Early years: 1948–1955 Como made the move to television when NBC initially televised the
Chesterfield Supper Club radio program on December 24, 1948. A guest on that first show was Como's eight-year-old son, Ronnie, as part of a boys' choir singing "
Silent Night" with his father. The show was the usual Friday night
Chesterfield Supper Club with an important exception—it was also being broadcast on television. The experimental simulcast was to continue for three Friday "Supper Club" shows, but had gone so well, NBC decided to extend the televised version through August 1949. Years later, Como admitted to being scared and feeling awkward initially but somehow managed to just be himself. Said Como, "You can't act on TV. With me, what you see is what you get." While still in its experimental phase, Como and the television show survived an on location broadcast in Durham, North Carolina, on April 15, 1949. On September 8, 1949, it became a weekly half-hour offering on Sunday nights, directly opposite Ed Sullivan's
Toast of the Town. In 1950, Como moved to CBS and the show's title was changed to
The Perry Como Chesterfield Show, again sponsored by Liggett & Myers'
Chesterfield cigarettes. Como hosted this informal 15-minute musical variety series on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, following the
CBS Television News.
The Faye Emerson Show was initially broadcast in the same time slot on Tuesday and Thursday. By 1952, it was evident that television would replace radio as the major entertainment medium.
Gary Giddins, the biographer of Bing Crosby, said in 2001, "He (Como) came from this whole generation of crooners—Crosby and Sinatra, but he was the only one of them who figured out TV." The year before, he had been asked to be the master of ceremonies and narrator of the NBC Radio 35th anniversary special. That April, Perry Como signed a 12-year "unbreakable" contract with NBC. In appreciation for the 11-year association, his sponsor, Chesterfield, presented him with all the musical arrangements used during this time as a parting gift.
Sing to me, Mr. C.: 1955–1959 He moved back to NBC with
The Perry Como Show, a weekly hour-long variety show featuring additional musical and production numbers, comedy sketches and guest stars, premiering September 17, 1955. Como's "
Dream Along With Me" became the show's opening theme song. Here he also began wearing his trademark cardigan sweaters. The "Sing to me, Mr. C." segment with Como seated on a stool singing viewer-requested songs had its roots in the first television broadcasts of
Chesterfield Supper Club. When cameras entered the "Supper Club" radio studio, they found Como and his guests sitting on stools behind music stands. There was as much fun at rehearsals as on the show itself. Como's relaxed and fun-loving manner at rehearsals put many nervous guests at ease. It was common for Como to leave the Saturday-afternoon rehearsal for about a half-hour to go to
confession. He saved some time by asking his music publisher, Mickey Glass, to wait in line for him at the confessional. Glass, who was Jewish, was most agreeable to this but wondered what to do if his turn came before Como arrived. and
Arthur Godfrey (1950) Como thoroughly enjoyed his years working in television, saying in a 1989 interview, "I got a kick out of live television. The spontaneity was the fun of it." On September 15, 1956, the season premiere of
The Perry Como Show was broadcast from NBC's new
color television studio at the New York
Ziegfeld Theatre, making it one of the first weekly color TV shows. In addition to this season premiere as a color television show, there was also a royal visit from
Prince Rainier of
Monaco and his bride of six months,
Grace Kelly. Como competed with
Jackie Gleason in what was billed as the "Battle of the Giants" and won. At the height of this television competition, Como asked Gleason a favor: to visit his home when his mother-in-law, a big Gleason fan, was there. Though Mrs. Belline spoke no English and Gleason no Italian, Roselle's mother was thrilled. Como told Gleason after the visit, "Anything you want, you got it. In fact, I'll even do one of your shows so the ratings will be better." Como was among those who filled in for Gleason on
The Jackie Gleason Show in 1954 when the entertainer suffered a broken ankle and leg in an on-air fall. An example of Como's popularity came in 1956, when
Life conducted a poll of young women, asking them which man in public life most fit the concept of their ideal husband: it was Perry Como. A 1958 nationwide poll of U.S. teenagers found Como to be the most popular male singer, beating
Elvis Presley, who was the winner of the previous year's poll. At one point, his television show was broadcast in at least 12 other countries.
Kraft Music Hall: 1959–1967 In 1959, Como signed a $25 million deal with
Kraft Foods and moved to Wednesday nights, hosting ''
Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall weekly for the next four years. Over the next four seasons, from 1963 to 1967, the series was presented as monthly specials alternating with Kraft Suspense Theatre, The Andy Williams Show, and finally The Road West. Como also had control of the show which would replace his during the summer television hiatus. While "Mr. C." was having a holiday, viewers would see Perry Presents'', beginning in 1959. In late 1962, after the
Cuban Missile Crisis had settled well enough to permit the evacuated servicemen's families to return to
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba, Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara was eager to do more for morale there. He asked Como to bring his television show to the Naval base. Como and his cast and crew were at Guantanamo when the families of the armed forces began their return. The first entertainers to visit the base since the crisis, the Como show filmed there for eight days. Some highlights of the program, which was seen in the US on December 12, 1962, included Como's shaving a serviceman with a
Castro-like beard and the enthusiastic participation when Perry asked for volunteers to come on stage to do the
twist with the lovely ladies who were part of the visiting dance troupe. Filming for the
Kraft Music Hall Christmas show that was aired on December 17, 1964, began at
the Vatican November 7. By special permission of
Pope Paul VI, Como and his crew shot segments in the Vatican gardens and other areas where cameras had never been permitted previously. The show featured the first television appearance of the
Sistine Chapel Choir, and also the first time a non-choir member (Como) sang with them. The choir performed a Christmas hymn in Latin written by their director,
Domenico Bartolucci, called "Christ Is Born", as part of their presentation. Como asked his associate, Ray Charles, to write English lyrics for the song, using it many times on both television shows and his Christmas albums.
The Carpenters also recorded the song on their first Christmas album,
Christmas Portrait. A large part of Como's public persona was the idea that he personally knew Santa Claus. Como had numerous Christmas television specials, beginning on Christmas Eve 1948, and continuing to 1994, when his final Christmas special was recorded in Ireland. They were recorded in many countries, including Israel, Mexico, and Canada, as well as many locations throughout the United States, including a Colonial America Christmas in Williamsburg, Virginia. The 1987 Christmas special was cancelled at the behest of an angry Como; the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) was willing to offer him only a Saturday 10 PM time slot for it three weeks before the holiday. Como filled the yearly gap for his fans with live Christmas concerts in various locations. Como's final Christmas special was filmed in January 1994 in Dublin's
Point Theatre before an audience of 4,500, including Irish President
Mary Robinson and Como's friend, the actress
Maureen O'Hara. ''Perry Como's Irish Christmas'' was a Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) production, made by an Irish independent production company in association with
RTÉ. Como, appearing aged and unwell, had the flu during the show, which took four hours to record. During his visit to Dublin, Como visited a barber shop called "The Como" on
Thomas Street. The owners, lifelong fans who named their business in his honor, had sent photographs of the shop and letters to Como inviting him to visit. Photos of Como with the barbers were framed in the shop. "The Como" closed in 2002, but it remains a household name in
The Liberties. ==Personal life==