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Biography for Steve Allen

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 STEVE ALLEN
AKA: Stephen Valentine Patrick William Allen;
Born: 1921-12-26
Birth place: New York City, New York, USA
Death: 2000-10-30
Death cause: heart attack caused by a ruptured blood vessel suffered in minor traffic accident
Profession: author, composer, disc jockey, lyricist, xylophonist, actor, comedian, political commentator, wrestling match commentator, TV host
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Biography

A jack-of-all-entertainment-trades, from TV host in the 1950s and 60s to composer of more than 4,000 pop songs and author of over 30 books, Steve Allen is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the most prolific composer of modern times. Tall, full-shouldered and wearing thick glasses, he might have seemed unlikely for TV stardom, but he had a quick wit, a good voice, and his inventiveness was perfect for early television. Allen actually began in radio, working at KOY in Phoenix in 1943 as an announcer. He then went to the Mutual Network in Los Angeles doing comedy and hosted a radio talk show on the CBS affiliate in Los Angeles until 1950. By then, he had his feet into TV as well, hosting game and chat shows, including "Songs for Sale" (CBS, 1950-51) and the first "Steve Allen Show" (CBS, 1950-52).

CBS had Allen as a panelist on "What's My Line?" in 1953 when Sylvester 'Pat' Weaver, head of NBC's programming, was looking for a host for a concept he was nurturing--a late-night talk/variety series. Early efforts, such as "Broadway Open House", had not succeeded, but Weaver wanted to give "The Tonight Show" a try. Allen was hired by NBC to host the show and made it his own, molding the concept to a combination of monologues, guests, skits, and ongoing characters played by a repertory of actors including Louis Nye and Tom Poston. Allen sat behind a desk, asked questions and offered quick comebacks. The show was such a success that with the demise of Milton Berle's variety show, Allen became NBC's hottest property and the network added a 1956 Sunday night primetime variety show starring Allen. Within a year, the double-duty proved too exhausting for the host, so he relinquished "The Tonight Show" duties to Jack Paar and opted to work exclusively in primetime. The Sunday night show could not adequately compete with the already-established "Ed Sullivan Show" and by 1960, Allen was gone from NBC and trying to launch a variety series for ABC.

Allen's true TV stardom was to be a product of the 50s and he never really recaptured that luster. From 1964-66, he was the moderator of the panel show "I've Got A Secret" and in 1968 launched a syndicated bid to renew his talk show supremacy. But the world was turning towards the likes of Mike Douglas and Phil Donahue and Allen's talk show sputtered on for a few seasons before disappearing. In 1977, he launched a heralded PBS series, "Meeting of the Minds", which scripted the notion of what would happen if famous people from different eras could be interviewed today and encounter each other in modern times. Often appearing as a panelist was Allen's second wife, actress Jayne Meadows. Allen occasionally acted on TV, such as in an 1983 episode of "Fantasy Island", but more often played himself or a generic talk show host. On the big screen, he did play the title role in the glossy, hardly factual "The Benny Goodman Story" (1956), while in films such as "The Comic" (1969) and "Casino" (1995) he was cast as himself.

A prolific songwriter, Allen earned a Grammy for "Gravy Waltz" and also scored one motion picture, the 1968 MGM film "A Man Called Dagger", and numerous TV shows. He wrote special lyrics for the 1985 TV musical version of "Alice in Wonderland" (CBS). Into the 90s, Allen was a frequent guest on TV retrospectives and was saluted on PBS with a 1997 tribute in honor of his 75th birthday.



Family

MOTHER: Isabelle Allen. Vaudevillian.

FATHER: Carroll Allen. Vaudevillian.

SON: Stephen Allen. Physician. Mother, Dorothy Goodman; survived him.

SON: Brian Allen. Mother, Dorothy Goodman; survived him.

SON: David Allen. Mother, Dorothy Goodman; survived him.

SON: William Christopher Allen. TV executive. Mother, Jayne Meadows; survived him.



Companion

WIFE: Dorothy Goodman. Married on August 23, 1943; divorced in 1952; had three children.

WIFE: Jayne Meadows. Actor. Married on July 31, 1954; had one son; survived him.



Milestone

1942: Began professional career as radio announcer, station KOY, Phoenix Arizona

1945: First job as comedian, Mutual Broadcasting System

1949: Film debut as writer (of narration) and performer, "Down Memory Lane"

1950 - 1951: Served as M.C. of "Songs for Sale"

1953: First Broadway performance, "The Pink Elephant"

Hosted "Tonight Show"

1955: Wrote first book, "Fourteen For Tonight"

Starred on prime time "The Steve Allen Show"; later title, "The Steve Allen Plymouth Show"

Moderated "I've Got a Secret"

Hosted syndicated talk show

Hosted and wrote "The Meeting of the Minds" (PBS)



Education

Drake University - Des Moines, Iowa Hyde Park High School - Chicago, Illinois St Thomas the Apostle School - Chicago, Illinois Arizona State Teachers College - Tempe, Arizona - 1942 - now part of the University of Arizona


Bibliography

"Fourteen For Tonight" Steve Allen 1955

"Bop Fables" Steve Allen 1955

"The Funny Men" Steve Allen 1956

"The Girls on the Tenth Floor" Steve Allen 1958

"The Question Man" Steve Allen 1959

"Mark It and Strike It" Steve Allen 1960

"Not All Your Laughter, Not All Your Tears" Steve Allen 1962

"Letter to a Conservative" Steve Allen 1965

"The Ground is Our Table" Steve Allen 1966

"Bigger Than a Breadbox" Steve Allen 1967

"A Flash of Swallows" Steve Allen 1969

"The Wake" Steve Allen 1972

"Princess Snip-Snip" Steve Allen 1973

"Curses!" Steve Allen 1973

"Schmock-Schmock!" Steve Allen 1975

"What to Say When It Rains" Steve Allen 1974

"Meeting of Minds" Steve Allen 1978

"Chopped Up Chinese" Steve Allen 1978

"Ripoff" Steve Allen 1979

"Explaining China" Steve Allen 1980

"Funny People" Steve Allen 1981

"The Talk Show Murders" Steve Allen 1982

"More Funny People" Steve Allen 1982

"Beloved Son: A Story of the Jesus Cults" Steve Allen 1982

"How to Make a Speech" Steve Allen 1986

"How to Be Funny" Steve Allen 1987

"Murder on the Glitter Box" Steve Allen

"Dumbth: And 81 Ways to Make Americans Smarter" Steve Allen

"Murder in Manhattan" Steve Allen 1990

"Murder at the Atlantic" Steve Allen 1995

"The Man Who Turned Back the Clock" Steve Allen 1995

"The Bug, the Slug and the Rug" Steve Allen 1995

"But, Seriously" Steve Allen 1996



Citizenship

United States


Notes

Inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in 1986


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