LOS ANGELES (AP) — Writer and humorist Garrison Keillor served up a bittersweet farewell for some 18,000 fans at the Hollywood Bowl, as he hosted his final episode of the old-style radio variety show, “A Prairie Home Companion.”
Keillor’s swan song Friday night wasn’t markedly different from most of his nearly 42 years of “Companion” episodes, offering a rich mix of Americana music and often tongue-in-cheek comedy. (Although U.S. President Barack Obama did call in for a special segment recorded earlier Friday, but not even the Bowl audience will hear that until Saturday’s broadcast.)
The “last-show” aspect of the doings was so subtle that, at one point, even Keillor’s cast mates began to prod their boss, asking, “How do you feel (about leaving)?” Keillor eventually, reluctantly replied, “It feels like something ends and something else is about to happen.”
The 73-year-old Keillor delivered one last “Lives of the Cowboys” comedy sketch as well as the show’s best-known segment, “News from Lake Wobegon,” a folksy report from a fictional town where “all the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average”