, it set a record as the longest-running variety show in U.S. broadcast history.[3] "It was, by almost any measure, the last great American TV show", said television critic David Hinckley. "It's one of our fondest, dearest pop culture memories."[4]

Ed Sullivan
Sullivan in 1955
Born
Edward Vincent Sullivan

(1901-09-28)September 28, 1901
New York City, U.S.
DiedOctober 13, 1974(1974-10-13) (aged 73)
New York City, U.S.
Burial placeFerncliff Cemetery
Occupation(s)Television host, reporter, newspaper columnist
Years active1932–1974
Spouse
Sylvia Weinstein Sullivan
(m. 1930; died 1973)
Children1[1]

Sullivan was a broadcasting pioneer during the early years of American television. As critic David Bianculli wrote, "Before MTV, Sullivan presented rock acts. Before Bravo, he presented jazz and classical music and theater. Before the Comedy Channel, even before there was The Tonight Show, Sullivan discovered, anointed and popularized young comedians. Before there were 500 channels, before there was cable, Ed Sullivan was where the choice was. From the start, he was indeed 'the Toast of the Town'."[5] In 1996, Sullivan was ranked number 50 on TV Guide's "50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time".[6]

Early life and career edit

Sullivan was born on September 28, 1901, in Harlem, New York City, to Elizabeth F. (née Smith) and Peter Arthur Sullivan, a customs house employee. His twin brother Daniel was sickly and lived only a few months.[7] Sullivan was raised in Port Chester, New York, where the family lived in a small red brick home at 53 Washington Street.[8] He was of Irish descent.[9] The family loved music, frequently playing the piano, singing and playing phonograph records. Sullivan was a gifted athlete in high school, earning 12 athletic letters at Port Chester High School. He played football as a halfback, basketball as a guard and track as a sprinter. With the baseball team, Sullivan was a catcher and the team's captain, leading the team to several championships. Sullivan noted that, in the state of New York, integration was taken for granted in high-school sports: "When we went up into Connecticut, we ran into clubs that had Negro players. In those days this was accepted as commonplace; and so, my instinctive antagonism years later to any theory that a Negro wasn't a worthy opponent or was an inferior person. It was just as simple as that."[10]

Sullivan landed his first job at The Port Chester Daily Item, a local newspaper for which he had written sports news while in high school and which he joined full-time after graduation. In 1919, he joined The Hartford Post, but the newspaper folded in his first week there. He next worked for The New York Evening Mail as a sports reporter. After the newspaper closed in 1923, he bounced through a series of news jobs with the Associated Press, the Philadelphia Bulletin, The Morning World, The Morning Telegraph, The New York Bulletin and The Leader. In 1927, Sullivan joined The New York Evening Graphic, first as a sports writer and then as a sports editor.

In 1929, when Walter Winchell moved to The Daily Mirror, Sullivan was named the New York Evening Graphic's Broadway columnist. He left the paper for the city's largest tabloid, the New York Daily News. His column, "Little Old New York", concentrated on Broadway shows and gossip, and Sullivan also delivered showbusiness news broadcasts on radio. In 1933, Sullivan wrote and starred in the film Mr. Broadway, in which he guided the audience around New York nightspots to meet entertainers and celebrities. Sullivan soon became a powerful force in the entertainment world and one of Winchell's main rivals, setting the El Morocco nightclub in New York as his unofficial headquarters against Winchell's seat of power at the nearby Stork Club. Sullivan continued writing for the New York Daily News throughout his broadcasting career, and his popularity long outlived that of Winchell. In the late 1960s, Sullivan praised Winchell's legacy in a magazine interview, leading to a major reconciliation between the longtime adversaries.

Throughout his career as a columnist, Sullivan had dabbled in entertainment, producing vaudeville shows with which he appeared as master of ceremonies in the 1920s and 1930s, directing a radio program over the original WABC and organizing benefit reviews for various causes.

Radio edit

In 1941, Sullivan became host of the Summer Silver Theater, a variety program on CBS, with Will Bradley as bandleader and a guest star featured each week.[11]

Television edit

 
Sullivan with Cole Porter on Toast of the Town, 1952

In 1948, producer Marlo Lewis convinced CBS to hire Sullivan to host a weekly Sunday-night television variety show, Toast of the Town, which later became The Ed Sullivan Show. Debuting in June 1948, the show was originally broadcast from Maxine Elliott's Theatre on West 39th Street in New York. In January 1953, it moved to CBS-TV Studio 50 at 1697 Broadway, a former CBS Radio playhouse that in 1967 was renamed the Ed Sullivan Theater (and was later the home of the Late Show with David Letterman and The Late Show with Stephen Colbert).[12]

Television critics gave the new show and its host poor reviews.[13] Harriet Van Horne alleged that "he got where he is not by having a personality, but by having no personality." (The host wrote to the critic, "Dear Miss Van Horne: You bitch. Sincerely, Ed Sullivan.") Sullivan had little acting ability; in 1967, 20 years after his show's debut, Time magazine asked, "What exactly is Ed Sullivan's talent?" His mannerisms on camera were so awkward that some viewers believed the host suffered from Bell's palsy.[14] Time in 1955 stated that Sullivan resembled

a cigar-store Indian, the Cardiff Giant and a stone-faced monument just off the boat from Easter Island. He moves like a sleepwalker; his smile is that of a man sucking a lemon; his speech is frequently lost in a thicket of syntax; his eyes pop from their sockets or sink so deep in their bags that they seem to be peering up at the camera from the bottom of twin wells.[15]

 
Carmen Miranda on The Ed Sullivan Show, 1953

"Yet," the magazine concluded, "instead of frightening children, Ed Sullivan charms the whole family." Sullivan appeared to the audience as an average guy who brought the great acts of show business to their home televisions. "Ed Sullivan will last", comedian Fred Allen said, "as long as someone else has talent."[15] Frequent guest Alan King said, "Ed does nothing, but he does it better than anyone else in television."[16] A typical show would feature a vaudeville act (such as acrobats, jugglers or magicians), one or two popular comedians, a singing star, a figure from the legitimate theater, an appearance by puppet Topo Gigio or a popular athlete. The bill was often international in scope, with many European performers appearing along with the American artists.

Sullivan had a healthy sense of humor about himself and permitted and even encouraged impersonators such as John Byner, Frank Gorshin, Rich Little and especially Will Jordan to imitate him on his show. Johnny Carson also performed a fair impression, and even Joan Rivers imitated Sullivan's unique posture. The impressionists exaggerated his stiffness, raised shoulders and nasal tenor phrasing, along with some of his commonly used introductions, such as "And now, right here on our stage ...", "For all you youngsters out there ..." and "a really big shew" (his pronunciation of the word "show"). The latter phrase was in fact in the exclusive domain of his impressionists, as Sullivan never actually spoke the phrase "really big show" during the opening introduction of any episode in the entire history of the series. Jordan portrayed Sullivan in the films I Wanna Hold Your Hand, The Buddy Holly Story, The Doors, Mr. Saturday Night, Down with Love and in the 1979 television movie Elvis.

Sullivan played himself, parodying his mannerisms as directed by Jerry Lewis, in Lewis' 1964 film The Patsy.

Sullivan inspired a song in the musical Bye Bye Birdie[17] and in 1963 appeared as himself in the film.

