Miami Herald

Hank Bradford, head writer for Carson’s ‘Tonight Show,’ dies at 88

- Matt Pearce Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES

Hank Bradford, who served as head writer for “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” and “The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers,” died Jan. 18 in Los Angeles, his family announced. He was 88.

Bradford’s death was confirmed by his daughter Stephanie Brenowitz, who said the cause of death was congestive heart failure.

Bradford served as Carson’s head writer between 1970 and 1975.

“As head writer on The Tonight Show, he was admired and beloved by his fellow writers for both his pitch-perfect sense of humor and his relatively­sane leadership style in a job (and profession) which tended toward the weird and chaotic,” Bradford’s family said in a prepared obituary.

“Above his desk at The Tonight Show was a sign that read: ‘It left here funny,’” the family wrote.

He wrote material for memorable Carson shticks including Carnac the Magnificen­t, the family said. Bradford oversaw a staff that pored through newspapers and magazines daily for topical material to turn into dozens of potential jokes for Carson to riff on.

“After handing in monologue material at 3:30, writers have a halfhour to recuperate before the daily 4 p.m. meeting, presided over by Hank Bradford, former angry young comic, now a semisteame­d head writer,” a journalist and Carson writer, Bill Majeski, wrote in an Aug. 1, 1971, feature in the New York Times, describing a typical day in Bradford’s writing room.

“It is Bradford’s job to coax audible whimsies from these writers, who, as a group, often communicat­e by means of monosyllab­ic utterings,” Majeski wrote, describing the writers’ reaction to interview notes for a karate team that included a cue for someone named Dr. U to break a cinder block with his head.

“Bradford looks around for comment. Someone grunts, ‘Better U than me.’ Bradford nods, types it on a card, presses a buzzer,” and a secretary whisks the ad-lib away.

Bradford met his wife, Patricia Bradford, a talent coordinato­r at “The Tonight Show,” and the pair married in 1971 in New York before moving to Los Angeles with the show in 1972, the family said.

Bradford later served as head writer for “The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers” between 1986 and 1987 and wrote episodes for “MASH” and “Three’s Company.”

He was born Henry Brenowitz in New York on May 7, 1935, and his parents, Irving and Anna (Leibowitz) Brenowitz, were Jewish refugees from Russian-occupied Poland, according to Bradford’s family.

He received an advertisin­g degree from

Long Island University, was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1958, and served as an intelligen­ce analyst and radio host in Okinawa, Japan.

Bradford returned to the U.S. and began his career as a comic who appeared at prominent nightclubs, variety shows and performed as an opening act for Simon & Garfunkel, the Temptation­s and Jack Jones, according to Bradford’s family.

“He used the stage name ‘Hank Bradford’ when he was touring comedy clubs in the 1960s for the same reason that performers such as Woody

Allen, Jackie Mason, Milton Berle, etc. changed their names,” his daughter, Stephanie Brenowitz, said in an email. “Antisemiti­sm was rampant in those years, and my father performed around the country in places that would not have welcomed Jewish performers.”

In a Feb. 7, 1968, review, Variety said Bradford’s act included “excursions on the cerebral side and an innate regard for the taste and intelligen­ce of audiences.”

Later in life, Bradford co-founded a comedy troupe in 1992 called “Yarmy’s Army” — named after a friend, Dick Yarmy, who was undergoing cancer treatment — that toured nationally to benefit comedians in need, his family said.

Bradford is survived by wife Patricia Bradford; daughters Stephanie Brenowitz and Sally Bradford McKenna; sons Matt

Bohm and William McLaughlin; and five grandchild­ren.

 ?? Carson Entertainm­ent Group/The Washington Post ?? Johnny Carson relied on writers including Hank Bradford for material for the wildly popular ‘The Tonight Show.’
Carson Entertainm­ent Group/The Washington Post Johnny Carson relied on writers including Hank Bradford for material for the wildly popular ‘The Tonight Show.’

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