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- <text id=93TT2132>
- <link 93TO0106>
- <title>
- Aug. 30, 1993: New Dave Dawning
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 30, 1993 Dave Letterman
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 50
- TELEVISION
- New Dave Dawning
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After 11 years, David Letterman is the man of the hour in late
- night. Now if he can only learn to enjoy it.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York
- </p>
- <p> Workmen are still wandering through the halls, rats are being
- chased in the basement, and bulletproof glass is being installed
- in David Letterman's office. Not really bulletproof; that's
- just the way Letterman likes to describe the protective pane
- designed to prevent him from accidentally tossing a baseball
- right through the glass, as he did once at his old NBC office,
- raining shards on pedestrians below. But Letterman is already
- gushing over his unfinished suite as if he had just moved into
- Windsor Castle. "Look at this," he says, striding into the room
- in his workaday outfit of T shirt, shorts and sneakers. "It's
- brand-new. Clean walls. New carpet. Office furniture. I used
- to have a paper route, and now I have three floors of a theater
- building on Broadway in New York City. I'm the luckiest man
- alive."
- </p>
- <p> After a decade of the fabled Letterman irony, one can be excused
- a skeptical pause. Is he serious? Or is this another Letterman
- put-on, one of those statements meant to convey its precise
- opposite--the way "those fine, fine people at General Electric"
- on his old show usually meant Dave had had another dustup with
- his bonehead corporate bosses. Letterman's new headquarters--located a few stories above New York City's Ed Sullivan Theater,
- where he is about to unveil his new late-night talk show on
- CBS--are clean, all right, but not without intrusion. The
- smell of roasting chicken wafts up every afternoon from the
- fast-food place downstairs and causes most of the staff to make
- faces. "I don't mind it," he says cheerily. "You build the place
- over a chicken restaurant, what is it gonna smell like--catfish?"
- </p>
- <p> No getting around it; David Letterman sounds, well, happy for
- a change. Or, at least, as happy as an insecure, driven, angst-ridden
- performer with a pathological fear of failure can be. Certainly
- no one has more of a right to enjoy himself for a spell. For
- the past two years, Letterman has been the most wrangled-over,
- gossiped-about, sought-after star in television. When Jay Leno
- was chosen to succeed Johnny Carson as host of the Tonight Show,
- it was Letterman, the disappointed office seeker, who drew the
- sympathy vote. Last fall, when his contract with NBC was coming
- due after 11 years as custodian of the post-Carson time period,
- he was besieged with offers. In January, when he announced he
- was jumping to CBS for a reported $14 million a year, Letterman
- reached the superstar pantheon. Starting next Monday when his
- show resurfaces on CBS at 11:35 p.m. Eastern time--going head
- to head against Leno's Tonight Show in most cities--he will
- be the point man in the most frenzied battle for late-night
- viewers in TV history.
- </p>
- <p> This matters, not just because a lot of money is at stake--about $675 million in advertising revenue this year for a time
- period that once was a quiet backwater. The struggle is also
- for the soul of late-night TV, where America goes live and loose,
- where the rituals of daily life give way, on occasion, to the
- risky and serendipitous. Late night comes after the cheery sitcoms
- and earnest magazine shows have gone to bed. It is where Americans
- have the freedom to rabble-rouse, ruminate or maybe just relax--their small-scale midnight rebellion.
- </p>
- <p> Letterman's second coming in late night has set off a high-stakes
- scramble. A week after his debut, Chevy Chase will launch his
- own talk show on the Fox network. A week after that, Conan O'Brien,
- the tousle-haired comedy writer plucked from obscurity by producer
- Lorne Michaels, will try to fill Letterman's old chair on NBC.
- Leno, feeling the competitive heat, has had his mug plastered
- on billboards around the country, while Arsenio Hall, despite
- slipping ratings, is still a hip-hop force to reckon with. Add
- to that Ted Kop pel's sturdy (and frequently top-rated) Nightline
- and wild cards like Rush Lim baugh, and you have the most hotly
- contested, creatively bustling time period in television. "Late
- night," says Leno, "is just about the only place on network
- TV where anything interesting is happening. It's almost the
- new prime time."
