Found this in a thrift store in LA decades ago. Likely from the dinner they are discussing here.
On the March 6, 1969 episode of the Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson, Bob Hope and Judy Carne discussed the recent cancellation of Turn-On.
Johnny Carson: I know you were taping the other night, Bob, because they had the dinner for Jack Benny …
Bob Hope: Jack was … celebrating his seventy-fifth year…
Johnny Carson: And twentieth year in television.
Bob Hope: Hard to believe, isn’t it? Twenty years in television. That’s hard to convince the producers of Turn-On, I bet.
Judy Carne: (laughs)
Bob Hope: Twenty years.
Johnny Carson: The only show that got canceled during a commercial.
Judy Carne: Right!
Bob Hope: In the middle they said, ‘Turn off.’ Wasn’t that something?
Judy Carne: Oh, amazing.
Bob Hope: That was George [Schlatter] too, though.
Judy Carne: Yes.
Bob Hope: We shouldn’t mention that cause George has done pretty well with that other thing [Laugh-In].
Judy Carne: And a big shock. A big shock to him.
Blanche Monnier (March 1, 1849 – October 13, 1913), often known in France as la Séquestrée de Poitiers (roughly, “The Confined Woman of Poitiers”), was a French socialite from a well-respected, bourgeoisie family in Poitiers of old noble origins. She was renowned for her physical beauty, and attracted many potential suitors for marriage.
In 1874, at the age of 25, she wanted to marry an older lawyer who was not to her mother Louise’s liking; she argued that her daughter could not marry a “penniless lawyer”. Her disapproving mother, angered by her daughter’s defiance, locked her in a tiny, dark room in the attic of their home, where she kept her secluded for 25 years. Louise Monnier and her brother Marcel continued on with their daily lives, pretending to mourn Blanche’s death. None of her friends knew where she was, and the lawyer she wished to marry unexpectedly died in 1885.