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Jimmy Fallon is back under his own studio lights.

The late-night host returned to the "Tonight Show" set at NBC's Rockefeller Center headquarters in New York City on Monday along with his band, The Roots.

The show is filming without an audience but Fallon said he hoped he could provide his at-home audience with a little more “normal” during the coronavirus pandemic.

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“I'm here to show you that there is a light at the end of the tunnel if we keep each other safe,” Fallon said.

Fallon, along with other late-night hosts, have been working remotely the past few months of months. The coronavirus pandemic shutdown TV and film production in March for safety reasons. New York has slowly been reopening as other parts of the country are now feeling the full effects of the epidemic.

He began his show with a filmed piece showing him “walking” to work, pulling down his mask so a Rockefeller Center security guard knew he was indeed an employee.

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Studio crew members wore face shields and masks. Everyone there had tested negative for COVID-19, he said. Fallon was dressed more informally, with a sweater instead of a suit.

“Normalcy, any type of normalcy, feels great,” he said. “So hopefully we can put a smile on your face an hour every night and let you sit back and relax while we try to bring you a little bit of normal.”

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Guests, including New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Charlize Theron, weren't in the studio as the celebrity interviews continued remotely.

Representatives for Stephen Colbert's “Late Show” and Comedy Central's “The Daily Show” with Trevor Noah both said plans were in the works to return to studios but put no timetable on it.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.