- </p>
- <p> All of it is revolving around Letterman. His new TV incarnation
- represents more than just a change of networks and an earlier
- bedtime; it marks the ascendance of a new generation. When Late
- Night with David Letterman made its debut on NBC in 1982, it
- was the prankish outsider, a subversive send-up of talk shows,
- television, the entertainment world in general. Let terman
- refused to fawn over guests; with the help of Vegas-obsessed
- bandleader Paul Shaffer, he took deadpan aim at show-biz phoniness.
- He griped about his NBC bosses, turned stagehands into stars,
- conducted elevator races in the hallway. His medium-twisting
- inventiveness was influenced by Ernie Kovacs, his man-on-the-street
- playfulness by Steve Allen. But Letterman seasoned them with
- his own sardonic, cranky, cooler-than-cool personality. For
- a young generation of viewers bored with television's formula
- and fakery, Letterman was fresh, liberating, indispensable.
- </p>
- <p> The TV question of the moment is whether Letterman's offbeat,
- sometimes abrasive style will work at 11:30, where the mainstream
- audience is more accustomed to the enthusiasm that Carson (and
- now Leno) brought to the job of helping celebrities promote
- their new movies. Industry prognosticators are cautious, if
- not downright skeptical. Leno, inheritor of the powerful Tonight
- franchise, is generally regarded as the front runner, if only
- because Letter man's show will have a weaker station lineup:
- more than 30% of CBS affiliates will be delaying his program
- by half an hour or more to make room for syndicated fare. CBS
- is projecting that Letterman will average a 4 rating--a big
- jump over its current ratings, though still behind Leno's (who
- averaged 4.6 last season). Some advertising gurus think even
- that is too optimistic. After an initial burst of curiosity
- tune-in, predicts Gene DeWitt, president of a New York City
- media management firm, the audience will drift back to Leno.
- "CBS's audience seems to skew a bit older ((than Let terman's)).
- It's kind of like putting a SoHo comedian into the Fontainebleau
- hotel."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Madison Avenue has a poor record of foreseeing seismic shifts
- in TV viewing patterns. As he moves closer to the mainstream,
- Letterman may find the mainstream has met him more than halfway.
- Letterman's hip, ironic, show-biz-hardened sensibility has,
- in the decade since he arrived, moved to the center of the culture
- in everything from sitcoms to Spy magazine. Billy Crystal used
- to poke fun at Tonight Show blather on Saturday Night Live ("You
- look mahvelous"); now he hosts the Academy Awards. Knockoffs
- of Letter man's Top 10 lists have turned up everywhere but
- on the backs of cereal boxes. Leno himself has appropriated,
- clumsily, Letterman-style bits (Jay too makes phone calls for
- people picked from the audience). The only late-night host who
- still seems to regard Merv Griffin as an acceptable role model
- is Arsenio Hall, and he introduces rap groups and wears an earring.
- </p>
- <p> None of which appears to be causing much concern among Letterman
- and his brain trust, who have spent the past month settling
- into their new digs and holding twice-daily meetings to plan
- their new show. Much of the activity has been on the architectural
- front. In 12 furious weeks, the old Ed Sullivan Theater--where
- Elvis and the Beatles were once presented by the Great Stone
- Face--was given a complete overhaul. In his new setup Letterman
- will have a more cavernous auditorium, a bigger audience (about
- 400 seats, nearly double the capacity of his old NBC studio)
- and a whole new neighborhood for his snoopy cameras to roam
- around in. "You can leave the stage, go down three or four steps,
- open the door, and you're right on 53rd Street," says Letterman.
- "I can scream every night at Miss Saigon. I can literally holler
- at her. I can make enough noise on our sidewalk to disrupt their
- show every night."
