(Reuters) – Perennial New Year’s Eve master of ceremonies and “American Bandstand” host Dick Clark, whose
long-running television dance show helped rock ‘n’ roll win acceptance in mainstream America, died on Wednesday at age 82,
a spokesman said.
Clark, one of America’s best-known TV personalities
and the longtime host of ABC’s annual “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” broadcast from Times Square in Manhattan, suffered a heart
attack and died at Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, California, publicist Paul Shefrin said.
Clark had
entered the hospital on Tuesday night for what was supposed to have been an outpatient procedure, Shefrin said in a
statement. He did not elaborate, except to say that attempts to resuscitate Clark after the heart attack were
unsuccessful.
Starting out as a TV announcer in Utica, New York, Clark parlayed his “Bandstand” fame into a career as
a host and producer of dozens of other shows, including the American Music Awards and Golden Globes broadcast.
His
youthful good looks — which he maintained into his 70s — won him the nickname of “America’s oldest
teenager.”
Clark’s career slowed down after he suffered a stroke in December 2004 that sidelined him from the New
Year’s Eve show for the first time since he launched the annual broadcast in 1972.
But Clark gamely returned to the
program the following year, and had continued since then to announce the annual countdown to midnight, despite his
considerably slurred speech, in a somewhat revised format co-hosted with the much younger Ryan Seacrest of “American Idol”
fame.
“I am deeply saddened by the loss of my dear friend, Dick Clark,” Seacrest said in a Twitter post. “He has truly
been one of the greatest influences in my life.”
In a lengthier statement, Seacrest saluted Clark as “smart, charming,
funny and always a true gentleman. … He was a remarkable host and businessman and left a rich legacy to television
audiences around the world.”
Tributes to Clark poured in from the entertainment industry, reflecting the wide range of
talent he helped showcase, from soul diva Aretha Franklin, who called him “an American institution,” to Connie Francis, who
credited Clark with rescuing her career as a teenager by helping turn her single “Who’s Sorry Now” into a
hit.
Clark’s most enduring legacy was his role in introducing rock ‘n’ roll to a wide U.S. audience while presiding
over more than three decades of pop music and dance fads as host of “American Bandstand.”
HOSTED LANDMARK
SHOW
As the first network TV show to feature rock ‘n’ roll, “Bandstand,” which began airing nationally in 1957, won
over America with its non-threatening image — girls were not allowed to wear slacks or tight sweaters, and boys dressed in
jackets and ties.
Smoking and chewing gum were banned, and the show featured a group of Philadelphia high school
students who developed their own national following. Clark himself embodied that clean-cut image. He also was an astute
businessman with a keen eye for cultural trends who targeted mainstream America and was careful not to offend his
viewers.
Lacking a personal passion for rock, he favored dance-friendly teen pop, and rock ‘n’ roll purists accused
Clark of helping to usher in an era of blandness, contributing to what some critics saw as a neutering of the earthy rock
‘n’ roll genre that grew out of rhythm and blues during the 1950s.
But “Bandstand” became an institution and, by the
time it left the air in the late 1980s had become the longest-running music show in American television history. Along the
way it gave rock legends such as Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and Buddy Holly their first national exposure.
Initially
running five days a week in the afternoon, each broadcast typically showcased one or two guest artists who would lip-synch
their current hits, chat with Clark about their careers and sign autographs. Clark kept tapes of their appearances and
retained full permission to use them in the future, building a valuable archive of early pop history.
The show was
hugely influential with American teens, and songs featured by Clark typically shot up the charts, so much so that it once
drew the attention of legislators scrutinizing corrupt business practices in the music business.
In 1959 a U.S. Senate
subcommittee investigating payola took an interest in Clark after they found that he had partial copyrights to 150 songs,
including many played on his show, and that he also had ties to music-related businesses.
At the end of the
investigation the Senate found nothing illegal by Clark, but ABC ordered the host to give up the outside businesses or the
show. He chose to keep the show.
Born Richard Wagstaff Clark in 1929 in New York state, the entertainer got an early
job in the mail room of a radio station partly run by his father and uncle before attending Syracuse University and landing a
job as a TV announcer in Utica.
He was hired at Philadelphia’s WFIL, filling in for regular host Bob Horn on
“Bandstand,” then a local Philadelphia program. He took over the show full time in 1959 after Horn was arrested for drunken
driving.
Originating on the local air waves in 1952, the show was picked up nationwide by ABC in 1957, becoming a hit
and making Clark a household name. It aired weekday afternoons until August 1963, then became a weekly Saturday network show
until 1987, when it was canceled. It aired in syndication for another year with Clark as host, then resurfaced on the USA
cable network for less than a year with a younger host, David Hirsch.
In 2002, NBC introduced the prime-time drama
“American Dreams,” which recreated “American Bandstand” as the backdrop for a series revolving around a teenage girl who
dances on the show. Clark was one of the producers of the show.
In May 2004, Clark announced that he was shopping an
updated version of “American Bandstand” to a number of networks for a debut in summer 2005. That project evolved into the Fox
contest show “So You Think You Can Dance.”
(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by
Cynthia Johnston and Cynthia
Osterman)