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Regis Philbin
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The hottest celebrity in America is a TV star with
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no discernible talent who is 66 years old--that's 462 in TV years--whose
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partner is the most detested woman on television, and whose claims to fame are
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an evening game show that no one wins ( Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? )
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and a morning talk show where nothing happens ( Live With Regis & Kathie
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Lee ). Yet Regis Philbin deserves all his acclaim and more.
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Regis has not come from
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nowhere. He has come from everywhere. Until he hit big with Live in the
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late '80s, he was the quintessential loser, a 25-year also-ran. A Notre Dame
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grad and Navy veteran, he got his start in the early '60s hosting a talk show
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in San Diego, Calif., and spent the next quarter century anchoring shows in New
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York, St. Louis, and Los Angeles. Periodically, these stints would be
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interrupted by a shot at the big time, which Regis would invariably blow. In
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1964, he succeeded Steve Allen as host of Westinghouse's marquee late-night
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show. It flopped, and Philbin was dumped for Merv Griffin. In the late '60s,
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Philbin spent three years as Joey Bishop's sidekick on another doomed
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late-night show. Johnny Carson's Tonight Show spanked Bishop in the
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ratings. In the mid-'70s, Philbin bombed as host of a couple of game shows. In
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1981, he tanked as anchor of a national morning program. No one could explain
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why Regis didn't work. He was too spastic perhaps--"just a nerve ending" as
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Bill Zehme, who co-wrote Philbin's delightful autobiography, puts it.
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Regis returned to New York in 1983, took over a morning
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show, hooked up with Kathie Lee Gifford (then Kathie Lee Johnson) two years
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later, and went national with the show in 1988. Live has been a monster
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hit ever since. Regis and Kathie Lee quickly became figures of ridicule, the
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embodiment of unhip. He was the toothy moron; she, the unbearable crooner.
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Live sounds like a joke, an hour of nothing: 20 minutes of "host chat"
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between Regis and Kathie Lee, celebrity interviews, lame stunts, a trivia
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question. Watch it once, and it seems pathetic. Watch it twice, and you begin
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to see genius.
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As host of Live
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(or Millionaire , or anything else he has ever done), Regis displays no
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evident talent. He does not interview guests well. He does not tell jokes. He
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lacks empathy. He displays no particular intelligence. He speaks in a bizarre
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voice, equal parts Bronx, sinus, and helium.
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So why is he the most watchable person on television? In
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the autobiography, I'm Only One Man , he explains his success this way:
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"I started small and learned to keep it small. Small is friendlier and more
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real. Small lasts longer." This captures one of Regis' gifts. He has a modest
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but captivating comic persona. He is the master of umbrage. Walloped by a
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generation of rejection, failure, and sidekickdom, he has perfected the persona
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of the aggrieved little guy. His hyperactivity has mellowed, but not too much.
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In "host chat," his specialty, Regis turns the mundane details of his life--a
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lost wallet, a urinary-tract problem, a disagreement with Live 's
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producer--into comic gems. Most performers mask their insecurity with ego.
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Regis shares his insecurity. (He can take offense at anything.) He is cotton
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candy, spinning TV sugar out of thin air.
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Kathie Lee, endlessly chipper and extra-perfect,
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serves as superb foil for Regis' peevishness. He jabs her, mocking her singing
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and her tedious stories about her son. She punches right back. It is an
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amusingly petty domestic drama, enacted every morning at 9.
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Regis' comic persona
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reinforces his second gift: a perfect relationship with the camera. No one
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talks to the screen better than Regis. "He is the last of the true broadcasters
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who can go on the air and spout about nothing," says Zehme. "He is never at a
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loss to speak to the camera as if it were you." This is one reason why David
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Letterman, Larry King, and other TV celebs idolize Reege.
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Regis seems genuine on camera in part because his
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personality and TV persona have joined. Profiles of Philbin are tedious because
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he has revealed everything on the show (his latest squabble with his wife,
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etc.). There is no secret life of Regis Philbin. While criticizing
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sensationalistic, confessional talk shows, he divulges everything about
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himself. He just doesn't have anything salacious to tell.
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It is too bad that so many Americans are meeting
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Regis as the host of Millionaire (click for a description of the game).
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Though Millionaire has brought ABC its first sweeps win since, oh, the
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19 th century, the show does not do Regis justice. He is a creature
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of sunny day, not shadowy night. He is restrained on Millionaire ,
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forbidden to indulge in his stories, ad-libs, and insults. His job is to make
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the contestants sweat, but he's no good at it. He's too light to play the
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heavy. The dark suits he wears make him look like a lounge singer, not an
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enforcer. His voice cannot convey menace. His attempts to daunt contestants are
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more genial than ominous (although "Is that your final answer?" has become a
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national catchphrase). And Regis certainly doesn't exude the Olympian wisdom
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you'd expect from the host. He often seems more surprised to learn the answer
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than the contestants do.
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Even so, Reege may be the ideal game show host for
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this ironic age: He allows the show to be both deadly serious and parody.
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Millionaire is portentously heavy, yet run by a man with no gravitas. It
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concerns itself with something that matters--a million bucks--yet Regis'
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presence makes it frivolous. With a somber host, Millionaire would be
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oppressive. Thanks to Regis, it is the perfect '90s experience: You can enjoy
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it as challenge, kitsch, or both.
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