- </p>
- <p> A few other changes are being planned. Shaffer has added two
- more members to the band, renamed it the CBS Orchestra and rescored
- the bluesy theme song to give it "more pizazz." Guests too are
- likely to be ratcheted a notch higher in marquee value. "At
- 11:30, with such heated competition, you have to have guests
- that are more surefire," says executive producer Robert Morton.
- "On the old show, we had more breathing room. We might put on
- a guest who wasn't a great talker but someone we really liked.
- Now we're going for the best possible performers." Among those
- scheduled for the first week: Robin Williams, Martin Short,
- Deb ra Winger and John Mellencamp. (In a nice bow to tradition,
- Letterman's very first guest will be Bill Murray, his inaugural
- guest on NBC in 1982.)
- </p>
- <p> But Letterman and his staff dismiss any notion that the show
- will be toned down or changed in any substantive way to suit
- the earlier time period. In a series of brainstorming meetings
- on the subject, Letterman and his producers considered several
- ideas--expanding the opening monologue, switching from a
- single chair for guests to a Tonight-style couch--and rejected
- them. Says Morton: "We decided we do a pretty darn good show."
- </p>
- <p> For several weeks, the Letterman crew has been taping "remotes"
- that will look little different from the taped bits familiar
- to fans of his old show. So far, Letterman has gone on a tour
- of the CBS Broadcast Center, manned a drive-up window at McDonald's
- and escorted Zsa Zsa Gabor through a New Jersey neighborhood
- in a segment titled "Do You Have a Question for Zsa Zsa?" (Letterman's
- postmortem: "Only one person asked her about slapping the cop.
- I thought that was odd.")
- </p>
- <p> Nor does Letterman seem troubled about the much publicized dispute
- with NBC over the rights to his signature bits, such as the
- Top 10 list and Stupid Pet Tricks. The Letterman camp has conceded
- some points; it has changed the title of the show from Late
- Night to Late Show with David Letterman, for instance. But the
- Top 10 list and other familiar bits will be back, Letterman
- promises, though possibly under different names. "I would never
- put CBS in a position where they would have to legally defend
- me," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Meet the new, cooperative, user-friendly David Letterman. At
- NBC, Letter man was a notorious malcontent, getting upset over
- real and perceived network slights, like a cost-saving proposal
- that he share studio space with The Maury Povich Show. At CBS
- he has schmoozed with affiliates, had nothing but kind words
- for network executives and recorded dozens of on-air promos,
- which have run ad infinitum since mid-July--a campaign, says
- Let terman, that "is now officially embarrassing even me."
- Some of the spots, in their snide way, seem intended to reveal
- a softer side of the acerbic late-night host. In one, Letterman
- talks about his two sisters. The older one, he says, taught
- him, "When you go to the bathroom, close the door"; and the
- younger one was "one of the smartest people that I've ever been
- around" but "won't give me her phone number."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Letterman, 46, remains an aloof, almost opaque celebrity.
- In conversation he is articulate, disarmingly modest and genuinely,
- effortlessly funny. Having shed 30 pounds since last year, he
- seems more relaxed and upbeat than ever before. Yet he guards
- his emotions tightly and talks only reluctantly about his private
- life.
- </p>
- <p> Colleagues say one reason is that there isn't much of it. Letterman,
- by most accounts, is consumed by his work, has few close friends
- and spends little time socializing outside the office. His current
- girlfriend, Regina Lasko, used to work on his show (she is now
- production manager for Saturday Night Live), but most staffers
- were unaware of their relationship until the two had been dating
- for months. She shares his lower Manhattan loft, though he still
- spends much of his time (more than she would like, he admits)
- at his house in Connecticut. Letterman has mentioned her name
- publicly only once and regrets it. "People started following
- her family around," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Others attribute Letterman's reclu siveness to his Midwestern
- reticence and a sincere discomfort with playing the celebrity
- game. "It's good taste," says Steve O'Donnell, who spent eight
- years as the show's head writer. "He doesn't want to lay that
- stuff on you."