In 1954, Sullivan appeared as a cohost on the television musical special General Foods 25th Anniversary Show: A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein.[18]

Legacy edit

 
Sullivan congratulates 13-year-old Itzhak Perlman after a concert in Tel Aviv, 1958.

Sullivan was quoted as saying: "In the conduct of my own show, I've never asked a performer his religion, his race or his politics. Performers are engaged on the basis of their abilities. I believe that this is another quality of our show that has helped win it a wide and loyal audience."[19] Although Sullivan was wary of Elvis Presley's image and initially said that he would never book him, Presley became too big a name to ignore; in 1956, Sullivan signed him for three appearances.[17][20] Six weeks earlier in August 1956, Sullivan and his son-in-law, the producer of the show, Robert Precht, were in a near fatal car accident near Sullivan's Connecticut country home in Southbury, Connecticut, and missed Presley's first appearance on September 9, when Charles Laughton introduced Presley.[21] After Sullivan came to know Presley personally, he made amends by telling his audience, "This is a real decent, fine boy."[22]

 
Sullivan with The Beatles, 1964

Sullivan's failure to scoop the TV industry with Presley made him determined to book the next big sensation first. In November 1963, while at Heathrow Airport, Sullivan witnessed the Beatlemania spectacle as the band returned from Sweden and the terminal was overrun by screaming teens. At first Sullivan was reluctant to book the Beatles because the band did not yet have a commercially successful single in the U.S., but at the behest of his friend Sid Bernstein, Sullivan signed the group. Their initial Sullivan show appearance on February 9, 1964, was the most-watched program in TV history to that point.[23] The Beatles appeared three more times in person and submitted filmed performances afterwards. The Dave Clark Five, who claimed a "cleaner" image than the Beatles, made 13 appearances on the show, more than any other UK group.

Unlike many shows of the time, Sullivan asked that most musical acts perform their music live, rather than lip-synching to their recordings.[citation needed] However, exceptions were made, such as when a microphone could not be placed close enough to a performer for technical reasons. An example was B.J. Thomas' 1969 performance of "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head", in which water was sprinkled on him as a special effect. In 1969, Sullivan presented the Jackson 5 with their first single "I Want You Back", which ousted Thomas' song from the top spot of the Billboard Hot 100.

 
Sullivan, in full clown regalia, hosting the 1972 special Clownaround

Sullivan had an appreciation for black entertainers. According to biographer Gerald Nachman, "Most TV variety shows welcomed 'acceptable' black superstars like Louis Armstrong, Pearl Bailey and Sammy Davis Jr. ... but in the early 1950s, long before it was fashionable, Sullivan was presenting the much more obscure black entertainers he had enjoyed in Harlem on his uptown rounds — legends like Peg Leg Bates, Pigmeat Markham and Tim Moore ... strangers to white America."[24] He hosted pioneering TV appearances by Bo Diddley, the Platters, Brook Benton, Jackie Wilson, Fats Domino and numerous Motown acts including the Supremes, who appeared 17 times.[25] As the critic John Leonard wrote, "There wasn't an important black artist who didn't appear on Ed's show."[26]

Sullivan defied pressure to exclude black entertainers or to avoid interacting with them on screen. "Sullivan had to fend off his hard-won sponsor, Ford's Lincoln dealers, after kissing Pearl Bailey on the cheek and daring to shake Nat King Cole's hand," Nachman wrote.[27] According to biographer Jerry Bowles, "Sullivan once had a Ford executive thrown out of the theatre when he suggested that Sullivan stop booking so many black acts. And a dealer in Cleveland told him 'We realize that you got to have niggers on your show. But do you have to put your arm around Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson at the end of his dance?' Sullivan had to be physically restrained from beating the man to a pulp."[28] Sullivan later raised money to help pay for Robinson's funeral.[29] He said: "As a Catholic, it was inevitable that I would despise intolerance, because Catholics suffered more than their share of it. As I grew up, the causes of minorities were part and parcel of me. Negroes and Jews were the minority causes closest at hand. I need no urging to take a plunge in and help."[30]

At a time when television had not yet embraced country and western music, Sullivan featured Nashville performers on his program. This in turn paved the way for shows such as Hee Haw and variety shows hosted by Johnny Cash, Glen Campbell and other country singers.[31]

The Canadian comedy duo Wayne and Shuster made the most appearances of any act throughout the show's run with 67 appearances between 1958 and 1969.

Sullivan appeared as himself on other television programs, including an April 1958 episode of the Howard Duff and Ida Lupino CBS situation comedy Mr. Adams and Eve. On September 14, 1958, Sullivan appeared on What's My Line? as a mystery guest. In 1961, Sullivan substituted for Red Skelton on The Red Skelton Show. Sullivan took Skelton's roles in the various comedy sketches, with Skelton's hobo character Freddie the Freeloader renamed Eddie the Freeloader.

Personality edit

Sullivan was quick to take offense if he felt that he had been crossed, and he could hold a grudge for a long time. As he told biographer Gerald Nachman, "I'm a pop-off. I flare up, then I go around apologizing."[32] "Armed with an Irish temper and thin skin," wrote Nachman, "Ed brought to his feuds a hunger for combat fed by his coverage of, and devotion to, boxing."[33] Bo Diddley, Buddy Holly, Jackie Mason, and Jim Morrison were parties to some of Sullivan's most storied conflicts.

For his second Sullivan appearance in 1955, Bo Diddley planned to sing his namesake hit, "Bo Diddley", but Sullivan told him to perform Tennessee Ernie Ford's song "Sixteen Tons". "That would have been the end of my career right there," Diddley told his biographer,[34] so he sang "Bo Diddley" anyway. Sullivan was enraged: "You're the first black boy that ever double-crossed me on the show," Diddley quoted him as saying. "We didn't have much to do with each other after that."[35] Later, Diddley resented that Elvis Presley, whom he accused of copying his revolutionary style and beat, received the attention and accolades on Sullivan's show that he felt were rightfully his. "I am owed," he said, "and I never got paid."[36] "He might have," wrote Nachman, "had things gone smoother with Sullivan."[37]

Buddy Holly and the Crickets first appeared on the Sullivan show in 1957 to an enthusiastic response. For their second appearance in January 1958, Sullivan considered the lyrics of their chosen number "Oh, Boy!" too suggestive, and ordered Holly to substitute another song. Holly responded that he had already told his hometown friends in Texas that he would be singing "Oh, Boy!" for them. Sullivan, unaccustomed to having his instructions questioned, angrily repeated them, but Holly refused to back down. Later, when the band was slow to respond to a summons to the rehearsal stage, Sullivan commented, "I guess the Crickets are not too excited to be on The Ed Sullivan Show." Holly, still annoyed by Sullivan's attitude, replied, "I hope they're damn more excited than I am." Sullivan retaliated by cutting them from two numbers to one, then mispronounced Holly's name during the introduction. He also saw to it that Holly's guitar amplifier volume was barely audible, except during his guitar solo. Nevertheless, the band was so well-received that Sullivan was forced to invite them back; Holly responded that Sullivan did not have enough money. Archival photographs taken during the appearance show Holly smirking and ignoring a visibly angry Sullivan.[38]

