FILE -
In this Saturday, Oct. 7, 2017, file
photo, David Letterman speaks during
the unveiling of a Peyton Manning
statue outside of Lucas Oil Stadium,
in Indianapolis. Letterman is being
honored with the Mark Twain Prize
for American Humor. He’ll receive
the lifetime achievement award
Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, at
Washington’s Kennedy Center. (Photo:
Darron Cummings, AP)
No joke:
TV host
Letterman
honored
with
Mark
Twain
Prize
Ashraf
Khalil,
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
- David
Letterman
was
celebrated
at the
Kennedy
Center
Sunday
night
for his
record
run on
late-night
TV,
innovative
comedy
routines
and for
helping
the
nation
start to
heal by
reassuring
that it
was OK
to laugh
again
after
the
terrorist
attacks
of Sept.
11,
2001.
Fellow
entertainers
gathered
to honor
Letterman
where he
was
receiving
the Mark
Twain
Prize
for
American
Humor.
Among
those in
attendance
were
previous
Mark
Twain
recipients
Steve
Martin
and Bill
Murray,
and
late-night
host
Jimmy
Kimmel,
who
recalled
a
monologue
Letterman
gave on
his show
shortly
after
9/11.
"You
let us
know it
was OK
to move
on and
OK to
laugh
again,"
Kimmel
said.
"Dave,
you led
the way
for all
of us."
Kimmel
jokingly
blamed
the
election
of
President
Donald
Trump on
Letterman's
retirement
in 2015.
"It's
like you
went out
for
cigarettes
one day
and left
us in
the
hands of
our
abusive,
orange
stepfather,"
Kimmel
said.
Speakers
included
comedians
John
Mulaney,
Amy
Schumer
and
Jimmie
Walker
of the
1970s
television
series
"Good
Times."
Walker
gave
Letterman
one of
his
first
jobs as
a joke
writer
in
Hollywood.
Schumer
poked
fun at
Letterman's
famed
reputation
for
grumpiness,
saying
she
performed
on his
show
three
times.
"By
the end
of my
third
appearance,
Dave was
no
longer
totally
indifferent
to me,"
she
said.
Mulaney
credited
Letterman's
appeal
with his
determination
to mine
humor
from
ordinary
people,
and
occasionally
their
pets.
"The
Johnny
Carson
show
said,
'Take a
break
from
your
weird
life and
watch
these
famous
people
have fun
in show
business,'"
Mulaney
said.
"Dave's
show
said,
'Your
weird
life is
just as
funny as
show
business.'"
The
70-year-old
Letterman
spent 33
years on
late-night
TV,
hosting
long-running
shows on
NBC and
then on
CBS. His
final
broadcast
on May
20,
2015,
was
episode
No. 6028
that
Letterman
hosted.
It
shattered
the
record
of his
mentor,
Carson.
On
Sunday,
comedians
Steve
Martin
and
Martin
Short
honored
him by
needling
him
about
his
bushy,
white
beard.
"Dave
has
always
had
excellent
instincts.
What
better
time
that now
to
choose
to look
like a
Confederate
war
general,"
Steve
Martin
said.
Former
First
Lady
Michelle
Obama
sent in
a video
tribute
and
Pearl
Jam lead
singer
Eddie
Vedder
thanked
Letterman
for
being a
longtime
"friend
to
music"
and
performed
the song
"Keep me
in your
heart"
by the
late
Warren
Zevon, a
Letterman
favorite.
Letterman's
run on
NBC in
particular
was
hugely
influential,
introducing
a
sardonic,
irony-drenched
comedic
style
that
influenced
a
generation.
His
time
slot
immediately
following
Carson's
"The
Tonight
Show"
allowed
Letterman
to draw
a huge
following
of
young,
largely
college-age
viewers
seeking
an
alternative
to the
somewhat
staid
Carson
model.
Letterman
introduced
the
country
to
fringe
musical
acts
that
might
never
have
received
an
opportunity
on "The
Tonight
Show."
His
humor
was
undeniably
intelligent,
but also
at times
surrealistic
and
silly.
He
pioneered
segments
called
Stupid
Pet
Tricks
and
Stupid
Human
Tricks.
He
tossed
watermelons
and
other
objects
off a
five-story
building;
at one
point,
he wore
a suit
made of
Velcro
and
jumped
onto a
Velcro-covered
wall,
sticking
in
place.
He
turned
bizarre
characters
like
Larry
"Bud"
Melman
and Biff
Henderson
into
cult
celebrities.
Letterman
started
his
career
as a
radio
talk
show
host and
TV
weatherman
in
Indiana.
In the
mid-1970s
he moved
to Los
Angeles,
performing
stand-up
comedy
and
writing
jokes
for (at
the time
more
famous)
stand-up
comic
Walker
of "Good
Times"
fame.
Eventually
he
caught
the eye
of "The
Tonight
Show"
and
Carson,
performing
several
times on
the show
and
becoming
a
regular
guest
host
starting
in 1978.
NBC
gave
Letterman
his own
show
following
Carson;
"Late
Night
with
David
Letterman"
debuted
on Feb.
1, 1982.
Letterman's
first
guest
that
night?
Bill
Murray,
the
Twain
award
recipient
in 2016.
On
Sunday,
Murray
stole
the show
with a
surreal
performance
dressed
as an
Elizabethan-era
monarch.
Murray
said the
perks of
the
Twain
award
elevate
you
above
normal
humans.
"You're
not
exactly
a god
but
you're
way up
there,"
he said.
"You
will be
able to
walk up
to any
man or
woman on
the
street,
take a
lit
cigar
out of
their
mouth
and
finish
it.
You'll
be able
to board
any
riverboat
in this
country."
Murray
then
announced
he was
hungry
and had
a burger
brought
to him
on
stage.
He then
ordered
platters
of
burgers
delivered
to
Letterman's
balcony
and
cajoled
Letterman's
son
Harry to
toss a
pickle
to the
masses
below.
Letterman
ended
the
evening
with a
brief
speech
and a
bit of
dark
humor,
saying,
"I kind
of wish
this
award
could be
presented
posthumously."
He
thanked
the
"hundreds
and
hundreds,
perhaps
thousands"
of
people
who
helped
him
along
the way.
He
closed
with a
politically
tinged
quote
from
Mark
Twain
himself
on the
subject
of
patriotism:
"Patriotism
is
supporting
your
country
all the
time and
supporting
your
government
when it
deserves
it."