Despite suffering a stroke, TV host Dick Clark is determined to appear at the Times Square New Year's countdown celebration. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES - FOUR years after a stroke, celebrated US TV host Dick Clark is relishing the prospect of another New Year's Eve celebration, determined to appear for his 36th year in Times Square.
And he's hardly surprised by the current state of the music industry he helped build - he predicted this, after all.
Clark, who turned 79 last month and has been in front of the cameras for 61 years, most famously as the longtime host of the 'American Bandstand' music show, said in a recent interview by e-mail that his involvement in 'Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2009', diminished though it may be, is a labour of love and 'not really a job'.
He is passing on the torch to Seacrest, the 'American Idol' host.
'Obviously, I'm not able to be as actively involved as I used to be out on the street, up on a platform and interacting with the crowds in Times Square' in New York, Clark wrote. 'Thank goodness my friend Ryan Seacrest is able to handle that end of the activity on the show these days'.
ABC-TV's 3 1/2-hour live extravaganza will include performances by Natasha Bedingfield, Fall Out Boy, Jesse McCartney, Ne-Yo, Pussycat Dolls, Solange and Robin Thicke. Fergie hosts the Hollywood segments.
Clark woke up with right-side paralysis on Dec 6, 2004 - 'Your life changes overnight', he said. (Regis Philbin filled in for Clark on the New Year's Eve show that year.) Clark still uses a walker or wheelchair, and speaking is difficult.
'I am one of the fortunate ones who survived and have been minimally impaired, so I'm just thankful I'm still able to enjoy this once-a-year treat of bringing in the New Year.'
Clark was there at the birth of rock 'n' roll ('American Bandstand' kicked off in 1957), and he's watched dramatic changes in the music industry. Not that those changes would come as much of a surprise.
'I can remember writing an article several years ago where I let my imagination run wild,' Clark wrote. 'I said we'd see the day when music is delivered directly to our homes, and delivered to us in some form of wireless communication.
'The fun of actually holding a record in our hands will disappear and we'll all have our own individual library of our favorite songs that we'll listen to at home, at work, in the car wherever we happen to go.' -- AP