During Jackie Mason's October 1964 performance on a show that had been shortened by ten minutes due to an address by President Lyndon Johnson,[39] Sullivan—on-stage but off-camera—signaled Mason that he had two minutes left by holding up two fingers.[40] Sullivan's signal distracted the studio audience, and to television viewers unaware of the circumstances, it seemed as though Mason's jokes were falling flat. Mason, in a bid to regain the audience's attention, cried, "I'm getting fingers here!" and made his own frantic hand gesture: "Here's a finger for you!" Videotapes of the incident are inconclusive as to whether Mason's upswept hand (which was just off-camera) was intended to be an indecent gesture, but Sullivan was convinced that it was, and banned Mason from future appearances on the program. Mason later insisted that he did not know what the "middle finger" meant, and that he did not make the gesture anyway.[41] In September 1965, Sullivan—who, according to Mason, was "deeply apologetic"[42]—brought Mason on the show for a "surprise grand reunion". "He said they were old pals," Nachman wrote, "news to Mason, who never got a repeat invitation."[43] Mason added that his earning power "... was cut right in half after that. I never really worked my way back until I opened on Broadway in 1986."[44]

When the Byrds performed on December 12, 1965, David Crosby got into a shouting match with the show's director. They were never asked to return.[45][46]

Sullivan decided that "Girl, we couldn't get much higher", from the Doors' signature song "Light My Fire", was too overt a reference to drug use, and directed that the lyric be changed to "Girl, we couldn't get much better" for the group's September 1967 appearance.[47] The band members "nodded their assent", according to Doors biographer Ben Fong-Torres, then sang the song as written.[48] After the broadcast, producer Bob Precht told the group, "Mr. Sullivan wanted you for six more shows, but you'll never work the Ed Sullivan Show again." Jim Morrison replied, "Hey, man, we just did the Ed Sullivan Show."[49]

The Rolling Stones famously capitulated during their fifth appearance on the show, in 1967, when Mick Jagger was told to change the titular lyric of "Let's Spend the Night Together" to "Let's spend some time together". "But Jagger prevailed," wrote Nachman, by deliberately calling attention to the censorship, rolling his eyes, mugging, and drawing out the word "t-i-i-i-me" as he sang the revised lyric. Sullivan was angered by the insubordination, but the Stones did make one additional appearance on the show, in 1969.[50][2]

Moe Howard of the Three Stooges recalled in 1975 that Sullivan had a memory problem of sorts: "Ed was a very nice man, but for a showman, quite forgetful. On our first appearance, he introduced us as the Three Ritz Brothers. He got out of it by adding, 'who look more like the Three Stooges to me'."[51] Joe DeRita, who worked with the Stooges after 1959, had commented that Sullivan had a personality "like the bottom of a bird cage."[52]

Diana Ross, who was very fond of Sullivan, later recalled Sullivan's forgetfulness during the many occasions the Supremes performed on his show. In a 1995 appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman (taped in the Ed Sullivan Theater), Ross stated, "he could never remember our names. He called us 'the girls'."[53]

In a 1990 press conference, Paul McCartney recalled meeting Sullivan again in the early 1970s. Sullivan apparently had no idea who McCartney was. McCartney tried to remind Sullivan that he was one of the Beatles, but Sullivan obviously could not remember, and nodding and smiling, simply shook McCartney's hand and left. In an interview with Howard Stern around 2012, Joan Rivers said that Sullivan had been suffering from dementia toward the end of his life.[54]

Politics edit

Sullivan, like many American entertainers, was pulled into the Cold War anticommunism of the late 1940s and 1950s. Tap dancer Paul Draper's scheduled January 1950 appearance on Toast of the Town met with opposition from Hester McCullough, an activist in the hunt for "subversives". Branding Draper a Communist Party "sympathizer", she demanded that Sullivan's lead sponsor, the Ford Motor Company, cancel Draper's appearance. Draper denied the charge, and appeared on the show as scheduled. Ford received over a thousand angry letters and telegrams, and Sullivan was obliged to promise Ford's advertising agency, Kenyon & Eckhardt, that he would avoid controversial guests going forward. Draper was forced to move to Europe to earn a living.[55]

After the Draper incident, Sullivan began to work closely with Theodore Kirkpatrick of the anti-Communist Counterattack newsletter. He would consult Kirkpatrick if any questions came up regarding a potential guest's political leanings. Sullivan wrote in his June 21, 1950, Daily News column that "Kirkpatrick has sat in my living room on several occasions and listened attentively to performers eager to secure a certification of loyalty."[55]

Cold War repercussions manifested in a different way when Bob Dylan was booked to appear in May 1963. His chosen song was "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues", which poked fun at the ultraconservative John Birch Society and its tendency to see Communist conspiracies in many situations. No concern was voiced by anyone, including Sullivan, during rehearsals; but on the day of the broadcast, CBS's Standards and Practices department rejected the song, fearing that lyrics equating the Society's views with those of Adolf Hitler might trigger a defamation lawsuit. Dylan was offered the opportunity to perform a different song, but he responded that if he could not sing the number of his choice, he would rather not appear at all. The story generated widespread media attention in the days that followed; Sullivan denounced the network's decision in published interviews.[56]

Sullivan butted heads with Standards and Practices on other occasions, as well. In 1956, Ingrid Bergman—who had been living in "exile" in Europe since 1950 in the wake of her scandalous love affair with director Roberto Rossellini while they were both married—was planning a return to Hollywood as the star of Anastasia. Sullivan, confident that the American public would welcome her back, invited her to appear on his show and flew to Europe to film an interview with Bergman, Yul Brynner, and Helen Hayes on the Anastasia set. When he arrived back in New York, Standards and Practices informed Sullivan that under no circumstances would Bergman be permitted to appear on the show, either live or on film. Sullivan's prediction later proved correct, as Bergman won her second Academy Award for her portrayal, as well as the forgiveness of her fans.[21]

Personal life edit

 
Sullivan with his wife Sylvia during his convalescence at Griffin Hospital, 1956

Sullivan was engaged to champion swimmer Sybil Bauer, but she died of cancer in 1927 at the age of 23.[57]

In 1926, Sullivan met and began dating Sylvia Weinstein. Initially she told her family that she was dating a Jewish man named Ed Solomon, but her brother discovered it was Sullivan, who was Catholic. Both their families were strongly opposed to interfaith marriage, which resulted in a discontinuous relationship for the next three years. They were finally married on April 28, 1930, in a City Hall ceremony. Eight months later Sylvia gave birth to Elizabeth ("Betty"), named after Sullivan's mother, who had died that year. In 1952, Betty Sullivan married the Ed Sullivan Show's producer, Bob Precht.[1]

The Sullivans rented a suite of rooms at the Hotel Delmonico in 1944 after living at the Hotel Astor on Times Square for many years. Sullivan rented a suite next door to the family suite, which he used as an office until The Ed Sullivan Show was canceled in 1971. Sullivan habitually called his wife after every program to get her critique.[58]

The Sullivans regularly dined and socialized at New York City's best-known clubs and restaurants including the Stork Club, Danny's Hide-A-Way, and Jimmy Kelly's. His friends included celebrities and U.S. presidents. He also received audiences with popes.[3]

Sylvia Sullivan was a financial advisor for her husband. She died on March 16, 1973, at Mount Sinai Hospital from a ruptured aorta.[59]

Later years and death edit

 
Sullivan's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

In the fall of 1965, CBS began televising its weekly programs in color. Although the Sullivan show was seen live in the Central and Eastern time zones, it was taped for airing in the Pacific and Mountain time zones. Excerpts have been released on home video, and posted on the official Ed Sullivan Show YouTube Channel.

