Iconic TV host and producer Dick Clark died today of a heart attack. He was 82. Clark, called “America’s Oldest Teenager,” is best known for hosting long-running television shows such as American Bandstand, Pyramid, and holiday staple Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve. According to Clark’s publicist Paul Shefrin, Clark passed away this morning following “a massive heart attack.” Attempts to resuscitate him were unsuccessful. Clark, who suffered a stroke in 2004 that left his speech and movements impaired, had entered St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica last night for an outpatient procedure.
Related: Hollywood Reacts To Dick Clark’s Death
Richard Wagstaff Clark, born on November 30, 1929 in Mt. Vernon, N.Y., earned Grammys, Emmys and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame among other awards and accolades in his 60 years in show business. From his start on radio in Philadelphia back in the early 1950s to his last appearance on Rockin’ Eve this year, Clark never lost his on-air boyish enthusiasm. But the genial host was also a trailblazing Hollywood executive. His Dick Clark Productions, which he started in the late 1950s and moved to LA in 1963, produced American Bandstand until 1989 and also created, produced and profitably syndicated such shows as Rockin’ Eve, which started in 1972;
TV’s Bloopers & Practical Jokes; The $25,000 Pyramid; The American Music Awards, which began in 1973; and, since 1983, The Golden Globes. Clark also produced movies including 1984’s Emmy-winner The Woman Who Willed A Miracle and 1985’s Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins. According to the Museum of Broadcast Communications, over the past 49 years Clark’s company has made over 20 TV and feature films, 30 series and 250 specials.
At one point in the mid-’80s, Clark hosted shows on all three major TV networks and in syndication. He also wrote several books, including a 1976 memoir Rock, Roll & Remember. Clark sold dcp to Mosaic Media in 2002 for $140 million. The company, which Clark ceased to have anything to do with years ago, is currently owned by Red Zone Capitol, who bought it for an estimated $175 million in 2007.
Having hosted everyone from Elvis to the Jackson 5 and Johnny Rotten’s Public Image, it surprised no one when Clark, who early on insisted on that black fans had just as much of a right to dance along on his show as white teens, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. ”Dick Clark was significant in transforming the record business into an intfernational industry,” says the Hall of Fame’s citation. “His weekly televised record hop, which predated MTV by 25 years, played an integral role in establishing rock and roll, keeping it alive and shaping its future.”
While praised and sometimes kidded for his non-threatening manner, Clark had a near career-devastating run-in with the music business’ dirty little secret in 1959. Just two years after American Bandstand began being shown across America to audiences of over 20 million a week, Clark was embroiled in the burgeoning Payola scandal, where disc jockeys and radio programmers were given money and other gifts to play certain records. Called before congressional hearings in the spring of 1960, Clark testified that, as well as taking some jewelry and a fur coat from one record company, he owned part of over 30 different record labels, plus distributors and manufacturers. “I think the crime I have committed, if any, is that I made a great deal of money in a short time on little investment,” he told the House Committee on Legislative Oversight, “but that is the record business.”
Clark also informed the committee that on the advice of ABC, which broadcast Bandstand at the time, he had divested himself of all his music businesses. He also relinquished the more than 150 songs, several of which he played on his show, on which he has been given a co-writing credit. Unlike legendary DJ Alan Freed, whose career was ruined by the scandal, Clark’s testimony and actions won him applause from Congress and the media. Besides being known for being a hard negotiator, that congressional appearance was the last time Dick Clark’s name was ever directly sullied publicly.
Except for ringing in New Year’s in Times Square, Clark has mainly stayed out of the spotlight due to his health issues. He was listed earlier this year as a witness, along with several other past and present dcp executives, in the multimillion-dollar Golden Globes rights trial between the Hollywood Foreign Press Associations and Dick Clark Productions but never took the stand. Instead, portions of his 2011 deposition in the case were read into the record.


Very sad. Watched American Bandstand when I was young. R.I.P. Dick Clark.
For some reason his death to me is more profound than Whitney’s or Don Cornelius this year. I grew up as a kid watching American Bandstand, I would race home to turn it on and learned dance steps with American Bandstand. He was in our livingroom for such a long time.
Typing through tears. American Bandstand was a staple of my childhood, New Years Rockin’ Eve is a multi generational family tradition.
Thank you for it all Dick!
While Ryan Seacrest has done most of the hosting of “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” in recent years, this is still a big loss.
