Paar's emotionality made the everyday routine of putting together a 90-minute program difficult to continue for long. Paar made it clear that he was not planning to continue with
The Tonight Show because, as a
TV Guide item put it, he was "bone tired" of the grind, and he signed off for the last time on
March 29, 1962.
Paar then began hosting a
prime-time Friday night show on NBC, entitled
The Jack Paar Program. Popular belief holds that
The Ed Sullivan Show introduced
the Beatles to American television audiences; In fact, on January 3, 1964 the group made their prime time debut on Paar's hour in film clips Paar had leased from the
BBC, with Paar gently making fun of the band (the Beatles first U.S. television appearance was in a feature story on
The Huntley-Brinkley Report on
November 18,
1963). Paar's show had a world view, debuting acts from around the globe and showing films from exotic locations; most of the films were made on travels made by guests such as
Arthur Godfrey or Paar himself (e.g., several visits with
Albert Schweitzer at his compound in
Gabon, West
Africa and Mary Martin at her home in the jungles of Brazil). During the first half of 1964, another running feud pitted Paar against the show immediately preceding his program,
David Frost's satire series
That Was The Week That Was. A typical exchange would have
That Was the Week That Was "signing off" the NBC Television Network just before the Paar program, with Paar responding that the show immediately preceding his was
Henry Morgan's Amateur Hour (Morgan was a frequent guest on the earlier show). The mock feud suddenly evaporated when NBC moved
That Was the Week That Was to a Tuesday night time slot for the 1964-65 season.
Paar's prime time show aired for three years, including guests such as
Brother Dave Gardner,
Peter Ustinov,
Lawrence of Arabia's brother,
Richard Burton,
Oscar Levant,
Lowell Thomas,
Cassius Clay reciting his poetry to piano accompaniment by
Liberace, an occasionally inebriated
Judy Garland,
Jonathan Winters,
Woody Allen,
Bill Cosby (whose nickname for Paar was "The Boss"),
Bette Davis,
Robert Morley and many others. The final closing segment of the series, broadcast on June 25, 1965, featured him sitting alone on a stool, sharing a discussion that he had with his daughter Randy, who called Paar's departure a
sabbatical. Noting the origins of the term, he said that his own field was, though not completely used up, "a little dry recently." Then he called to his
German shepherd, who came to him from the seats of what was, for once, an empty studio, and walked out.
Johnny Carson precisely copied this format of hosting a clip show from a stool for his own farewell episode of
The Tonight Show almost three decades later.