President Reagan visibly enjoyed Davis's performance at Ford's Theatre. On January 20, 1985, he performed at the inaugural ball following the
second inauguration of Ronald Reagan. In the mid- to late 1980s, he appeared on the BBC's
The Bob Monkhouse Show five times, at least three times on the
Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (30 Mar 1988, 27 Apr 1988, 11 Feb 1989), four times on the
Tonight Show with Johnny Carson (23 February 1984, 24 May 1984, 3 Jan 1985, 22 July 1988), three times on
Late Night with David Letterman (17 Feb 1983, 2 Nov 1983, 13 Mar 1986), and on
Sesame Street. On The Tonight Show he famously quipped, "I started out with nothing. I still have most of it." On March 29, 1986, he performed on the first American telecast of
Comic Relief. The show, hosted by
Robin Williams,
Billy Crystal, and
Whoopi Goldberg, raised funds for homeless people. On May 21, 1986, he appeared on NBC's
Today, juggling for passengers aboard the
SS Norway cruise ship. On November 24, 1986, he entertained
Queen Elizabeth and the
Queen Mother at the
Royal Variety Performance,
London Theatre Royal. On January 20, 1989, he returned to the White House to perform at the inaugural gala following
President Bush's inauguration. On July 10, 1990, Davis entertained President
George Bush and other world leaders at the
16th G7 summit. On October 30, 1993, Davis performed again at Ford's Theatre for a TV special, "A Gala for the President at Ford's Theatre", but this time for
President Clinton. Coperformers included
Whoopi Goldberg,
Jay Leno,
Michael Bolton,
Boyz II Men,
Brett Butler,
Natalie Cole, and
Kenny Loggins. In December 1994, he performed in the Broadway performance
Comedy Tonight, a vaudeville-type show with
Mort Sahl,
Dorothy Loudon, and
Joy Behar, which lasted only eight shows. On November 5, 1997, he again entertained former President Bush and friends, this time at the opening of the
presidential library. In 2008 Davis was featured in the documentary
Buskers; For Love or Money. During the early 2000s he was head writer and performed nightly for seven years at
Teatro ZinZanni in San Francisco. ==References==