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"A Prairie Home Companion" host Garrison Keillor
Only during the encore did he truly take time to say goodbye, engaging the crowd with a moving medley of songs running the gamut from classic spirituals to pop ballads. Photograph: Stephanie Zollshan/AP
Only during the encore did he truly take time to say goodbye, engaging the crowd with a moving medley of songs running the gamut from classic spirituals to pop ballads. Photograph: Stephanie Zollshan/AP

Garrison Keillor hosts final A Prairie Home Companion episode

This article is more than 8 years old

Writer and humorist says farewell to 18,000 fans, but ‘last-show’ aspect was subtle as he closed out as if it were any other – though Obama called in

The writer and humorist Garrison Keillor served up a bittersweet farewell for 18,000 fans at the Hollywood Bowl on Friday, as he hosted his final episode of the old-style radio variety show, A Prairie Home Companion.

Keillor’s swan song was not 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.

Barack Obama did, however, call in for a special segment recorded earlier on Friday, but that will not be heard 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]?”

Garrison Keillor hosts his final episode of A Prairie Home Companion, at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. Photograph: Craig T. Mathew/AP

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”.

Keillor sang a few more songs and closed out the show as if it were any other. Only during the encore did he truly take time to say goodbye, engaging the crowd with a moving medley of songs running the gamut from classic spirituals to pop ballads.

Companion attracts more than 3 million public-radio listeners in the US; many more counting the show’s Armed Forces Radio audiences worldwide.

After Saturday’s season finale, it will return with new episodes in October with an updated format and new host, the musician Chris Thile.

Keillor will do concerts and is working on a Wobegon screenplay.

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