McMahon, Edward L. P.., Col

Deceased
 
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 Service Details
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Final Rank
Colonel
Last MOS
7596-Aviation Safety Officer
Last MOSGroup
Pilots/Naval Flight Officers
Primary Unit
1966-1990, Air National Guard
Service Years
1943 - 1966
Colonel

 Last Photo 
 Personal Details 



Home State
Michigan
Michigan
Year of Birth
1923
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Sgt Jason Denny to remember Marine Col Edward McMahon (Ed).

If you knew or served with this Marine and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Detroit
Last Address
Los Angeles, CA
Date of Passing
Jun 23, 2009
 
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Cremated

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 Enlisted/Officer Basic Training
  1943, Officer Candidate School (Quantico, VA)
 Unit Assignments
3rd Marine Airwing (3rd MAW)Marine Observation Squadron 6 (VMO-6)MarForResAir National Guard
  1952-1953, 7302, 3rd Marine Airwing (3rd MAW)
  1953-1953, 7301, Marine Observation Squadron 6 (VMO-6)
  1955-1958, 7302, Fleet Marine Corps Reserve
  1966-1990, Air National Guard
 Combat and Non-Combat Operations
  1953-1953 Korean War/Third Korean Winter (1952-53)/Operation Smack
 Colleges Attended
Boston College
  1941-1943, Boston College
  1946-1949, The Catholic University of America
 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Performer. Edward Peter Leo McMahon, Jr., was born March 6, 1923, in Detroit, Michigan. Blessed with an unusually resonant voice, McMahon spent several summers working as a bingo announcer at various carnivals during high school. While studying electrical engineering at Boston College, he enrolled in the Navy's V-5 training program with hopes of becoming a Marine Corps fighter pilot. McMahon earned his wings in 1944, but spent most of World War II working stateside as an instructor and test pilot. After his discharge, he got his BA from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. in 1949.

McMahon's first foray into professional broadcasting came just after he graduated, when a Philadelphia radio station that was branching out into television hired him to serve as a producer and co-host for The Take Ten Show, a three-hour variety show. Over the next few years, McMahon appeared on a number of TV programs, most notably The Big Top, a circus show in which he played a clown. At one time in the early 1950s, McMahon was appearing on no fewer than 13 concurrently running programs on local Philadelphia television.

During the Korean War, McMahon was called into service and eventually earned six air medals. He returned to TV with several new efforts, including a late-night talk show, McMahon and Company. His breakthrough chance came in October 1958, when the producer of the New York-based ABC daytime quiz show Who Do You Trust? hired him as the show's announcer. It was on Who Do You Trust? that McMahon first worked with Johnny Carson, a rising young comic star who was the show's host.

The Tonight Show

Four years later, Carson was tapped to replace Jack Paar on NBC's late night talk show, The Tonight Show. Carson insisted McMahon come with him to NBC. The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson first aired on October 1, 1962. For the next three decades, McMahon served as the show's announcer—with the trademark line "Heeeeeeere's Johnny!"—and the perfect chuckling foil for Carson's monologues and witty banter. First based in New York, then in Burbank, California, The Tonight Show became one of the best-loved programs in America. Even as Carson himself relied more and more on guest hosts during the 1980s, McMahon appeared nightly to perform his announcing duties and support the visiting hosts, who included Joan Rivers and Jay Leno.

Long before the final episode of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson aired on May 22, 1992, McMahon made a name for himself in other areas—first as a pitchman for products as diverse as Budweiser, Breck Shampoo, and Sara Lee Kitchens, and later as host of the long-running syndicated talent show Star Search, which debuted in 1983. McMahon also became well-known for his role as spokesman (along with longtime friend Dick Clark) for American Family Publishers (not to be confused with Publishers' Clearinghouse) and its sweepstakes.

Later Life
McMahon has also pursued a career as an actor, with considerably less success. His interest was sparked by a brief stint as a replacement in the Broadway production of The Impossible Years in the mid-1960s. His feature films included The Incident (1967), Slaughter's Big Rip-Off (1973), Fun With Dick and Jane (1977),

and Full Moon High (1981). More recently, McMahon appeared as himself in Love Affair (1994), starring Warren Beatty and Annette Bening, and earned a measure of praise for his supporting role on the short-lived 1997-1998 sitcom The Tom Show, starring Tom Arnold. In 1998, McMahon published a popular autobiography, For Laughing Out Loud: My Life and Good Times (he had previously published another memoir, Here's Ed, in 1976).

McMahon and his first wife, Alyce Ferrell, married while he was in college and had four children—Claudia, Michael, Linda, and Jeffery—before divorcing in 1976. With his second wife, Victoria Valentine, McMahon adopted a daughter, Katherine. McMahon and Valentine divorced in 1989. He married Pamela Hurn in March 1992.

McMahon was extremely active in various charities. He made frequent appearances with Jerry Lewis on the Muscular Dystrophy Association annual telethon, served on the board of the Marine Corps Scholarship Fund, and also supported the United Negro College Fund.

McMahon died on June 23, 2009. He was suffering from bone cancer, among other illnesses, at the time. He was 86 years old.

   
Other Comments:

McMahon hoped to become a US Marine Corps fighter pilot. Prior to the US entry into World War II, however, both the Army and Navy required two years of college for their pilots program. McMahon enrolled into classes at Boston College. After Pearl Harbor was attacked, the college requirement was dropped, and McMahon immediately applied for Marine flight training. His primary flight training was in Dallas, followed by fighter training in Pensacola, where he also earned his carrier landing qualifications. He was a Marine Corps flight instructor for two years, finally being ordered to the Pacific fleet in 1945. However, his orders were canceled after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki forcing Japan's surrender.

As an officer in the reserves, McMahon was recalled to active duty during the Korean War. This time, he flew the OE-1 (the original Marine designation for the Cessna O-1 Bird Dog), an unarmed single-engine spotter plane. He functioned as an artillery spotter for the Marine batteries on the ground and as a forward controller for the Navy and Marine fighter bombers. He flew a total of 85 combat missions, earning 6 Air Medals. After the war, he stayed with the Marines, as a reserve officer, retiring in 1966 as a Colonel, he was later commissioned to the rank of Brigadier General in the California National Guard.

Col. Edward Leo Peter "Ed" McMahon, Jr., USMC (Ret.)

   
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