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Steve Allen Biography

TV Personality / Writer / Composer

By the end of his career Allen was more famous for being multi-talented than for any individual achievement. (His official website called him a "one-man creative conglomerate.") He was the host of the long-running Tonight Show from its first New York broadcast in 1953 until 1957, when he was replaced by Jack Paar. (Allen is often credited with pioneering the "man on the street" and audience-participation comedy bits which became a staple of late-night TV.) He hosted other comedy and variety shows on various networks from the 1950s through the 1980s, and emceed the game show I've Got A Secret. From 1977-81 he wrote and starred in A Meeting of Minds, a fictional talk show starring famous figures from history. On film he played jazz clarinetist Benny Goodman in the 1955 movie The Benny Goodman Story. Allen also claimed to have composed more than 7900 songs; in one famous stunt he dashed off 400 quickie tunes in one day. His best-known song is probably This Could Be The Start of Something Big, and his Gravy Waltz won a 1963 Grammy as best jazz composition. He was the author of over 50 books, including The Talk Show Murders (1982). An autopsy after Allen's death revealed that his fatal heart failure was likely caused by a minor traffic accident earlier the same day.

Extra credit: Allen's second wife was the actress Jayne Meadows, sister of The Honeymooners star Audrey Meadows.

Allen and Jack Paar appear in our loop on Tonight Show Hosts. Allen also appears in our loop Death By Car.

Four Good Links

Steve Allen Online

The late star's official site; tons of info, and no lack of ego

Dead Musician Directory: Steve Allen

Reprints of several Allen obituaries from October 2000

A Meeting of Media Minds

Lively interview with Allen from a page on "media visionaries"

The Tonight Show

The Museum of Broadcast Communications looks at the show Allen began

Vital Stats

Birth

26 December 1921

Birthplace

New York, New York

Death

30 October 2000
(heart failure, age 78)

Best Known As

Original host of The Tonight Show