By 1971, the show's ratings had plummeted. In an effort to refresh the CBS lineup, CBS cancelled the program in March 1971, along with some of its other long-running shows throughout the 1970–1971 season (later known as the rural purge). Angered, Sullivan refused to host three more months of scheduled shows. They were replaced by reruns, and a final program without him aired in June. He remained with the network in various other capacities and hosted a 25th anniversary special in June 1973.

In early September 1974, Sullivan was diagnosed with an advanced stage of esophageal cancer. Doctors gave him very little time to live, and the family chose to keep the diagnosis secret from him. Sullivan, a lifelong smoker, believed his ailment to be yet another complication from a long-standing battle with gastric ulcers. Sullivan died on October 13, 1974, at New York's Lenox Hill Hospital. His funeral was attended by 2,000 people at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, on a cold, rainy day.[60] Sullivan is interred in a crypt at the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.[61]

Sullivan has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6101 Hollywood Blvd. In 1985, Sullivan was welcomed to the Television Academy Hall of Fame.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Elizabeth 'Betty' Sullivan Precht". Missoulian. Missoula, Montana. June 9, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Maguire 2006, p. 222.
  3. ^ a b "Ed Sullivan Biography". www.edsullivan.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  4. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 7662–7670.
  5. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 7670.
  6. ^ "50 Greatest TV Stars Of All Time". TV Guide (December 14–20). 1996. ASIN B0061QIQ6C.
  7. ^ "About Ed Sullivan". Ed Sullivan Show. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  8. ^ Block, Maxine; Rothe, Anna Herthe; Candee, Marjorie Dent (1953). Current Biography Yearbook. H. W. Wilson Company.
  9. ^ Harris 1968, p. [page needed].
  10. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location[page needed].
  11. ^ "Sunday". Radio and Television Mirror. 16 (5): 41. September 1941. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
  12. ^ "Ed Sullivan Theater". Ed Sullivan Show. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  13. ^ Time 1955, p. 6.
  14. ^ Time 1967, p. 1.
  15. ^ a b Time 1955, p. 2.
  16. ^ Time 1967, p. 3.
  17. ^ a b Gilliland, John (1969). "Show 7 – The All American Boy: Enter Elvis and the rock-a-billies. [Part 1]" (audio). Pop Chronicles. University of North Texas Libraries.
  18. ^ General Foods 25th Anniversary Show: A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein (TV special). 1954.
  19. ^ Sullivan, Ed (1952). "My Story". Colliers Magazine. 1 of 3 part series (September 14, 1952).
  20. ^ "Elvis on the Ed Sullivan Show". History1900s.about.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  21. ^ a b Merwin, Gregory (May 1957). (PDF). TV-Radio Mirror. pp. 32–33. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 2, 2013. Retrieved February 12, 2012.(PDF)
  22. ^ "Elvis Presley | Ed Sullivan Show". EdSullivan.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  23. ^ Harrington, Richard (February 9, 1989). "THE BIRTH OF BEATLEMANIA". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  24. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 6021.
  25. ^ Nachman 2009, 6022.
  26. ^ Leonard 1992, p. 146.
  27. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle edition 6031.
  28. ^ Bowles 1980, pp. 131–2.
  29. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5875.
  30. ^ Sullivan, Ed (September 14, 1956). "My Story". Colliers Magazine. 1 of 3 part series.
  31. ^ Morris, Edward (April 18, 2012). "The First Families of Country Music". CMT News. Retrieved January 24, 2017.
  32. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5681.
  33. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5690.
  34. ^ White 1998, p. 133.
  35. ^ White 1998, p. 134.
  36. ^ White 1998, p. 144.
  37. ^ Nachman 2009, p. 277.
  38. ^ Moore 2011, p. 128.
  39. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5878.
  40. ^ "Vince Calandra Interview | Archive of American Television". Emmytvlegends.org. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  41. ^ The Very Best of the Ed Sullivan Show (TV Special). CBS. 1991.
  42. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5940.
  43. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5950.
  44. ^ Nachman 2009, Kindle location 5966.
  45. ^ "Byrds video". Video.google.com. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
  46. ^ "The Byrds | Ed Sullivan Show". Edsullivan.com. December 12, 1965. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  47. ^ "The Doors | Ed Sullivan Show". Edsullivan.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  48. ^ Fong-Torres 2006, p. 144.
  49. ^ Nachman 2009, p. 373.
  50. ^ Nachman 2009, p. 372.
  51. ^ Howard 1979, p. 165.
  52. ^ Lenburg, Howard Maurer & Maurer 1982, p. [page needed].
  53. ^ "The Supremes | Ed Sullivan Show". Edsullivan.com. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  55. ^ a b Barnouw 1990, pp. 117–21.
  56. ^ "Bob Dylan walks out on The Ed Sullivan Show". History.com archive. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
  57. ^ Sisson, Zacher & Cayton 2007, p. 901.
  58. ^ "Ed Sullivan Is Dead at 73; Charmed Millions on TV". The New York Times. October 14, 1974. Retrieved December 9, 2021.
  59. ^ Mrs Ed Sullivan Dies, Lubbock-Avalanche-Journal (Lubbock, TX), March 17, 1973, page 5
  60. ^ "Beame Leads 2,000 Mourners At Sullivan Rites in St. Patrick's". The New York Times. October 17, 1974. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
  61. ^ Liebson, Richard (July 19, 2018). "Famous people buried or cremated at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale: list". The Journal News. Retrieved December 12, 2021.

Cited sources edit

  • "Current Biography Yearbook". H. W. Wilson Company. 1953.
  • "Radio: Big As All Outdoors". Time. October 17, 1955. ISSN 0040-781X.
  • "Variety Shows: Plenty of Nothing". Time. October 13, 1967.
  • Barnouw, Erik (May 31, 1990). Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-987917-5.
  • Bowles, Jerry G. (1980). A Thousand Sundays: The Story of the Ed Sullivan Show. Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-12493-8.
  • Fong-Torres, Ben (2006). The Doors (1st ed.). Hyperion. ISBN 1-4013-0303-X.
  • Harris, Michael David (1968). Always on Sunday: Ed Sullivan: an Inside View. Meredith Press.
  • Howard, Moe (October 1, 1979). Moe Howard and the Three Stooges. Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8065-0666-1.
  • Lenburg, Greg; Howard Maurer, Joan; Maurer, Norman (1982). The Three Stooges Scrapbook. Citadel Press. ISBN 978-0-8065-0946-4.
  • Leonard, John (1992). A Really Big Show: A Visual History of the Ed Sullivan Show. Viking Studio Books. ISBN 978-0-670-84246-9.
  • Maguire, James (2006). Impresario : the life and times of Ed Sullivan. New York: Billboard Books. ISBN 0823079627.
  • Moore, Gary W. (January 20, 2011). Hey Buddy: In Pursuit of Buddy Holly, My New Buddy John, and My Lost Decade of Music. Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-063-7.
  • Nachman, Gerald (2009). Right Here on our Stage Tonight! Ed Sullivan's America. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520258679.
  • Sisson, Richard; Zacher, Christian K.; Cayton, Andrew R. L. (2007). The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34886-9.
  • White, George R. (1998). Bo Diddley: Living Legend. Castle Communications. ISBN 978-1-86074-130-2.

