{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}} {{Infobox television | genre = Variety | country = United States | language = English | runtime = 90 minutes | company = {{Ubl|Paramount Television|Columbia Pictures Television|Time Life Television|20th Century Fox Television}} | network = American Broadcasting Company | first_aired = {{Start date|1973|1|8}} | last_aired = {{End date|1976|6|14}} }}
'''''ABC's Wide World of Entertainment''''' is a late night television block of programs created by the ABC television network. It premiered on January 8, 1973, and ended three years later.<ref>Terrace, Vincent (1981). ''Television 1970-1980''. San Diego: A.S. Barnes and Company. {{ISBN|0-498-02577-2}}.</ref> The title was based on the long-running broadcast ''ABC's Wide World of Sports''; there was also an ''ABC's Wide World of Mystery'' broadcast from 1973 to 1978.
==Credits== Unable to find a single talk show to compete with NBC's highly successful ''The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson'', the network aired a collection of comedy specials, documentaries, mystery movies, music concerts and talk shows with a variety of hosts.<ref>Brooks, Tim & Marsh, Earle (2007). ''The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present'' (9th ed.). New York: Ballantine Books. {{ISBN|978-0-345-49773-4}}.</ref> Included in the broadcasts were ''The Dick Cavett Show'', ''Jack Paar Tonite'', ''Good Night America'' (a news magazine hosted by Geraldo Rivera), the live concert series ''In Concert'', the UK-originated anthology series ''Thriller'', and ''Comedy News'' (a parody of ''Eyewitness News'' with an ensemble cast of comedians and satirists including Kenneth Mars, Marian Mercer, Robert Klein, Mort Sahl and Dick Gregory).<ref>Terrace, Vincent (1976). ''The Complete Encyclopedia of Television Programs 1947-1976'' (Vol. 1). South Brunswick and New York: A.S. Barnes and Company. {{ISBN|0-498-01561-0}}.</ref> Initially, Paar, Cavett, comedy specials and mystery movies were each given one week per month.
Two nights of music concerts, broadcast every other Friday on weeks where specials or movies were broadcast, completed the monthly schedule.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20081214084237/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,910573,00.html "Show Business: ABC's Potpourri"]. (February 26, 1973). ''Time''. Retrieved 2011-03-24.</ref> The 1975 and 1976 editions of ''Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve'' were also broadcast as "''Wide World Specials''".<ref>[https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=PZE8UkGerEcC&dat=19741231&printsec=frontpage&hl=en Television listings in ''Evening Independent'', December 31, 1974 (via Google News)]</ref>
==Monty Python broadcast== ''Monty Python's Flying Circus'', the British comedy sketch television series, taped its last episode in December 1974 and was syndicated to American public broadcasting soon after. On October 3, 1975, ABC aired the first of two edited compilations of sketches from the series as one of its ''Wide World of Entertainment'' comedy specials. The Python group represented by Terry Gilliam, the group's only American-born member, sued ABC for copyright infringement.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.law.uconn.edu/homes/swilf/ip/cases/gilliam.htm |title=Gilliam v. American Broadcasting Co., Inc. (1976) |access-date=2010-04-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091124072949/http://www.law.uconn.edu/homes/swilf/ip/cases/gilliam.htm |archive-date=2009-11-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Zapruder film== On the March 6, 1975, edition of ''Good Night America'', Rivera had as his guests assassination of John F. Kennedy researchers Robert J. Groden and Dick Gregory, who presented the first-ever network television showing of the Zapruder film. The public's response and outrage to that television showing quickly led to the forming of the Hart-Schweiker investigation, contributed to the Church Committee Investigation on Intelligence Activities by the United States, and resulted in the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations investigation.<ref name="Bugliosi2007">{{cite book|author=Vincent Bugliosi|title=Reclaiming history: the assassination of President John F. Kennedy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7jrKTKDhvfkC&pg=PA371|accessdate=5 March 2011|year=2007|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|isbn=978-0-393-04525-3|page=371}}</ref>
==ABC Late Night== The comedy and variety specials proved unpopular and, along with most talk shows, were dropped by the summer of 1974. They were replaced with reruns of television films and the programming block was re-titled ''ABC Late Night'' on January 12, 1976. In addition to movies (which were seen under the ''ABC Movie of the Week'' banner), the network aired a variety of prime-time series reruns including ''Police Woman'', ''Mannix'', ''Starsky & Hutch'', ''Soap'', ''Barney Miller'', ''Charlie's Angels'' and ''Fantasy Island'', with the only first-run programming a series of specials hosted by Geraldo Rivera and the sketch comedy series ''Fridays''. However, not all programs were carried by all affiliates. ''ABC Late Night'' ended on October 22, 1982, being replaced with the talk show ''The Last Word'' on October 26. ''The Last Word'' last aired on April 22, 1983, replaced the following Monday by ''One On One'' hosted by ''The Last Word'' host Greg Jackson. ''One On One'' was canceled in July 1983, leaving ABC without regular late-night network programming—aside from ''Nightline'' and a short-lived block in the fall of 1986 featuring a revival of the ''Dick Cavett Show'' alternating with an interview show hosted by Jimmy Breslin—until January 6, 1992, when ''World News Now'' was launched.
==References== {{reflist}}
==External links== *{{IMDb title|0176356}}
{{Motion picture television series on ABC}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Abc's Wide World Of Entertainment}} Category:Television programming blocks in the United States Category:1972 American television series debuts Category:1975 American television series endings Category:American Broadcasting Company original programming Category:American motion picture television series Category:1970s American late-night television series Category:American Broadcasting Company late-night programming Category:Television series by 20th Century Fox Television