Toronto Star

Late-night TV gets reinvented

Nightly talk shows are back — and in radically different forms,

- DAVE ITZKOFF THE NEW YORK TIMES

A few days ago, Samantha Bee was filming a segment for her TBS late-night series, “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee,” when she encountere­d a complicati­on she had never dealt with before.

“There was literally a screeching hawk, circling up in the sky,” she recalled, speaking from her home in upstate New York where she and her family have been sheltering in place — and which has become the de facto sound stage for her TV program.

So, Bee turned to her makeshift crew — her husband and executive producer, Jason Jones, and their three children — and delivered an unusual direction.

“We had to hold for hawk sounds,” she said. “You have to be OK with whatever nature provides. This is really uncharted territory for any of us.”

In the days since the coronaviru­s pandemic forced them into hiatus, the latenight comedy shows are gradually coming back. This week, many of them returned to their familiar broadcast time slots, but in radically different, minimalist forms.

Gone are the lavish studios, elaboratel­y produced field segments and cushy faceto-face conversati­ons with celebrity guests. Instead, the hosts are delivering their nightly monologues into iPhones from home and conducting their interviews by video conference.

Now that their shows are up and running, the people behind them say their continuing challenge is to provide viewers — for whom television has become one of a few remaining outlets for informatio­n and fresh entertainm­ent — with a sense of comfort and continuity while commenting on events that have turned increasing­ly dire.

“We’re in a weird space,” said Trevor Noah, the host of “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central. “It feels like the end of the world, and it’s not, but we also cannot treat it like nothing is happening. So we do have to find that balance.”

Most of the late-night shows, which are produced in New York and Los Angeles, recorded their last traditiona­l episodes around March 12, as social-distancing and self-quarantini­ng guidelines were being adopted in those cities. Their casts and crews went home for a long weekend and contemplat­ed next steps.

Little by little, the hosts began to reemerge in charmingly unpolished segments that were posted online: Stephen Colbert, of CBS’s “Late Show,” performed a 10-minute monologue from his bathtub (he still wore a suit), and Jimmy Fallon, of NBC’s “Tonight Show,” showed viewers around his home and celebrated St. Patrick’s Day.

Molly McNearney, the co-head writer and a producer of ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” said that creating a short, homemade monologue with its host was far more challengin­g than it might appear.

“It took three hours to shoot six minutes,” she said. “Just trying to get his eye line correct took forever. He’s used to having a teleprompt­er guy and a team of 140 people helping him there.”

McNearney, who is also Kimmel’s wife and the mother of their two young children, added that for that production, “it was just him and partially me.”

“I was the prop master and camera person and lighting person,” she continued. “We didn’t even worry about hair and makeup.”

As these shows hurriedly reinvented themselves for a new, ad hoc era, their staffers confronted a range of unexpected technologi­cal trials, teaching themselves to use new software and hardware while discoverin­g the limits of their home internet connection­s.

Mike Shoemaker, an executive producer of NBC’s “Late Night With Seth Meyers,” said that show’s host — who was formerly accustomed to reading his topical “A Closer Look” monologues from cue cards — has had to adjust to teleprompt­er software he downloaded onto his portable devices.

Describing raw footage of Meyers from some of the earliest attempts, Shoemaker said, “You’d see him reading something and then it’s going too fast, and then he reaches in like a grandpa on Skype, trying to slow it down.”

The segments that “Late Night” has deemed fit for posting have, nonetheles­s, drawn scrutiny from critics who are native to online media. “YouTubers are saying, ‘Dude, your lights; your sound,’ ” Shoemaker said. “Of course YouTubers are good at this. We’re not good at it.”

Even as these programs were experiment­ing, they began publicly committing to coming back on the air.

Jeff Ross, who is an executive producer of TBS’s “Conan” and has worked with Conan O’Brien since his 1993 debut on NBC, said that the host and his colleagues have kept the show running through all kinds of adversitie­s and hardships.

“Look, we went through 9/11,” Ross said. “We went through the writers’ strikes. We just said we have to do it.”

Beyond that spirit of camaraderi­e, Ross said that “Conan” needed to keep going out of economic necessity so that its employees could continue to get paid.

“At a certain point, where you’re not delivering shows, the network comes to you and says we can only do this for so long,” he said. “The day of reckoning comes.”

In this respect, Ross said, people in his line of work were fortunate to have jobs that they could still perform during the pandemic.

“We’re lucky because we can figure this out and work,” he said. “Other people are not so lucky.”

The hosts and producers of many latenight series are finding that, in these concentrat­ed formats, they are rediscover­ing the fundamenta­l values that make them unique. “The Tonight Show” has offered an intimate portrait of Fallon and his family. His young daughters, Winnie and Frances, often steal the show.

“For us, these shows have been about the presenting idea that we’re all going through this together,” said Gavin Purcell, an executive producer for “The Tonight Show.”

“People are adjusting to working from home, and what is it like to be stuck there. People have let Jimmy into their homes forever, and he thought it might be cool to let them into his home.”

Meanwhile, “The Daily Show” has focused on its trademark satire of current events while mixing in a bit of public service.

Noah, the “Daily Show” host, drew praise (and more than 10 million YouTube views and counting for an interview he conducted last month with Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

That conversati­on was largely free of comedic zingers, and it focused on informatio­n about the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“One thing I didn’t want to do was have Dr. Fauci’s interview be politicize­d in any way,” Noah said. “I was being as selfish as I was being benevolent — it was truly one of those instances where I’m asking the questions that I myself have as a human being.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Now that their nightly shows are back up and running, late-night hosts, including Jimmy Fallon, left, Trevor Noah and Stephen Colbert, are trying to provide viewers with a sense of comfort and continuity while commenting on current events.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Now that their nightly shows are back up and running, late-night hosts, including Jimmy Fallon, left, Trevor Noah and Stephen Colbert, are trying to provide viewers with a sense of comfort and continuity while commenting on current events.

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