- </p>
- <p> Despite his kids-in-the-hall casualness around the office, Letterman
- is a fiercely driven perfectionist who controls virtually every
- detail of his show. "There's more tension than any place I've
- ever worked," says an ex-staffer. Letterman rejects reams of
- material submitted by his team of a dozen writers, and he crosses
- off potential guests by the score. "We'd hand in a list of 50
- guests, and he'd say no to 48," says a frustrated former booker.
- He is also notoriously moody and has last-minute pangs of self-doubt.
- "In the makeup room five minutes before the show," says head
- writer Rob Burnett, "Dave will suddenly say, `This bit is not
- going to work.' Sometimes he needs to be almost pushed in front
- of the camera." After the show, he typically replays the videotape
- and broods about mistakes or bits that misfired.
- </p>
- <p> "He's incredibly insecure and very self-torturing," says Merrill
- Markoe, his former girlfriend, who helped create Late Night,
- devised such popular bits as Stupid Pet Tricks and wrote for
- the show until 1986. "He doesn't ever reward himself for a job
- well done. He always feels that he screwed up. In fact, in all
- the years I knew him, I never once heard him say he thought
- something went pretty well. The most he ever gives himself is
- remarks like, `Well, I guess that stuck to the tape.'"
- </p>
- <p> Markoe and Letterman split up five years ago and no longer speak.
- Letterman expresses no bitterness and praises Markoe as "the
- smartest, funniest woman I've ever been around." Markoe, who
- is now writing books, says she hasn't watched Letterman's show
- since the breakup and "won't even talk to people about working
- on another late-night show. I have no interest in helping any
- other white man in a suit do an inventive show. Let them all
- find their own damn inventive shows."
- </p>
- <p> If women staffers describe Letter man's program as a boys'
- club, it is not just because only one of the show's 12 writers
- is female; it is also because the off-camera Letterman is much
- like the on-camera, prank-playing fraternity boy. Staffers recall
- the chaos that ensued during an office celebration several years
- ago, when he set off a flare in Morton's office and triggered
- the building's smoke alarms. A couple of weeks ago, Letterman
- challenged head writer Burnett to an oyster-eating contest:
- $150 if he consumed 50, $10 for each one thereafter. (Burnett
- wolfed down 60.)
- </p>
- <p> Letterman's outside interests mostly involve sports. He jogs
- and swims (more of the latter since he injured his neck in a
- car accident two years ago), plays basketball and went to the
- All-Star baseball game in July. His No. 1 passion is auto racing.
- Letterman keeps a collection of foreign sports cars in an airplane
- hangar in Santa Monica, pores over British racing magazines
- and takes a different friend each year to the Indianapolis 500,
- part of his campaign to show that the sport is "more than cowboys
- in cars going as fast as they can." Racing has a nostalgic appeal
- for Letterman, who grew up in Indianapolis. "I can remember
- as a kid going out to the speedway with my uncle to watch time
- trials for the race," he says. "I loved those days."
- </p>
- <p> Letterman treats his Midwestern roots with a mixture of ironic
- detachment and affection. He visits his mother a couple of times
- a year; the last time was after this year's Indy 500. Letterman
- says he was tickled by the experience. He called the house at
- 7 p.m. and came by after dinner. "I got there at 8:30, and Mom
- says to me [affecting her quiet, church-lady voice], `David,
- would you like some strawberry pie?' I go into the kitchen,
- and there's a brand-new, fresh-baked strawberry pie. I said,
- `When did you make this?' She said, `I started right after I
- got off the phone with you.' It was just the cutest. I was so
- touched. Isn't that motherhood? She gets off the phone, drops
- what she's doing and bakes a pie."
