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Conan O’Brien's late-night legacy as host lives on

US talk show host was late-night’s longtime underdog, turning it into surrealist art



Talk show host Conan O'Brien
Image Credit: AP

For the third time in his career, Conan O’Brien left a late-night show, ending the 11-season run of ‘Conan’ on TBS — preceded by the end of his seven-month stint as the host of ‘The Tonight Show’, and that by the end of 16 years’ worth of ‘Late Night’, both on NBC.

Unlike those earlier departures, he does not have another talk show on the horizon, at least not on television, but will present what has so far been described only as a “variety show” on HBO Max, a TBS corporate relative.

The final ‘Conan’ was a friendly, appealingly modest affair presented in front of an audience that seemed to include a lot of people who worked on the show and their friends and relations, to judge by the applause accorded various members of the production team in O’Brien’s closing remarks. It was taped at Largo at the Coronet Theater, a cozy space long at the centre of LA comedy; ‘Conan’ has been based there for a year, playing until lately to a crowd of cardboard cutouts and crew members, with O’Brien, his guest and more-than-a-sidekick Andy Richter keeping more than the recommended social distance.

Conan O Brien with Lisa Kudrow
Image Credit: Supplied

The last couple of weeks have introduced live audiences, however, and there has been a lot of sincere, sentimental hugging as the show has lowered its shutters. Even so, it has been a more measured affair than the host’s last days at ‘Late Night’, when he took his set apart with an axe.

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It was “fitting,” said O’Brien, that final guest Jack Black had actually injured himself rehearsing a filmed musical piece in which he was supposed to appear to injure himself; he came onstage with a cane in his hand and a foot in a brace. One waited to see if it were a bit, but it wasn’t. “When Carson and Letterman and all these legends go off the air, everything is meticulous,” said O’Brien. (“Johnny would have had Jack shot,” joked Richter. “That’s how they did it then.”) Black did manage to rise and sing to the tune of ‘My Way’: “He’s tall, he’s really pale, he has red hair, like Howdy Doody / But more, much more than this, he did it Cone’s way.”

Paul Rudd and Conan O'Brien
Image Credit: Team Coco

Conan’s final episodes included visits by Martin Short, J.B. Smoove, Tig Notaro, Patton Oswalt, Mila Kunis and Dana Carvey. Seth Rogen got him to take a hit of a joint he happened to have on him. “I’m like a narc that to prove he was not a narc took some drugs,” said O’Brien. “I think it metabolises and becomes more orange pompadour.” Paul Rudd, in a tuxedo, crashed Bill Hader’s segment to prank the host once more with a clip of ‘Mac and Me’, the awful ‘E.T.’ knockoff he substitutes for whatever film he’s supposedly there to promote.

On Thursday, Will Ferrell, who appeared on the last night of O’Brien’s ‘Late Night’” Zoomed in to record a packet of farewells for future last shows: “Congratulations on an outstanding run on your HBO Max show; people would say that six episodes isn’t a lot, but you packed enough entertainment in them for eight episodes.” And, “I’m truly going to miss your Delta flight talk show, ‘Wheels Up,’ available on select flights from Atlanta to Tampa.” O’Brien himself announced “my new career posing as Conan O’Brien on Hollywood Boulevard.” An “exit interview” conducted by Homer Simpson with an animated Conan — referencing “Marge vs. the Monorail,” an episode O’Brien wrote — opened the show.

Lifetime of success

Andy Richter, Kevin Nealon and Conan O'Brien
Image Credit: Team Coco
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Obviously, there is some distance between O’Brien’s habitual self-deprecation, whether it expresses genuine feelings and/or supports a joke, and the reality of his success, a trail that leads through the Harvard Lampoon, of which he was president; the writers rooms of ‘Saturday Night Live’ and ‘The Simpsons’; 28 years of talk shows, which requires being funny night after night; and a highly successful podcast, ‘Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend’, which requires being natural in an unnatural setting. NBC paid him more than $30 million to walk away from ‘The Tonight Show’, which is a rarefied sort of failure, a disappointment stood on the shoulders of great success.

This self-consciousness is what sets him apart from Jimmy and Jimmy and James and Stephen; they are all more or less regular guys where he is an irregular one; even his whiteness is a different shade of pale. In classic rock terms, it’s the difference between being a fan of Neil Young and a fan of those other guys in that supergroup. He is a performer almost by accident, a writer who suddenly found himself — a man who needed much introduction — in David Letterman’s ‘Late Night’ chair, shot from a cannon.

Conan O'Brien
Image Credit: AP

His energy and his looks — Short called him a “a ginger crash-test dummy” — make him hard to place chronologically, O’Brien is 58; he will have been getting AARP mailers for some time now. For late-night-retirement context, he’s eight years younger than Johnny Carson was when he quit ‘The Tonight Show’, a decade younger than David Letterman when he left ‘Late Show’, a year younger than Jay Leno when Leno turned the keys to ‘The Tonight Show’ over to him in 2009, before taking them back for another four years. He has stayed in longer than his contemporaries but is getting out sooner than his elders, making sure not to stay too long at the fair.

“I have devoted all of my adult life, all of it, to pursuing this strange phantom intersection between smart and stupid,” he said in the ‘Conan’ finale. “This really crazy and seemingly pointless pursuit to do things that are kind of stupid but have something smart in there somewhere and then there’s a little tiny sort of flicker of what is a kind of a magic, I think. That’s what I believe. So my advice to anyone watching right now, and it’s not easy to do, but try and do what you love with people you love, and if you can manage that it’s the definition of heaven on earth.”

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