Further reading edit

  • Leonard, John, , American Heritage, May/June 1997, Volume 48, Issue 3
  • Nachman, Gerald, , December 18, 2006.
  • Barthelme, Donald, "And Now Let's Hear It for the Ed Sullivan Show!" in Guilty Pleasures, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1974

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Ed Sullivan Papers at the Wisconsin Historical Society Archives
  • Ed Sullivan at IMDb
  • Ed Sullivan at Find a Grave

sullivan, this, article, about, person, show, show, other, uses, edward, sullivan, disambiguation, edward, vincent, sullivan, september, 1901, october, 1974, american, television, host, impresario, sports, entertainment, reporter, syndicated, columnist, york, . This article is about Ed Sullivan the person For his TV show see The Ed Sullivan Show For other uses see Edward Sullivan disambiguation Edward Vincent Sullivan September 28 1901 October 13 1974 was an American television host impresario 2 sports and entertainment reporter and syndicated columnist for the New York Daily News and the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate He was the creator and host of the television variety program The Toast of the Town which in 1955 was renamed The Ed Sullivan Show Broadcast from 1948 to 1971 it set a record as the longest running variety show in U S broadcast history 3 It was by almost any measure the last great American TV show said television critic David Hinckley It s one of our fondest dearest pop culture memories 4 Ed SullivanSullivan in 1955BornEdward Vincent Sullivan 1901 09 28 September 28 1901New York City U S DiedOctober 13 1974 1974 10 13 aged 73 New York City U S Burial placeFerncliff CemeteryOccupation s Television host reporter newspaper columnistYears active1932 1974SpouseSylvia Weinstein Sullivan m 1930 died 1973 wbr Children1 1 Sullivan was a broadcasting pioneer during the early years of American television As critic David Bianculli wrote Before MTV Sullivan presented rock acts Before Bravo he presented jazz and classical music and theater Before the Comedy Channel even before there was The Tonight Show Sullivan discovered anointed and popularized young comedians Before there were 500 channels before there was cable Ed Sullivan was where the choice was From the start he was indeed the Toast of the Town 5 In 1996 Sullivan was ranked number 50 on TV Guide s 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time 6 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Radio 3 Television 4 Legacy 5 Personality 6 Politics 7 Personal life 8 Later years and death 9 References 9 1 Cited sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and career editSullivan was born on September 28 1901 in Harlem New York City to Elizabeth F nee Smith and Peter Arthur Sullivan a customs house employee His twin brother Daniel was sickly and lived only a few months 7 Sullivan was raised in Port Chester New York where the family lived in a small red brick home at 53 Washington Street 8 He was of Irish descent 9 The family loved music frequently playing the piano singing and playing phonograph records Sullivan was a gifted athlete in high school earning 12 athletic letters at Port Chester High School He played football as a halfback basketball as a guard and track as a sprinter With the baseball team Sullivan was a catcher and the team s captain leading the team to several championships Sullivan noted that in the state of New York integration was taken for granted in high school sports When we went up into Connecticut we ran into clubs that had Negro players In those days this was accepted as commonplace and so my instinctive antagonism years later to any theory that a Negro wasn t a worthy opponent or was an inferior person It was just as simple as that 10 Sullivan landed his first job at The Port Chester Daily Item a local newspaper for which he had written sports news while in high school and which he joined full time after graduation In 1919 he joined The Hartford Post but the newspaper folded in his first week there He next worked for The New York Evening Mail as a sports reporter After the newspaper closed in 1923 he bounced through a series of news jobs with the Associated Press the Philadelphia Bulletin The Morning World The Morning Telegraph The New York Bulletin and The Leader In 1927 Sullivan joined The New York Evening Graphic first as a sports writer and then as a sports editor In 1929 when Walter Winchell moved to The Daily Mirror Sullivan was named the New York Evening Graphic s Broadway columnist He left the paper for the city s largest tabloid the New York Daily News His column Little Old New York concentrated on Broadway shows and gossip and Sullivan also delivered showbusiness news broadcasts on radio In 1933 Sullivan wrote and starred in the film Mr Broadway in which he guided the audience around New York nightspots to meet entertainers and celebrities Sullivan soon became a powerful force in the entertainment world and one of Winchell s main rivals setting the El Morocco nightclub in New York as his unofficial headquarters against Winchell s seat of power at the nearby Stork Club Sullivan continued writing for the New York Daily News throughout his broadcasting career and his popularity long outlived that of Winchell In the late 1960s Sullivan praised Winchell s legacy in a magazine interview leading to a major reconciliation between the longtime adversaries Throughout his career as a columnist Sullivan had dabbled in entertainment producing vaudeville shows with which he appeared as master of ceremonies in the 1920s and 1930s directing a radio program over the original WABC and organizing benefit reviews for various causes Radio editIn 1941 Sullivan became host of the Summer Silver Theater a variety program on CBS with Will Bradley as bandleader and a guest star featured each week 11 Television edit nbsp Sullivan with Cole Porter on Toast of the Town 1952In 1948 producer Marlo Lewis convinced CBS to hire Sullivan to host a weekly Sunday night television variety show Toast of the Town which later became The Ed Sullivan Show Debuting in June 1948 the show was originally broadcast from Maxine Elliott s Theatre on West 39th Street in New York In January 1953 it moved to CBS TV Studio 50 at 1697 Broadway a former CBS Radio playhouse that in 1967 was renamed the Ed Sullivan Theater and was later the home of the Late Show with David Letterman and The Late Show with Stephen Colbert 12 Television critics gave the new show and its host poor reviews 13 Harriet Van Horne alleged that he got where he is not by having a personality but by having no personality The host wrote to the critic Dear Miss Van Horne You bitch Sincerely Ed Sullivan Sullivan had little acting ability in 1967 20 years after his show s debut Time magazine asked What exactly is Ed Sullivan s talent His mannerisms on camera were so awkward that some viewers believed the host suffered from Bell s palsy 14 Time in 1955 stated that Sullivan resembled a cigar store Indian the Cardiff Giant and a stone faced monument just off the boat from Easter Island He moves like a sleepwalker his smile is that of a man sucking a lemon his speech is frequently lost in a thicket of syntax his eyes pop from their sockets or sink so deep in their bags that they seem to be peering up at the camera from the bottom of twin wells 15 nbsp Carmen Miranda on The Ed Sullivan Show 1953 Yet the magazine concluded instead of frightening children Ed Sullivan charms the whole family Sullivan appeared to the audience as an average guy who brought the great acts of show business to their home televisions Ed Sullivan will last comedian Fred Allen said as long as someone else has talent 15 Frequent guest Alan King said Ed does nothing but he does it better than anyone else in television 16 A typical show would feature a vaudeville act such as acrobats jugglers or magicians one or two popular comedians a singing star a figure from the legitimate theater an appearance by puppet Topo Gigio or a popular athlete The bill was often international in scope with many European performers appearing along with the American artists Sullivan had a healthy sense of humor about himself and permitted