
In 1982, 1985 and 1990, producer Alexander Cohen brought forth specials called "The Night of 100 Stars," featuring at least that many famous folks, especially if you lowered the standards a bit of what you consider a "star." They were heaven for those who just wanted to see a lot of well-known faces and some of those faces even performed a little. The specials were all to raise awareness and some dough for the Actors Fund of America, which is why so many luminaries were willing to participate.
I showed some clips of this to my friend Shelly Goldstein the other day and we got to discussing just how hard these must have been to do — all those stars, all their agents, arranging for the outta-town ones to be in-town, hotel rooms, getting them all to Radio City Music Hall, dressing rooms, rehearsals, making sure everyone knew when to exit and not to pad their screen time. I know how tough variety shows can be with three stars, let alone more than a hundred.
As I said, there were a lot of great performances in these telecasts and there were also moments when stars just walked on and walked off. In each show, the closing was a parade of male stars, each accompanied by a Rockette. These stars just walked on, tipped their hats and then were led off-camera, all to the strains of the song "One" from A Chorus Line. You can see that some of these leading men needed to be led by their respective Rockettes. Some had to be told when to tip their hats. Some seemed to be having too good a time while others looked like they were thinking, "Why the hell did I agree to this?"
And then at the end, everyone had to at least try to be part of a kick line. Now, that's Entertainment at its finest. Here is the "One" number from the 1982 show…
And here's the one from the 1985 show. This video clips off the first star in the parade, who was Mark Hamill…
Here's the 1990 one. As you'll see, they got a bit desperate for famous male stars and this one includes Geraldo Rivera, Henny Youngman, Larry "Bud" Melman and a few others who'll make you go "Huh?" I honestly don't know who some of these people are…
There are a lot of excerpts from all three specials on YouTube and they're all pretty interesting. The above excerpt from the 1990 show is from a pretty good video of the entire thing and if you want to watch it from the start, click here.














