What Is Paul Shaffer's Net Worth and Salary?
Paul Shaffer is a Canadian musician and bandleader who has a net worth of $30 million. Paul Shaffer is best known for being the musical director, bandleader, and sidekick for comedian/talk show host David Letterman from 1982 until the show ended in 2015. In addition to accompanying musical guests on Letterman's show, Shaffer has released occasional albums and contributed his expertise to other projects. His first major television gig was as a member of the original band for the early seasons of "Saturday Night Live." Paul also co-wrote the song "It's Raining Men," which became a smash hit for The Weather Girls in 1982.
Paul Shaffer Salary
What was Paul Shaffer's salary as musical director of the David Letterman's show? $5 million per year.
Early Life
Paul Shaffer was born on November 28, 1949, in Thunder Bay, Ontario. He was raised in Fort William by his parents, Shirley and Bernard Shaffer. He came from a music-loving family; his father was a jazz aficionado, and his mother loved show tunes. Shaffer credits his desire to become a performer with a trip during his childhood to Las Vegas to see Nat King Cole. In his early years, Paul studied classical piano as a child and later joined a rock band after discovering the Beatles and Neil Young. Shaffer originally wanted to earn a law degree and join his father's firm, but while majoring in psychology as an undergraduate at the University of Toronto, he found himself unable to bear giving up music. He began playing jazz with guitarist Tisziji Munoz and performed in bands around local bars. He completed his studies and graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in sociology in 1971.
Career
Paul's first onscreen appearance was a brief one: playing the organ at an outdoor wedding in 1971's "North of Superior," an early IMAX documentary that was shot in northern Ontario. After graduation, Shaffer landed a job as musical director of a Toronto production of "Godspell" in 1972, where he befriended Martin Short, Gilda Radner, and Eugene Levy. He began playing piano for the Broadway show "The Magic Show" in 1974. Paul soon branched out into radio work, including "National Lampoon's Radio Hour," and played on other artists' recording sessions, commercial jingles, and demos.
Shaffer had previously befriended many of the comedians at a then-new comedy program, "Saturday Night Live" (now affectionately known as "SNL"), as well as producer Lorne Michaels, and he joined the program in 1975, writing special musical material and playing in the house band for the program. He appeared in the show's sketches regularly, with a noted sketch as the pianist for Bill Murray's Nick the Lounge Singer character. He teamed up with the Not Ready for Prime-Time Players and worked on Gilda Radner's highly successful Broadway show. Shaffer also worked as the musical director for John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd whenever they recorded or performed as their classic Blues Brothers duo. He was slated to appear in their 1980 film, but he revealed many years later that Belushi had dropped him from the project.
Shaffer left "SNL" in 1977 to co-star in "A Year at the Top," a short-lived CBS sitcom where he played one-half of a pair of musician friends from Idaho to move to Hollywood. The series only lasted a few episodes, but they released a soundtrack nevertheless. After the series was canceled, Paul went back to "SNL." Shaffer made history in the spring of 1980 when he became the first performer to accidentally utter the F word live on "SNL." It escaped the censors in the live broadcast and the West Coast taped airing.
Shaffer's big break came in 1982 when he became the musical director of "Late Night with David Letterman" and the leader of the World's Most Dangerous Band (1982-1993). He also composed the theme song. Later, when Letterman moved to CBS, Shaffer served as the leader of Paul Shaffer and the CBS Orchestra for "Late Show with David Letterman." Over the course of his time there, he also guest-hosted the show four times when Letterman was unavailable. Shaffer appeared nightly on the show until Letterman's retirement in 2015.
In 1991, Paul recorded his first album, "Coast to Coast," which featured guests such as Dion, Ben E. King, Bobby Womack, and Wilson Pickett and paid tribute to the rock and soul classics Shaffer had fallen in love with in his younger days. Paul also released another solo album, 1993's "The World's Most Dangerous Party." Over the years, he has collaborated with a diverse range of artists, including B.B. King, Cyndi Lauper, Cher, George Clinton, Brian Wilson, and Earl Scruggs. He co-wrote "It's Raining Men" with Paul Jabara, and it was a #1 US "Billboard" Hot Dance Club Play hit and a #2 hit in the UK. Shaffer and the World's Most Dangerous Band performed the Chuck Berry song "Roll Over Beethoven" for the 1992 film "Beethoven." Paul has served as musical director and producer for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony since it opened in 1986.
In 2017, Shaffer reunited with the World's Most Dangerous Band to record a self-titled album that they released in March of that year. They went on tour and appeared on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" and "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert." Paul wrote and performed the bridge music on Letterman's Netflix series "My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman," which premiered in 2018. After the show was given a series order, Shaffer received a call from Letterman asking him to work on the show.
Personal Life & Real Estate
Paul has talked in detail in interviews about the "unrequited love" he had for Gilda Radner in the days they collaborated. Shaffer has been married to Cathy Vasapoli since 1990. They have two children, Will and Victoria.
In 1991, Paul paid $680,000 for an 8-acre property in Bedford, New York. The property features a 5,000-square-foot home that was built in 1968. Shaffer listed this property for sale in January 2024 for $2.75 million. He accepted $2.3 million in May 2024.
In 1994, Paul paid $1 million for a three-bedroom apartment not far from Lincoln Center in Manhattan that overlooks both Central Park and the city from different windows. In 2004, he bought a unit in the luxurious 3 Lincoln Center building, just a few blocks from his other residence. In June 2024 he paid $4 million for a condo in Santa Monica, California.