and even encouraged impersonators such as John Byner Frank Gorshin Rich Little and especially Will Jordan to imitate him on his show Johnny Carson also performed a fair impression and even Joan Rivers imitated Sullivan s unique posture The impressionists exaggerated his stiffness raised shoulders and nasal tenor phrasing along with some of his commonly used introductions such as And now right here on our stage For all you youngsters out there and a really big shew his pronunciation of the word show The latter phrase was in fact in the exclusive domain of his impressionists as Sullivan never actually spoke the phrase really big show during the opening introduction of any episode in the entire history of the series Jordan portrayed Sullivan in the films I Wanna Hold Your Hand The Buddy Holly Story The Doors Mr Saturday Night Down with Love and in the 1979 television movie Elvis Sullivan played himself parodying his mannerisms as directed by Jerry Lewis in Lewis 1964 film The Patsy Sullivan inspired a song in the musical Bye Bye Birdie 17 and in 1963 appeared as himself in the film In 1954 Sullivan appeared as a cohost on the television musical special General Foods 25th Anniversary Show A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein 18 Legacy edit nbsp Sullivan congratulates 13 year old Itzhak Perlman after a concert in Tel Aviv 1958 Sullivan was quoted as saying In the conduct of my own show I ve never asked a performer his religion his race or his politics Performers are engaged on the basis of their abilities I believe that this is another quality of our show that has helped win it a wide and loyal audience 19 Although Sullivan was wary of Elvis Presley s image and initially said that he would never book him Presley became too big a name to ignore in 1956 Sullivan signed him for three appearances 17 20 Six weeks earlier in August 1956 Sullivan and his son in law the producer of the show Robert Precht were in a near fatal car accident near Sullivan s Connecticut country home in Southbury Connecticut and missed Presley s first appearance on September 9 when Charles Laughton introduced Presley 21 After Sullivan came to know Presley personally he made amends by telling his audience This is a real decent fine boy 22 nbsp Sullivan with The Beatles 1964Main article The Beatles Sullivan s failure to scoop the TV industry with Presley made him determined to book the next big sensation first In November 1963 while at Heathrow Airport Sullivan witnessed the Beatlemania spectacle as the band returned from Sweden and the terminal was overrun by screaming teens At first Sullivan was reluctant to book the Beatles because the band did not yet have a commercially successful single in the U S but at the behest of his friend Sid Bernstein Sullivan signed the group Their initial Sullivan show appearance on February 9 1964 was the most watched program in TV history to that point 23 The Beatles appeared three more times in person and submitted filmed performances afterwards The Dave Clark Five who claimed a cleaner image than the Beatles made 13 appearances on the show more than any other UK group Unlike many shows of the time Sullivan asked that most musical acts perform their music live rather than lip synching to their recordings citation needed However exceptions were made such as when a microphone could not be placed close enough to a performer for technical reasons An example was B J Thomas 1969 performance of Raindrops Keep Fallin on My Head in which water was sprinkled on him as a special effect In 1969 Sullivan presented the Jackson 5 with their first single I Want You Back which ousted Thomas song from the top spot of the Billboard Hot 100 nbsp Sullivan in full clown regalia hosting the 1972 special ClownaroundSullivan had an appreciation for black entertainers According to biographer Gerald Nachman Most TV variety shows welcomed acceptable black superstars like Louis Armstrong Pearl Bailey and Sammy Davis Jr but in the early 1950s long before it was fashionable Sullivan was presenting the much more obscure black entertainers he had enjoyed in Harlem on his uptown rounds legends like Peg Leg Bates Pigmeat Markham and Tim Moore strangers to white America 24 He hosted pioneering TV appearances by Bo Diddley the Platters Brook Benton Jackie Wilson Fats Domino and numerous Motown acts including the Supremes who appeared 17 times 25 As the critic John Leonard wrote There wasn t an important black artist who didn t appear on Ed s show 26 Sullivan defied pressure to exclude black entertainers or to avoid interacting with them on screen Sullivan had to fend off his hard won sponsor Ford s Lincoln dealers after kissing Pearl Bailey on the cheek and daring to shake Nat King Cole s hand Nachman wrote 27 According to biographer Jerry Bowles Sullivan once had a Ford executive thrown out of the theatre when he suggested that Sullivan stop booking so many black acts And a dealer in Cleveland told him We realize that you got to have niggers on your show But do you have to put your arm around Bill Bojangles Robinson at the end of his dance Sullivan had to be physically restrained from beating the man to a pulp 28 Sullivan later raised money to help pay for Robinson s funeral 29 He said As a Catholic it was inevitable that I would despise intolerance because Catholics suffered more than their share of it As I grew up the causes of minorities were part and parcel of me Negroes and Jews were the minority causes closest at hand I need no urging to take a plunge in and help 30 At a time when television had not yet embraced country and western music Sullivan featured Nashville performers on his program This in turn paved the way for shows such as Hee Haw and variety shows hosted by Johnny Cash Glen Campbell and other country singers 31 The Canadian comedy duo Wayne and Shuster made the most appearances of any act throughout the show s run with 67 appearances between 1958 and 1969 Sullivan appeared as himself on other television programs including an April 1958 episode of the Howard Duff and Ida Lupino CBS situation comedy Mr Adams and Eve On September 14 1958 Sullivan appeared on What s My Line as a mystery guest In 1961 Sullivan substituted for Red Skelton on The Red Skelton Show Sullivan took Skelton s roles in the various comedy sketches with Skelton s hobo character Freddie the Freeloader renamed Eddie the Freeloader Personality editSullivan was quick to take offense if he felt that he had been crossed and he could hold a grudge for a long time As he told biographer Gerald Nachman I m a pop off I flare up then I go around apologizing 32 Armed with an Irish temper and thin skin wrote Nachman Ed brought to his feuds a hunger for combat fed by his coverage of and devotion to boxing 33 Bo Diddley Buddy Holly Jackie Mason and Jim Morrison were parties to some of Sullivan s most storied conflicts For his second Sullivan appearance in 1955 Bo Diddley planned to sing his namesake hit Bo Diddley but Sullivan told him to perform Tennessee Ernie Ford s song Sixteen Tons That would have been the end of my career right there Diddley told his biographer 34 so he sang Bo Diddley anyway Sullivan was enraged You re the first black boy that ever double crossed me on the show Diddley quoted him as saying We didn t have much to do with each other after that 35 Later Diddley resented that Elvis Presley whom he accused of copying his revolutionary style and beat received the attention and accolades on Sullivan s show that he felt were rightfully his I am owed he said and I never got paid 36 He might have wrote Nachman had things gone smoother with Sullivan 37 Buddy Holly and the Crickets first appeared on the Sullivan show in 1957 to an enthusiastic response For their second appearance in January 1958 Sullivan considered the lyrics of their chosen number Oh Boy too suggestive and ordered Holly to substitute another song Holly responded that he had already told his hometown friends in Texas that he would be singing Oh Boy for them Sullivan unaccustomed to having his instructions questioned angrily repeated them but Holly refused to back down Later when the band was slow to respond to a summons to the rehearsal stage