Ed McMahon (born Edward Leo Peter
McMahon Jr) is most famous for his work on television
as Johnny Carson's announcer on the Tonight Show. For
more than 30 years, he introduced the show with a drawn-out "Heeeeeeeeeeeeeere's
Johnny!". His booming voice and constant laughter
earned him the nickname the human laughtrack.
He later also became well-known as the presenter
of Publishers Clearinghouse sweepstakes who arrives
unannounced at the homes of winners. He subsequently
made a series of Neighborhood Watch public service
announcements reprising that role in parody.
He also hosted the long-running syndicated talent
show Star Search, cohosted the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon,
emceed the game shows Snap Judgment and Concentration,and
performed in television commercials.
McMahon has appeared in several films, including
The Incident (1967), Fun With Dick and Jane (1976),
Full Moon High (1981) and Butterfly (1981).
McMahon began his career as a bingo caller in Maine,
when he was fifteen. He worked as a carnival barker
for three years as a teenager, and put himself through
college as a pitchman for vegetable slicers on the
Atlantic City boardwalk. He graduated from the Catholic
University of America with a Bachelor of Arts in 1949.
During World War II he was decorated as a Marine
fighter pilot, and also served as a flight instructor
and test pilot. He continued his military career in
1952 by flying 85 missions in Korea, and rose to the
rank of full Colonel in the Marines, then was commissioned
as Brigadier General in the California Air National
Guard. Several of his ancestors, including the Marquis
d'Equilly, also had long and distinguished military
careers. A McMahon was a Marshall of armies in France
and served under Napoleon III. McMahon also once asserted
to Johnny Carson that an ancestor of his had something
to do with the invention of the salad dressing known
as mayonnaise. Since the origin of mayonnaise is unclear,
it is also unclear if he was being sincere or just
being funny.
McMahon served on the boards of The Marine Corps
Scholarship Fund, the Horatio Alger Association, and
St. Jude's Ranch for Children in Boulder City, Nevada.
He was named honorary chairman of the National Marine
Corps Aviation Museum to be built at Cherry Point,
North Carolina. He was President of the Catholic University
Alumni Association for four years.
In the 1990's, McMahon was considered one of the
richer members of the Hollywood set with substantial
investments in real estate(one of the largest landlords
in Malibu), and in diversified brewing stocks. He was
reputed to be worth in excess of $200 million in real
estate holdings and real estate partnerships.
As part of the introductory patter to the Tonight
Show, McMahon would state his name out loud, pronouncing
it as Ed "Mc MAH yon", but neither his long-time
cohort Johnny Carson nor seemingly anyone else who
interviewed him ever seemed to pick up on that subtlety,
usually referring to him as Ed "Mc MAN".
The extroverted McMahon made a good counter to the
notoriously shy Carson. Nonetheless, McMahon once told
an interviewer that after his many decades as an emcee,
he would still get "butterflies" in the stomach
every time he would walk onto a stage. He said that
instead of letting that nervousness defeat him, he
would use it as "energy" for his role as
emcee. |