Stephen Colbert said goodbye to “The Late Show” Thursday night in the franchise’s finale following a 33-year run, saying he was “lucky enough to be here for the last 11 years,” and couldn’t take the experience for granted.
“There is so much history here in the Ed Sullivan Theater, and we’ve been honored to have been just a small part of it,” Colbert said in his opening monologue.
In the opening of the show, Colbert emphasized the “joy” the show brought him and cast members throughout the 11 years and over 1,800 episodes.
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“We call it the joy machine, because to do this many shows, it has to be a machine. But the thing is, if you choose to do it with joy, it doesn’t hurt as much when your fingers get caught in the gears,” Colbert said. “And I cannot adequately explain to you what the people who work here have done for each other and how much we mean to each other.”
The final show, which ran 17 minutes longer than its usual hour, was packed with surprise cameos from celebrities such as “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart, comedian Tig Notaro, actors Ryan Reynolds, Paul Rudd, Bryan Cranston and Don Cheadle and astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.
“I didn’t think my show would end like this, but still grateful,” Colbert told Stewart.
Fellow late-night hosts Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers and John Oliver also joined Colbert on Thursday.
“We came to say we’re gonna miss you. Late night is not gonna be the same without you,” Kimmel said.
In recognition of Colbert’s final show, Kimmel and Fallon both aired reruns on Thursday.
Before the show, it was speculated that Pope Leo XIV might be Colbert’s final guest, but Colbert jokingly tried to introduce him before a cast member said Leo refused to come out of his dressing room.
The show’s actual final guest was none other than Paul McCartney.
McCartney performed at the Ed Sullivan Theatre with The Beatles during their American television debut on Feb. 9, 1964. McCartney was a guest on the show in 2019 and in 2009, when David Letterman was still the host.
In the lead-up to the franchise finale, a stream of star guests had appeared on the show, such as actors Tom Hanks and Billy Crystal, director Steven Spielberg, Letterman, the show’s host when it debuted in 1993, Bruce Springsteen and Martha Stewart
CBS announced back in July that it would end “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and retire “The Late Show” franchise at the end of this season. The company said it was “purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night.”
That explanation was met with skepticism from some viewers and media critics, who questioned whether political motives were involved, given Colbert’s outspoken criticism of President Trump.
Colbert took a jab at the network Thursday when his band played “Linus and Lucy,” the theme song from the “Peanuts” television special as part of a bit about a copyright infringement lawsuit.
“Is the band right now playing the same music I said people are being sued for, for using without permission?…Oh no, I hope this doesn’t cost CBS any money,” Colbert said, a reference to CBS’s statement when it first announced the show’s cancellation last July that it was based on a “purely a financial decision.”
Colbert, 62, took over as host of “The Late Show” in September 2015 after Letterman retired from the role he’d held for 22 years.
The entire set of “The Late Show” is being donated to the Museum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago, a city where Colbert has deep roots. Colbert attended Northwestern University and performed in Chicago with the famous Second City improv troupe at the beginning of his comedy career.
“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” had been the No. 1 late-night program for nine consecutive seasons, CBS said last year. In September, it won the Emmy for outstanding talk series and received a standing ovation from the Emmys crowd.
CBS announced last month that Byron Allen’s “Comics Unleashed” will replace Colbert’s show in the 11:35 p.m. ET time slot.