Sullivan commented I guess the Crickets are not too excited to be on The Ed Sullivan Show Holly still annoyed by Sullivan s attitude replied I hope they re damn more excited than I am Sullivan retaliated by cutting them from two numbers to one then mispronounced Holly s name during the introduction He also saw to it that Holly s guitar amplifier volume was barely audible except during his guitar solo Nevertheless the band was so well received that Sullivan was forced to invite them back Holly responded that Sullivan did not have enough money Archival photographs taken during the appearance show Holly smirking and ignoring a visibly angry Sullivan 38 During Jackie Mason s October 1964 performance on a show that had been shortened by ten minutes due to an address by President Lyndon Johnson 39 Sullivan on stage but off camera signaled Mason that he had two minutes left by holding up two fingers 40 Sullivan s signal distracted the studio audience and to television viewers unaware of the circumstances it seemed as though Mason s jokes were falling flat Mason in a bid to regain the audience s attention cried I m getting fingers here and made his own frantic hand gesture Here s a finger for you Videotapes of the incident are inconclusive as to whether Mason s upswept hand which was just off camera was intended to be an indecent gesture but Sullivan was convinced that it was and banned Mason from future appearances on the program Mason later insisted that he did not know what the middle finger meant and that he did not make the gesture anyway 41 In September 1965 Sullivan who according to Mason was deeply apologetic 42 brought Mason on the show for a surprise grand reunion He said they were old pals Nachman wrote news to Mason who never got a repeat invitation 43 Mason added that his earning power was cut right in half after that I never really worked my way back until I opened on Broadway in 1986 44 When the Byrds performed on December 12 1965 David Crosby got into a shouting match with the show s director They were never asked to return 45 46 Sullivan decided that Girl we couldn t get much higher from the Doors signature song Light My Fire was too overt a reference to drug use and directed that the lyric be changed to Girl we couldn t get much better for the group s September 1967 appearance 47 The band members nodded their assent according to Doors biographer Ben Fong Torres then sang the song as written 48 After the broadcast producer Bob Precht told the group Mr Sullivan wanted you for six more shows but you ll never work the Ed Sullivan Show again Jim Morrison replied Hey man we just did the Ed Sullivan Show 49 The Rolling Stones famously capitulated during their fifth appearance on the show in 1967 when Mick Jagger was told to change the titular lyric of Let s Spend the Night Together to Let s spend some time together But Jagger prevailed wrote Nachman by deliberately calling attention to the censorship rolling his eyes mugging and drawing out the word t i i i me as he sang the revised lyric Sullivan was angered by the insubordination but the Stones did make one additional appearance on the show in 1969 50 2 Moe Howard of the Three Stooges recalled in 1975 that Sullivan had a memory problem of sorts Ed was a very nice man but for a showman quite forgetful On our first appearance he introduced us as the Three Ritz Brothers He got out of it by adding who look more like the Three Stooges to me 51 Joe DeRita who worked with the Stooges after 1959 had commented that Sullivan had a personality like the bottom of a bird cage 52 Diana Ross who was very fond of Sullivan later recalled Sullivan s forgetfulness during the many occasions the Supremes performed on his show In a 1995 appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman taped in the Ed Sullivan Theater Ross stated he could never remember our names He called us the girls 53 In a 1990 press conference Paul McCartney recalled meeting Sullivan again in the early 1970s Sullivan apparently had no idea who McCartney was McCartney tried to remind Sullivan that he was one of the Beatles but Sullivan obviously could not remember and nodding and smiling simply shook McCartney s hand and left In an interview with Howard Stern around 2012 Joan Rivers said that Sullivan had been suffering from dementia toward the end of his life 54 Politics editSullivan like many American entertainers was pulled into the Cold War anticommunism of the late 1940s and 1950s Tap dancer Paul Draper s scheduled January 1950 appearance on Toast of the Town met with opposition from Hester McCullough an activist in the hunt for subversives Branding Draper a Communist Party sympathizer she demanded that Sullivan s lead sponsor the Ford Motor Company cancel Draper s appearance Draper denied the charge and appeared on the show as scheduled Ford received over a thousand angry letters and telegrams and Sullivan was obliged to promise Ford s advertising agency Kenyon amp Eckhardt that he would avoid controversial guests going forward Draper was forced to move to Europe to earn a living 55 After the Draper incident Sullivan began to work closely with Theodore Kirkpatrick of the anti Communist Counterattack newsletter He would consult Kirkpatrick if any questions came up regarding a potential guest s political leanings Sullivan wrote in his June 21 1950 Daily News column that Kirkpatrick has sat in my living room on several occasions and listened attentively to performers eager to secure a certification of loyalty 55 Cold War repercussions manifested in a different way when Bob Dylan was booked to appear in May 1963 His chosen song was Talkin John Birch Paranoid Blues which poked fun at the ultraconservative John Birch Society and its tendency to see Communist conspiracies in many situations No concern was voiced by anyone including Sullivan during rehearsals but on the day of the broadcast CBS s Standards and Practices department rejected the song fearing that lyrics equating the Society s views with those of Adolf Hitler might trigger a defamation lawsuit Dylan was offered the opportunity to perform a different song but he responded that if he could not sing the number of his choice he would rather not appear at all The story generated widespread media attention in the days that followed Sullivan denounced the network s decision in published interviews 56 Sullivan butted heads with Standards and Practices on other occasions as well In 1956 Ingrid Bergman who had been living in exile in Europe since 1950 in the wake of her scandalous love affair with director Roberto Rossellini while they were both married was planning a return to Hollywood as the star of Anastasia Sullivan confident that the American public would welcome her back invited her to appear on his show and flew to Europe to film an interview with Bergman Yul Brynner and Helen Hayes on the Anastasia set When he arrived back in New York Standards and Practices informed Sullivan that under no circumstances would Bergman be permitted to appear on the show either live or on film Sullivan s prediction later proved correct as Bergman won her second Academy Award for her portrayal as well as the forgiveness of her fans 21 Personal life edit nbsp Sullivan with his wife Sylvia during his convalescence at Griffin Hospital 1956Sullivan was engaged to champion swimmer Sybil Bauer but she died of cancer in 1927 at the age of 23 57 In 1926 Sullivan met and began dating Sylvia Weinstein Initially she told her family that she was dating a Jewish man named Ed Solomon but her brother discovered it was Sullivan who was Catholic Both their families were strongly opposed to interfaith marriage which resulted in a discontinuous relationship for the next three years They were finally married on April 28 1930 in a City Hall ceremony Eight months later Sylvia gave birth to Elizabeth Betty named after Sullivan s mother who had died that year In 1952 Betty Sullivan married the Ed Sullivan Show s producer Bob Precht 1 The Sullivans rented a suite of rooms at the Hotel Delmonico in 1944 after living at the Hotel Astor on Times Square for many years Sullivan rented a suite next door to the family suite which he used as an office until