- </p>
- <p> Letterman's father, a florist who died when David was 27, was
- a "polar opposite. When he would walk through a room, lamps
- would rattle. He was funny and energetic and a goofball, screaming
- and hollering, making corny jokes. Then when he died, the focus
- shifted obviously to my mother, and none of us realized how
- quiet and undemonstrative she was. It took some re-getting used
- to. My first 27 years, I'm living in a fraternity house. It
- was all thunder and lightning. And with my mom now, it's kind
- of a gentle spring rain."
- </p>
- <p> Letterman married his college sweetheart and moved with her
- to California, where they divorced after nine years. Friends
- say he was rarely without a steady girlfriend thereafter, though
- Letterman gets a troubled look whenever the subject of female
- relationships comes up. "Every relationship that's failed in
- my life has been my fault," he says.
- </p>
- <p> His closest male friends are mostly comedians he met on the
- club circuit in Los Angeles. Even they concede that Letterman
- reveals little about himself. George Miller, who lived in the
- same apartment building as Letterman, across the street from
- the Comedy Store, recalls taking him along on his first three
- or four guest appearances on the Tonight Show. When Letterman
- was invited for his first Tonight gig, however, "I found out
- about it from Merrill," says Miller. "I was a little ticked
- off. But it's just because he's so private."
- </p>
- <p> For all his guardedness, Letterman can be generous and loyal
- to friends. In 1979 Miller was among several comics who boycotted
- the Comedy Store in a labor dispute. Letterman, who by this
- time was guest-hosting the Tonight Show, kept performing there
- because he needed to try out material. Miller showed up one
- night to watch his friend, but the club's owner called the police
- and had him thrown out. "After Dave heard what had happened,
- he never worked another show there," says Miller. "That was
- quite a sacrifice."
- </p>
- <p> Letterman's standards and sense of propriety are apparent as
- well in his choice of material. Writers say he often rejects
- jokes that stray too close to tragic news events or real-life
- misfortune. Rob Burnett recalls Letterman turned down a gag
- for a segment called Charts and Graphs--"Dyslexics' Favorite
- Beatles," featuring names like ULAP and OGNRI; the host said
- it made fun of a serious disability. Comedian Jeff Altman, another
- Letterman pal from the Comedy Store days, remembers a guest
- appearance on Late Night in which he made a lewd crack that
- included the word "genitals." Letterman didn't laugh, and Altman
- complained about it later at dinner. "I said, `You could have
- helped me out a little there.' Dave said, "Maybe you shouldn't
- have said that on TV.' "
- </p>
- <p> In his Midwestern modesty and reserve, Letterman recalls no
- one so much as the man he publicly idolizes, Johnny Carson.
- Like Carson, much of Letterman's appeal comes from the counterpoint
- between his heartland Wasp looks and his edgy irreverence. The
- two have become closer since Carson retired, Letterman says.
- "I'm more at ease around him now." Letterman had dinner at Carson's
- house in April, along with former Tonight producer (and now
- Letterman executive producer) Peter Lassally. Carson served
- meat loaf and mashed potatoes and talked about his recent African
- safari. "He had learned Swahili," says Letterman. "I'm thinking,
- Is this a dream? I'm here in Johnny Carson's dining room, and
- he's speaking Swahili."
- </p>
- <p> After flirting with a movie career (he signed a development
- deal with Disney several years ago, but it came to nothing),
- Letterman seems determined, for now, to continue doing what
- he does best. The move to Carson's old 11:30 slot means the
- sort of mainstream acceptance he could never achieve as host
- of a fringe-period talk show--"entertaining prisoners and
- college students,'' as he once put it. Says Markoe: "Dave is
- the most competitive person I have ever spent a lot of time
- with. It really matters to him to win everything he goes into.
- Dave has taken a new time slot because he wants to win."
- </p>
- <p> And if he wins, then what? "I'm not going to be around as long
- as Carson was around," Letterman vows. "After a period of time
- with this, I will leave and go on. I'll probably never be on
- television again, on any kind of regular basis. This will be
- my new and final project."
- </p>
- <p> A pause for the old self-doubt to surface. "You can hear America
- breathing a sigh of relief."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-