Carson’s hometown says final goodbye ‘Tonight Show’ style

? Johnny Carson didn’t want a public memorial in Los Angeles, but people from the Nebraska town where the comedian was raised gathered Sunday at the high school auditorium that bears his name for a last chance to say goodbye.

Far from a somber tribute, the event was mostly high-spirited and included a monologue, a jazz ensemble playing the “Tonight Show” theme and stage props such as a desk and guest chairs where those who had known Carson talked about him.

Carson, host of “The Tonight Show” for 30 years, died last Sunday of emphysema at his Malibu, Calif., home. He was 79.

At Carson’s request, there was no public memorial in Los Angeles. The king of late-night television was a fiercely private man who made few public appearances following his retirement in 1992.

But residents in Norfolk said they wanted a chance to say goodbye. Many had known the late-night comic from high school. The memorial drew more than 1,000 people to the high school theater named after Carson.

Lois Voecks said Carson sat behind her in class and performed magic for students.

“We used to see him later in the hallway, and we would look back at him and say, ‘That’s the same guy? He seems just like us,'” she said.

Jeff Burkink, who was principal of Norfolk High School in the 1980s when Carson gave $600,000 to the school to build a performing arts center, said Carson never forgot his roots.

Burkink said he met Carson in 1976 when the comic came to town to give the high school’s commencement address.

“He was nervous,” Burkink said. “He said he didn’t want to be a flop in his hometown. But the minute he stood up there, he was humorous and relaxed. He was right at home with a microphone.”

Born in Iowa, Carson was raised in Norfolk from the age of 8 until he left after high school to serve in World War II.

It was in Norfolk that Carson first showed a flair for show business, performing magic as the “Great Carsoni” in Elk’s and Moose lodges when he was 14.

Carson’s known donations to causes in the town amounted to more than $5 million, including $2.27 million for a regional cancer radiation center.