September 19, 1980 (1980-09-19) – August 29, 1981 (1981-08-29)
The All-Night Show is a television series starring Chas Lawther and produced by Jeff Silverman which ran from September 19, 1980, to August 29, 1981 on CFMT-TV in Toronto. The show was created and written by Errol Bruce, Chas Lawther, Michael Lennick and Jeff Silverman.[1]
During its run, The All Night Show ran Mondays through Saturdays, running from the end of other programming (typically 2 am, but 1 am on Saturdays) until 6 am. It featured early voice work by Maurice LaMarche and Jim Carrey, both at the very start of their careers.
Premise
The premise was that Lawther's character, Chuck the Security Guard, was the overnight security guard for CFMT (which at that time was branding itself as "MTV", prior to the introduction of the American music channel MTV). With very little to do on the overnight shift, every night Chuck -- with the help of his friends Ryerson and P.B. -- would take over the facilities of CFMT. Ostensibly without the knowledge of the station owners, Chuck and company had found "a bunch of cool old tapes in the basement", and – each night after the station officially went off the air – would start broadcasting their favourite shows while fooling around with the equipment. In the series continuity, rather than fire Chuck, the station decided to let him continue by giving Chuck his own overnight show.
Chas Lawther played Chuck, a friendly, slightly awkward late-night security guard. Chuck addressed the audience directly, and introduced the night's programming from a TV studio control panel—actually placing the video tapes in the playback machine to be played on air. Chuck's show opening, a loud, upbeat "Hey, you!", became a catchphrase for both the character and the show. Occasionally, Chuck would venture beyond his base in the CFMT TV control room and explore the empty station at night while doing his rounds; memorably, he once broke into real-life station president Dan Iannuzzi's office and made himself at home in Iannuzzi's absence.[2]
The other ever-present regular on the show was Chuck's often-heard but never-seen friend Ryerson Dupont (Errol Bruce), the Scottish-accented camera operator. As an in-joke, Ryerson was named after Toronto's Ryerson Polytechnical Institute, known for its Radio and Television Arts program. Heard far less frequently as an off-camera voice was audio technician P.B. Leonard, played by Michael Lennick. (Behind the scenes, Bruce and Lennick really did operate the camera and run the audio system, and were also the show's co-directors.)
A continuing feature had the lips of Maurice LaMarche inserted into a photograph of a famous person, and having LaMarche imitate that person to deliver a show promo or announcement. When LaMarche left the show, a young up-and-coming comic named Jim Carrey was recruited to take his place as a voice actor. Both Carrey and LaMarche were at this point just beginning their careers.[3]
Seen on-camera from time to time was Suzette Couture as Fran the Night Nurse, a cheerful friend who would drop by to visit Chuck after her late shift had ended. Another recurring character was Paul Goldberg as Paul del Stud, a fifties-styled 'greaser' who would incongruously read out household cleaning tips as show bumpers leading into or out of commercials.
Content and recurring features
The show had a deliberately loose, semi-unstructured feel. Viewers would often call in and chat with Chuck and Ryerson—the day after the death of John Lennon, much of the show was devoted to viewers calling in and sharing their stories of their reaction to Lennon's death. Viewers were also encouraged to send in videos they had made, and some viewers would do this frequently, becoming semi-regular contributors to the show. There were periodic contests, with viewers being invited to correctly guess the origin of old movie clips, or to identify actors in the TV series being shown. One memorable contest featured producer Jeff Silverman (in character as a pirate) giving clues to the location of a buried treasure. Unfortunately, the show found themselves in trouble with the local police when a larger-than-expected crowd of people, spurred on by the clues, started digging up Toronto's isolated Cherry Beach to recover the hidden 'treasure', creating a safety hazard for beach visitors.
A recurring feature was "The Elevator To The Stars", in which various individual local performers would ride the CFMT freight elevator up to the studio level and—without leaving the elevator—be given a short period of time to sing, dance, or tell jokes on-air before the elevator doors closed and took them downstairs again.
The show only lasted one year, ending when CFMT cut its budget for the time slot.[5] In the final moments of the final episode, as the credits rolled, Ryerson was finally seen on camera.
Ten Thousand Shiftless Nights, a documentary about The All Night Show (which also served as a de facto reunion special) was aired on CFMT in 2007. The special was hosted by Lawther, and featured clips and reminiscences from Lawther, Bruce, Silverman, Lennick and others associated with the show.