Stephen Colbert Debuts On ‘The Late Show’

After months of buildup, the former host of The Colbert Report, returned to latenight TV by gorging on Donald Trump jokes and noting his transition from playing the character of a cable TV blowhard to being himself. "With this show I begin the search for the real Stephen Colbert," he said. "I just hope I don't find him on Ashley Madison."

NEW YORK (AP) — Stephen Colbert began his tenure as host of the CBS “Late Show” Tuesday with a tribute to predecessor David Letterman, a brief conversation with rival Jimmy Fallon and a surprise cameo from Comedy Central buddy Jon Stewart.

After months of buildup, the former host of “The Colbert Report,” returned to latenight TV by gorging on Donald Trump jokes and noting his transition from playing the character of a cable TV blowhard to being himself.

“With this show I begin the search for the real Stephen Colbert,” he said. “I just hope I don’t find him on Ashley Madison.”

Colbert was joined by actor George Clooney and Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush. He completes the remake of late-night network television from the days of Letterman and Jay Leno to the two Jimmys (Fallon and Kimmel) and himself.

Colbert showed a picture of the now-retired Letterman, saying that he bowed to no one as a Letterman fan.

BRAND CONNECTIONS

“We will try to honor his achievement by doing the best show we can and occasionally making the network very mad at us,” Colbert said.

CBS Corp. boss Leslie Moonves was close at hand in the front row of the renovated Ed Sullivan Theater, jokingly holding a switch that could turn off the “Late Show” in favor of reruns of “The Mentalist,” which ran in the weeks before Colbert took over.

Colbert showed off video walls behind his desk, one of which was set to a view of New York’s Central Park. And he pretended to change channels, alighting on Fallon at NBC.

“Have a good show, buddy,” Fallon said. “See you in the locker room.”

The show opened with a filmed skit depicting Colbert traveling across the country to sing the national anthem, accompanied by various folks at a bowling alley, in a factory and at a youth baseball game. At the end, an “umpire” at the baseball game took off a mask to reveal himself as a bearded Stewart, who shouted, “Play ball!”

His former Comedy Central colleague stepped down from “The Daily Show” last month, but Tuesday was about beginnings, and the audience greeted him with a standing ovation.

Colbert appeared most comfortable seated behind his new wraparound desk, conversing with his guests. Clooney, who several months ago handcuffed himself to Letterman in a joking attempt to get him to stay, was given a Tiffany paperweight engraved with “I don’t know you” as a wedding present.

“What is it like to be the arm candy in a relationship?” Colbert asked Clooney. Noting that the movie star had no new movie to promote, they made one up and showed “clips” of the film.

In his appearance, Bush noted the number of drawings of Colbert that appeared on the ceiling of the theater.

“I used to play a narcissistic conservative pundit,” Colbert said. “Now I’m just a narcissist.”

The two men talked about how to restore civility to politics. Colbert pointed to his brother sitting in the audience and noted that he disagreed with him politically. He asked Bush where he disagreed with his brother, former President George W. Bush, and the current candidate said his brother didn’t do enough to hold down spending in the second term of his administration.

Earlier, fans who exited the taping were bubbling over with enthusiasm.

“It was amazing,” said Shira Margulies, from Queens. “It was fantastic. It was joyful. It was energetic. It was surprising. It was everything we expected and more.”

Sanjay Chhabra, from New Jersey, said he was impressed by everything about the show.

“Stephen Colbert was on point,” Chhabra said. “I mean he was prepped, ready to go. He’s off to a pretty fantastic start.”

Colbert introduced his new bandleader, Jon Batiste, and his group Stay Human, who played the new show theme.

The guest list for Colbert’s first week of shows indicates he plans to get beyond the typical show biz patter of many talk shows. Vice President Joe Biden will visit Thursday and the CEOs of Tesla Motors and Uber also will make appearances. Comic Amy Schumer, actress Scarlett Johansson and author Stephen King also are on the schedule.

Video journalist Bastien Inzaurralde contributed to this report.


Comments (6)

Leave a Reply

alicia farmer says:

September 9, 2015 at 9:14 am

Unfortunately the mind numbing commercial glut makes the program unwatchable.

    Wagner Pereira says:

    September 9, 2015 at 2:47 pm

    Clearly 6.6 Million people did not agree with you.

Julien Devereux says:

September 9, 2015 at 10:32 am

Overall, my reaction was “Meh”, but I really hated the live-read hummus commercial. It was a jarring non-sequitur that made the debut of the show seem cheap and cheesy as well.

Ben Gao says:

September 9, 2015 at 2:12 pm

At least he paid tribute to Letterman (and Biff Henderson) unlike Jay Leno who pretended that Johnny Carson never existed on his first show- probably the biggest error of his ways.

Andrea Rader says:

September 9, 2015 at 6:20 pm

Obviously the debut was going to get a huge sample, but the real question is how much of that audience will stick with the show.

    Wagner Pereira says:

    September 10, 2015 at 1:14 am

    Actually, the show could do much better than Letterman with 1/2 his audience if it resembles what he delivered at Comedy Central. Letterman’s average age was in the 60s and Colbert’s was 37 at Comedy Central.