Santa Fe New Mexican

JIMMY FALLON ROCKS CHRISTMAS

The late-night host lights up the holiday season with a slate of new shows and reveals his fondest Christmas memories.

- BY MARA REINSTEIN • COVER AND OPENER BY MARY ELLEN MATTHEWS

If you think Jimmy Fallon is enthusiast­ic while hosting The Tonight

Show, you should see him give a tour of his office.

“This is me brushing my teeth next to Paul McCartney!” he says of a photo on his wall behind his desk. Next, he points to a framed ticket of his final Saturday

Night Live show from May 2004. He proudly picks up a Rodney Dangerfiel­d Centennial Respect trophy (“I loved Rodney, but this award is heavy, to be honest”), which sits on a cabinet next to a fish tank gifted to him four years ago by his former SNL boss, Lorne Michaels. And, whoa, that’s a handwritte­n note from legend Jerry Lewis, asking him if Lewis can say a profane word as a guest on The Tonight Show.

With the same level of exuberance, Fallon also singles out a photo of himself with his wife, movie producer Nancy Juvonen, at their 2007 wedding on the private Necker Island in the Caribbean—as well as one of his own parents, Gloria and James Fallon Sr., on their big day in Brooklyn. “My mom is in this beautiful wedding dress and my dad is in a tuxedo with a cigarette,” he says. “Like, Dad, you can’t wait five minutes?!”

This combinatio­n of unfailing humor and heart has endeared Fallon, 47, to millions of fans. More than seven years into his plum Tonight Show job, the SNL alum has made his mark by embracing old-school variety-show-style entertainm­ent. “I like that we mix it up so I can sing a song with someone or dance and do sketches,” he says.

Now he’s branching out beyond late night. Fallon hosts and executive-produces

That’s My Jam (premiering Nov. 29 on NBC), in which two teams of celebritie­s face off in music-and-dance-based games. He also oversees The Kids Tonight Show, airing weekly on Peacock through Dec. 22, and the E! network’s music competitio­n series Clash of the Cover Bands. And just in time for Christmas, the animated

special 5 More Sleeps ’til Christmas, based on his bestsellin­g children’s book, aired Nov. 26 on NBC and will run again in December. Before the holiday crush, Fallon talks to

Parade about his ghosts of Christmas past, his Tonight Show present and his never-beenbright­er TV future. What’s it like working in Rockefelle­r Center during the holidays? It’s a mix between magic and chaos. There’s the tree, the ice-skating, FAO Schwarz and Saks Fifth Avenue with a light show every half hour. But after a while you go, “Maybe get your own tree?” Are you a good gift giver? I think so. I always try to throw a couple curve balls, but I try to be thoughtful. Oh, God, I’m just thinking about the time I got my grandma a scent diffuser. She was like 80 years old, and I thought it would be calming. It was terrible. Oh, I had maybe one really serious girlfriend ever and I got her a long flannel nightgown from the Disney Store with Mickey Mouse on it. And we had no connection to Mickey Mouse! I can relive going to the mall and buying it and then seeing her disappoint­ment. Did you grow up performing for your

family? We are a very Irish Catholic family, and my grandparen­ts lived in a little cottage in our backyard. So we would have parties all the time and everyone would be singing and laughing and telling stories. I think at those parties, my parents would ask me to perform something. I actually have a reel-to-reel tape of my parents interviewi­ng me when I was 2. They said, “Oh, Jimmy, do James Cagney,” and I go, “You dirty rat!” I did Don Ho too.

But you do have a musical side. When I started out, I only did stand-up comedy. Then in college [at the College of Saint Rose in Albany, N.Y.], I started adding musical impression­s. I would do George Michael at the end of my act, and it was the perfect closer. I can harmonize, but my voice isn’t that amazing. And I’d be too embarrasse­d to write an original serious song. How obsessed were you with Saturday Night Live as a teen? It was my ultimate goal. If I had a birthday cake, I’d blow out

the candles and think about SNL. Throw a coin in the fountain and wish for SNL. In college, I wouldn’t go to parties until SNL was over. What was it like to be 24 and on the show

of your dreams? I’d come home at like 5 in the morning and wake up at 1 in the afternoon. I’d save everything for the nighttime because that’s when I could really shine. That was my life. Where did The Kids Tonight Show idea come from? I have kids and I realized they didn’t have anything just for them. Animation is good, but you need to see real humans

out there doing silly things. When I was growing up, I had Kids Incorporat­ed and The Mickey Mouse Club with actual kids and teenagers. Why aren’t your daughters

on the show? They’re funny for a little bit, but anytime you ask them to do something they won’t do it. “Can you say, ‘Welcome to The Tonight Show’?” and they’ll go, “Booooo.”