Hopefully, Clark’s company will remain in business and continue to produce “Rockin’ Eve” with Seacrest, and that some network will continue to carry it.
Worked with Dick many years ago, and saw him on and off over the years. He was always polite and respectful and accessible.
My sympathies to his lovely wife and family.
A little piece of Americana is gone, but not forgotten.
also worked with Dick and Keri many years ago and they were terrific. Thirty years later they were always warm and available. He will always be remembered. Safe journey Dick and peace.
Rest in Peace to a legent.
very sad day in rock-n-rolldom, he was a pioneer and a gentleman..he will be sorely missed..R.I.P. MR. CLARK
Rest in peace, Dick Clark.
But I always cringe when they say “massive” heart attack. Saying he died of a heart attack will suffice, and it won’t tack on that nasty mental image. Maybe it’s just me.
Wow, so sad… Death of a LEGEND… RIP Dick Clark…
The great Dick Clark. Another legend gone. Ever youthful all the way up to a few years ago. RIP.
I was just watching him on GSN repeats of Pyramid two weeks ago. What a career he had. And always welcomed into everyone’s home. He will always live in repeats. At least there he will truly be immortal. R.I.P. Dick Clark.
As a senior his loss has brought back the memory of my best buddy and I racing home from school to watch American Bandstand that came on at 3pm in NYC back in the 50′s…it reminds me how old I really am…RIP DICK
I had several strokes 8 years ago. I’ve always looked up to Clark for how he persevered after his stroke. I feel like I lost a personal hero.
Dick, you made such an impact and impression on all of our lives, we have and will continue to miss you. Now that you have the power of an Angel please start reshaping the Music industry! It sure needs your Great touch!
RIP, my Friend!
You get a person like that maybe once in a generation. Someone who seems forever young, hip and personable enough to call a friend, even though you’ve never met him. Maybe Ryan Seacrest is one of those guys, but he’s got a long, long way to go to match Mr. Clark. Rest well, you’ve made a lot of people happy over the years.
I thought Dick Clark and Kari Wigton got married in 1977.
One interesting bit of trivia: In the mid-1980′s, Dick Clark was, as far as I know, the only person ever to host programs on ABC (“American Bandstand”), CBS (“Pyramid”) and NBC (“TV’s Bloopers and Practical Jokes”) at the same time.
American Bandstand was one of my favorite shows as a teen also. I’m kinda of giving my age away to say it was the early version broadcast from Philadelphia in the early sixties. Great days.
All the best to his family. If you were to only consider American Bandstand,that would be an achievement in itself,but,when you realize all of the various things Dick Clark/DK productions originated-amazing! May he rest in peace.
We crossed paths with Dick Clark several times in our TV career (both in business deals with dcp and when we interviewed him for shows we were doing) and he was a consummate professional. He was warm, gracious, to the point, and amazingly intuitive about what you’d need and how it would cut in the bay.
If we said, “Can we get a :20 bite on so and so’s role in that movie?,” he’d give you exactly a :20 bite on that. It was a pleasure to work with him those few times.
RIP.
What made Dick Clark so great was that every show he hosted was about the show and not him.
A real Rock and Roll icon.I loved American Bandstand in the late fifties, good stuff.
May he rest in peace now after all the great and wonderful things he did for us growing up and may music lovers everywhere continue to bask and enjoy what he has brought forth and made better for all of us.
I have heard that a few of the MC’s for game shows were jerks but I with Dick clark he was always a great person to be around. I enjoyed the $20,000 Dollar Pyramid you could always tell he was enjoying himself and he was not a fake. I hate to hear this news of him passing but he will keep people happy in heaven. R.I.P and I will always enjoy you in reruns.
I started watching AB with Dick Clark as a kid in Philly, before it went national, from the old 69th Street Studios of WFIL-TV. He was actually the second host, but was the one that made it successful. My cousin was a regular dancer on the show and actually won the the Frankie Avalon look alike contest. We turned it on everyday after school and were proud when this little Philly show went national. I think his success and moving from Philly to L.A. let me think it was possible for a Philly kid (who new he was from NY?) to be in the entertainment industry in L.A. Remember him acting in The Young Doctors???
The passing of the torch. Ryan Seacrest is now the new Dick Clark.
What an incredible man – and an incredible talent. Huge loss!! RIP Dick!