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NBC Pages Turned Hollywood Players Tell All: Johnny Carson Sightings, Calls From the President, TV Cameos"The page uniform is a scarlet letter," says Universal Television's reality chief Meredith Ahr, who donned the infamous polyester suit as a member of NBC's page class of 2. It's so hideous, and everyone sees you in it and knows you're the lowest on the totem pole; but at the same time, it's like this golden ticket that opens every door."Indeed, long before the job was immortalized by Jack Mc. Brayer's Kenneth the Page on 3.

Rock, NBC's 8. 4- year- old internship program was a broadcasting institution that paved the way for hundreds of careers in the entertainment business. Eva Marie Saint, Regis Philbin, Ted Koppel, Michael Eisner, Aubrey Plaza — they all got their start giving tours to out- of- towners and fetching coffee for network stars like Johnny Carson. What the gig lacks in pay — the current crop of 1. THR spoke to 2. 1 former pages who parlayed their experiences at NBC's headquarters — both in New York and Los Angeles — into successful careers and asked them to reminisce about their respective runs.

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There was a time when my kids were big 3. Rock fans," says Liz Cole, a class of '9. NBC's Dateline. "I was able to tell them I did that job, and to them, it was way cooler than anything else I've ever done."•••EVA MARIE SAINTActress Page Year: 1. I was 1. 9, and I'd never had a job before.

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I'd heard about the Guidettes [an early moniker for a female tour guide at NBC], and then I tried out and got it. Maybe because I was a cute blonde? That summer changed my life. It brought me out of my shell. You had to take the elevator during the tour, and one day it opened and Joan Crawford stepped in.

She saw me standing there in my uniform — which I loved — and she said, "Do you want to be an actress?" I said, "Oh, yes," and she replied, "Well, you will be," and then she turned her back and the doors shut. That was the thrill of my summer. WILLARD SCOTTWeatherman Page Year: 1. Watch The Delicate Delinquent Tube Free. One of my jobs was to relieve the switchboard operator so she could go to the bathroom or get food.

I'll never forget, I was there one Sunday morning, and Sundays are usually quiet, but the light on the board turned on. Good morning, NBC," I said. The voice on the other end of the phone said, "This is the president, and I want to speak to the secretary of state." So, I said, "Yeah, and this is Santa Claus," and hung up.

Five minutes later, the phone rang again. The same voice: "Goddammit, this is Harry Truman, and I want to talk to Dean Acheson [who was at NBC doing a panel show]." "You're kidding," I said, and he said, "No, this is not a joke." I apologized, of course, and put him through, and he was nice enough not to raise hell. REGIS PHILBINFormer Live! Page Year: 1. 95. In those days, the page department was run almost like a military unit. There was a full dress inspection before every shift.

TV was still in its infancy. I don't remember giving tours, but I'd sit behind this big desk on the bottom floor, and it was a thrill because you never knew who would come in. Perry Como was upstairs doing his half- hour show every night.

And I'll never forget, Perry was on vacation and Eddie Fisher was pinch hitting for him for the week, and as they were getting ready to say goodbye to Eddie, they called me. Hey, Regis, come up here and hang on to this elevator. Eddie's going to say goodbye and then get in, and the show will end." So he fights his way through the crowd and up the aisle, and then he gets into the elevator, and I see I got myself on TV.

I was thrilled. I ran to call my mother to see if she'd seen me on TV. And she said, "Yeah, yeah, but where was Eddie going?"RICHARD BENJAMINActor- director Page Year: 1. On our lunch breaks, you could go up to the balcony and watch the NBC orchestra rehearsing with Arturo Toscanini. It was incredible. In one of those studios, Gene Rayburn, who used to be a page, was running a game show, and he'd see the pages and yell, "One day, kid, you'll be down here!" I remember color television was just starting back then and The Perry Como Show rehearsed in color.

So, the last stop on the tour was the master control room and I'd always say a little prayer, 'Let The Perry Como Show be on,' because then they'd get to see color TV for the first time in their lives and I didn't have to say a word because they'd be mesmerized. Those tours became performance pieces for those of us who wanted to be actors. I'd embellish things or tell them they might see David Sarnoff, who had run RCA and NBC, but please don't take pictures.

I had no idea what David Sarnoff looked like, and as we came down some corridor and I'd see a man with gray hair and a suit, I'd say, "All right, that's Mr. Watch The Gusher Online Facebook. Sarnoff, and remember you're not supposed to …" and of course they went nuts and took pictures of this complete stranger. TED KOPPELFormer Nightline anchor Page Year: 1. I was arguably the worst page in the history of NBC. I was assigned to be backstage at The Tonight Show with Jack Paar, and I'd take calls coming from ambitious young women who wanted to come on the show. I'd tell them I was the talent booker and offer to meet them for a drink, but they'd take one look at me, and I looked about 1. I was [full of it].

Or there was another page who spoke fluent Czech, and I spoke fluent German, and when he and I were on duty guiding the elevator bank to The Tonight Show, I'd be in the information booth and he'd be by the stanchions making sure that the line went through properly. People would come over and they'd ask me a question about getting tickets to The Tonight Show and I'd answer in German. Of course, they'd say they didn't understand what I was saying, and so I'd point to the other guy and he'd answer them in Czech. And then there was the time Queen for a Day was in town [from L.

A., where the game show traditionally was filmed], and all these women came and were all crowding, trying to get to the front of the line so they could get on the show. I walked up and down that line, pointing to a crack in the sidewalk, saying that NBC had installed an electronic barrier and that if they crossed it they'd receive a mild electric shock. It just so happened that the head of the guest relations department came by as all of these women were huddled up against the wall of the theater. When she asked them what was happening, I saw all of these fingers pointing at me.

MICHAEL EISNERFormer Disney CEO Page Year: 1. I got to wear a uniform without having to go to Vietnam. It was all very formal then. You had to memorize the names of all of the senior executives and you had to know the history of NBC to give the tours. I remember I worked on The Price Is Right and Jeopardy!

Tonight Show. The summer of '6. Jack Paar and Johnny Carson, so all summer long there were alternating guests. All of the biggest stars came through. It was one of the best jobs I ever had.

MARCY CARSEYTelevision producer Page Year: 1. After I graduated college, I got a temp job in the garment district, but every day at lunch I'd run over to NBC to the office of the guy who hired the tour guides at the time. I need this job," I'd say. I'd somehow gotten an interview with him, and then I just wouldn't leave him alone. He'd say, "All you young Turks coming out of college, you all want to be in TV, and you all end up here. There's a long list ahead of you.

Stop pestering me." "OK I'll be back tomorrow." He finally gave me the job to get me out of his office.

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