Has fatherhood changed you?

Well, if I ever went to a bar now it would be because it has a good burger. But I think I’m a little less hyper, a bit more understand­ing and I understand things are going to be OK. And my hours! Now I look forward to the mornings and I want to live as much of the day as I possibly can.

 ?? ?? >ŃŃŖOE½Ã ŃŖÛi Ŗv music is obvious in two new projects— the celeb song-anddance competitio­n
That’s My Jam and Clash of the Cover Bands, where groups compete by performing classic tunes.
>ŃŃŖOE½Ã ŃŖÛi Ŗv music is obvious in two new projects— the celeb song-anddance competitio­n That’s My Jam and Clash of the Cover Bands, where groups compete by performing classic tunes.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? We play holiday music all the time. We decorate. The kids [Franny, 6, and Winnie, 8] are very crafty.
And we make this Puerto Rican eggnog called coquito [a coconut-and-rum drink], and once you try that you’ll never go back to regular eggnog again. There are also candy canes and cookies. I really go all in.
How do the Fallons spend the holidays?
We play holiday music all the time. We decorate. The kids [Franny, 6, and Winnie, 8] are very crafty. And we make this Puerto Rican eggnog called coquito [a coconut-and-rum drink], and once you try that you’ll never go back to regular eggnog again. There are also candy canes and cookies. I really go all in. How do the Fallons spend the holidays?
 ?? ?? Ń>łi -ijiŃÌŖOE] ƂÀĶ>OE> À>OE`i] iŃŃÞ Ń>ÀłÃŖOE and John Legend compete on That’s My Jam.
Ń>łi -ijiŃÌŖOE] ƂÀĶ>OE> À>OE`i] iŃŃÞ Ń>ÀłÃŖOE and John Legend compete on That’s My Jam.
 ?? ?? What’s been your hosting highlight? I’ve done a sketch with Carol Burnett and sang with Chrissie Hynde [of the Pretenders]. And with Bob Dylan. Crazy! I don’t know anyone who’s done a sketch with Dylan.
What’s been your hosting highlight? I’ve done a sketch with Carol Burnett and sang with Chrissie Hynde [of the Pretenders]. And with Bob Dylan. Crazy! I don’t know anyone who’s done a sketch with Dylan.
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Saturday Night Live [from Óäää Ì Óää{R° Ì Ü>à > Ü i Ì } > ` à i L>ÀÀ>Ãà }° }ÀiÜ > Õ iÌ > ` y ««i` Ì i L ÌÌ ÕÌ] > ÃÌ i *>Õ V >ÀÌ iÞ vÀ Ü i i Ü>à 7 }ð ÕÌ Þ Õ >Ûi Ì >Ûi *>Õ V >ÀÌ i޽à v>Vi Ì «Õ Ì >Ì vv°
Looking back, are you now embarrasse­d about anything in your career? / ÕÃ> `à v Ì }Ãt , } Ì Ü] ½` Ã>Þ Þ > ÀVÕÌà vÀ Ü i ` ` º7ii i ` 1«`>Ìi» Saturday Night Live [from Óäää Ì Óää{R° Ì Ü>à > Ü i Ì } > ` à i L>ÀÀ>Ãà }° }ÀiÜ > Õ iÌ > ` y ««i` Ì i L ÌÌ ÕÌ] > ÃÌ i *>Õ V >ÀÌ iÞ vÀ Ü i i Ü>à 7 }ð ÕÌ Þ Õ >Ûi Ì >Ûi *>Õ V >ÀÌ i޽à v>Vi Ì «Õ Ì >Ì vv°

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