The show as expected featured no sit-down guest interviews,
relying heavily on clips of Letterman shows going all the way
back to his 1980s morning show on NBC.
It opened with news footage of former President Gerald Ford
intoning, out of context: "Our long national nightmare is over,"
referring at the time to the Watergate scandal.
In succession, presidents George H. and George W. Bush, Bill
Clinton and finally Barack Obama all repeated Ford's
pronouncement verbatim, with Obama adding, "Letterman is
retiring."
A bevy of top names turned up for one of Letterman's signature
bits, the nightly Top 10 list, which was entitled "top 10 things
I've always wanted to say to Dave." Barbara Walters, Jim Carrey,
Peyton Manning, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Alec Baldwin, Seinfeld,
Chris Rock, Bill Murray, Fey and Martin took aim.
"I'm just glad your show is being given to another white guy,"
was Rock's contribution, a reference to Letterman's successor
Stephen Colbert who takes over in September.
Tributes also came from long-running television shows including
"The Simpsons" and "Wheel of Fortune."
Notably absent was longtime rival and former "Tonight Show" host
Jay Leno, although Letterman quipped in his monologue "I'll be
honest with you - it's beginning to look like I'm not going to
get 'The Tonight Show.'"
More of his trademark self-deprecation followed when he observed
that he had done more than 6,000 shows, then joked that noted
physicist Stephen Hawking had calculated "It works out to about
eight minutes of laughter."
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The 68-year-old host, famed for his quick wit, sarcasm, offbeat
humor, often snarky attitude and silly stunts, hosted top stars and
presidents in his final weeks, much as he did during 33 years on
late night television at NBC and CBS.
For his swansong, Letterman, who started in television as a
weatherman in his native Indianapolis, dropped his edginess and
instead thanked his staff, his audience and CBS executives,
including president and CEO Les Moonves who was on hand.
Letterman even took a moment to introduce his wife Regina and son
Harry as the lights briefly came up in the Ed Sullivan Theater in
Manhattan's Times Square district.
The show, which ran long at more than one hour and 15 minutes, ended
as Letterman told viewers "thank you and good night," turning the
stage over to his favorite band Foo Fightersm who performed "Everlong"
to a montage of clips.
In a final image, he blew a kiss to the cheering audience.
"It was a heart-warming and heartfelt goodbye," said Victor King of
Los Angeles, who flew in to attend the historic show.
(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
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