The Ed Sullivan Show was canceled in 1971 Sullivan habitually called his wife after every program to get her critique 58 The Sullivans regularly dined and socialized at New York City s best known clubs and restaurants including the Stork Club Danny s Hide A Way and Jimmy Kelly s His friends included celebrities and U S presidents He also received audiences with popes 3 Sylvia Sullivan was a financial advisor for her husband She died on March 16 1973 at Mount Sinai Hospital from a ruptured aorta 59 Later years and death edit nbsp Sullivan s star on the Hollywood Walk of FameIn the fall of 1965 CBS began televising its weekly programs in color Although the Sullivan show was seen live in the Central and Eastern time zones it was taped for airing in the Pacific and Mountain time zones Excerpts have been released on home video and posted on the official Ed Sullivan Show YouTube Channel By 1971 the show s ratings had plummeted In an effort to refresh the CBS lineup CBS cancelled the program in March 1971 along with some of its other long running shows throughout the 1970 1971 season later known as the rural purge Angered Sullivan refused to host three more months of scheduled shows They were replaced by reruns and a final program without him aired in June He remained with the network in various other capacities and hosted a 25th anniversary special in June 1973 In early September 1974 Sullivan was diagnosed with an advanced stage of esophageal cancer Doctors gave him very little time to live and the family chose to keep the diagnosis secret from him Sullivan a lifelong smoker believed his ailment to be yet another complication from a long standing battle with gastric ulcers Sullivan died on October 13 1974 at New York s Lenox Hill Hospital His funeral was attended by 2 000 people at St Patrick s Cathedral New York on a cold rainy day 60 Sullivan is interred in a crypt at the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale New York 61 Sullivan has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6101 Hollywood Blvd In 1985 Sullivan was welcomed to the Television Academy Hall of Fame References edit a b Elizabeth Betty Sullivan Precht Missoulian Missoula Montana June 9 2014 Retrieved March 17 2015 a b Maguire 2006 p 222 a b Ed Sullivan Biography www edsullivan com Retrieved February 10 2014 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 7662 7670 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 7670 50 Greatest TV Stars Of All Time TV Guide December 14 20 1996 ASIN B0061QIQ6C About Ed Sullivan Ed Sullivan Show Retrieved July 1 2022 Block Maxine Rothe Anna Herthe Candee Marjorie Dent 1953 Current Biography Yearbook H W Wilson Company Harris 1968 p page needed Nachman 2009 Kindle location page needed Sunday Radio and Television Mirror 16 5 41 September 1941 Retrieved April 1 2015 Ed Sullivan Theater Ed Sullivan Show Retrieved January 26 2022 Time 1955 p 6 Time 1967 p 1 a b Time 1955 p 2 Time 1967 p 3 a b Gilliland John 1969 Show 7 The All American Boy Enter Elvis and the rock a billies Part 1 audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries General Foods 25th Anniversary Show A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein TV special 1954 Sullivan Ed 1952 My Story Colliers Magazine 1 of 3 part series September 14 1952 Elvis on the Ed Sullivan Show History1900s about com Retrieved February 10 2014 a b Merwin Gregory May 1957 Fifty Million People Can t Be Wrong PDF TV Radio Mirror pp 32 33 Archived from the original PDF on October 2 2013 Retrieved February 12 2012 PDF Elvis Presley Ed Sullivan Show EdSullivan com Retrieved February 10 2014 Harrington Richard February 9 1989 THE BIRTH OF BEATLEMANIA Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved January 26 2022 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 6021 Nachman 2009 6022 Leonard 1992 p 146 Nachman 2009 Kindle edition 6031 Bowles 1980 pp 131 2 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5875 Sullivan Ed September 14 1956 My Story Colliers Magazine 1 of 3 part series Morris Edward April 18 2012 The First Families of Country Music CMT News Retrieved January 24 2017 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5681 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5690 White 1998 p 133 White 1998 p 134 White 1998 p 144 Nachman 2009 p 277 Moore 2011 p 128 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5878 Vince Calandra Interview Archive of American Television Emmytvlegends org Retrieved February 10 2014 The Very Best of the Ed Sullivan Show TV Special CBS 1991 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5940 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5950 Nachman 2009 Kindle location 5966 Byrds video Video google com Retrieved October 13 2021 The Byrds Ed Sullivan Show Edsullivan com December 12 1965 Retrieved February 10 2014 The Doors Ed Sullivan Show Edsullivan com Retrieved February 10 2014 Fong Torres 2006 p 144 Nachman 2009 p 373 Nachman 2009 p 372 Howard 1979 p 165 Lenburg Howard Maurer amp Maurer 1982 p page needed The Supremes Ed Sullivan Show Edsullivan com Retrieved February 10 2014 March 1971 The End Of An Era Ed Sullivan Canceled By CBS Eyes Of A Generation Television s Living History Archived from the original on January 28 2020 Retrieved January 28 2020 a b Barnouw 1990 pp 117 21 Bob Dylan walks out on The Ed Sullivan Show History com archive Retrieved May 12 2015 Sisson Zacher amp Cayton 2007 p 901 Ed Sullivan Is Dead at 73 Charmed Millions on TV The New York Times October 14 1974 Retrieved December 9 2021 Mrs Ed Sullivan Dies Lubbock Avalanche Journal Lubbock TX March 17 1973 page 5 Beame Leads 2 000 Mourners At Sullivan Rites in St Patrick s The New York Times October 17 1974 Retrieved August 2 2022 Liebson Richard July 19 2018 Famous people buried or cremated at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale list The Journal News Retrieved December 12 2021 Cited sources edit Current Biography Yearbook H W Wilson Company 1953 Radio Big As All Outdoors Time October 17 1955 ISSN 0040 781X Variety Shows Plenty of Nothing Time October 13 1967 Barnouw Erik May 31 1990 Tube of Plenty The Evolution of American Television Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 987917 5 Bowles Jerry G 1980 A Thousand Sundays The Story of the Ed Sullivan Show Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 12493 8 Fong Torres Ben 2006 The Doors 1st ed Hyperion ISBN 1 4013 0303 X Harris Michael David 1968 Always on Sunday Ed Sullivan an Inside View Meredith Press Howard Moe October 1 1979 Moe Howard and the Three Stooges Carol Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8065 0666 1 Lenburg Greg Howard Maurer Joan Maurer Norman 1982 The Three Stooges Scrapbook Citadel Press ISBN 978 0 8065 0946 4 Leonard John 1992 A Really Big Show A Visual History of the Ed Sullivan Show Viking Studio Books ISBN 978 0 670 84246 9 Maguire James 2006 Impresario the life and times of Ed Sullivan New York Billboard Books ISBN 0823079627 Moore Gary W January 20 2011 Hey Buddy In Pursuit of Buddy Holly My New Buddy John and My Lost Decade of Music Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 063 7 Nachman Gerald 2009 Right Here on our Stage Tonight Ed Sullivan s America University of California Press ISBN 978 0520258679 Sisson Richard Zacher Christian K Cayton Andrew R L 2007 The American Midwest An Interpretive Encyclopedia Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34886 9 White George R 1998 Bo Diddley Living Legend Castle Communications ISBN 978 1 86074 130 2 Further reading editLeonard John The Ed Sullivan Age American Heritage May June 1997 Volume 48 Issue 3 Nachman Gerald Ed Sullivan December 18 2006 Barthelme Donald And Now Let s Hear It for the Ed Sullivan Show in Guilty Pleasures Farrar Straus and Giroux 1974External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ed Sullivan Official website Ed Sullivan Papers at the Wisconsin Historical Society Archives Ed Sullivan documentary Ed Sullivan at IMDb Ed Sullivan at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ed Sullivan amp oldid 1188441083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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