|
Saturday Night
Live | |
|
| |
|
Genre |
|
|
Picture format |
|
|
Running time |
90 minutes (1 hour and 30 minutes)
per episode |
|
Creator(s) |
|
|
Starring |
|
|
Country of origin |
|
|
Original
channel |
|
|
Original
run |
October 11, 1975–present |
|
No. of episodes |
|
Saturday Night Live (SNL) is a weekly late night
90-minute American comedy-variety show based in New York
City which has been broadcast by NBC nearly every Saturday night
since its debut on October 11, 1975. It is one of the longest-running
network entertainment programs in American television history. Each week, the show's
cast is joined by a guest
host and a musical act.
Originally, the show was called NBC's
Saturday Night because Howard Cosell was hosting
a show on ABC titled
Saturday
Night Live with Howard Cosell. After Cosell's show was cancelled in 1976, NBC retitled
its show. The first show with the new title was broadcast on March 26, 1977.
The
show — broadcast from Studio 8H at the GE Building in New York's Rockefeller Center —
has been the launching place for some major American comedy stars of the last
thirty years. It was created by Lorne Michaels who,
excluding a hiatus from Season 6 through Season 10, has produced and written for the show
and remains its executive producer (Jean Doumanian producing
most of Season 6, and Dick Ebersol Seasons
7–10).
In 2005, NBC renewed
SNL's contract until 2012.
[edit]
The
show usually follows a standard format. It opens with a cold opening sketch often parodying
politics, pop culture, or other current events; this
sketch always ends with someone saying "Live
from New York, It's Saturday Night!" (in
keeping with the show's original title, as noted earlier). Of note, during Dick
Ebersol's reign as Executive Producer (1981-1985), the show would quite often
not open with this line, as Ebersol tried to separate his SNL from
Lorne's. The show then segues into the opening credits, which
usually open with a shot of the Statue of Liberty and
a montage of the cast members cut with various locations around the city. The
opening credits are voiced-over by long-time NBC announcer Don Pardo. The show's theme
music has been re-arranged many times, but always follows the same basic
chord patterns. For three episodes in 1985 (11th season), the opening credits
were run over photographs of New York and the
host, musical guests, and cast members on segmented paper.
Next
is the opening
monologue performed by the guest host(s), often followed by a TV commercial
parody. The show continues with more comedy
sketches (sketches might feature recurring
characters, running gags, celebrity impersonations, movie and
TV spoofs, and sketches parodying the news issues of the day), followed by a
performance by the guest musical act. More
recent shows have the second act divided by an animated short by Robert
Smigel. The news parody segment Weekend
Update marks the show's midway point.
The
second half of the program continues with more sketches, and in most cases a second performance by the
musical guest. Some shows also feature filmed segments, often featuring cast
members, or it may feature independent film shorts. In a few rare cases, a third
musical performance by the week's musical guest is done near the end of the
show, but this was more common in the pre-1995-present era, and in fact, has
only occurred once in the past 11 years (U2, host Luke Wilson, 2004.) The last
segment is the goodnights, preceded by the SNL band playing a coda during
the final station break, which has changed very little over the show's history.
Often times, the show "fades to black", or just blatantly cuts away while the
credits roll, as the timing of the show is often run over, thus negating a full
credit roll (a full credit roll takes app. 80 seconds, when rolled at the
standard speed.) Also, in some reruns, shows have been edited to contain a
mixture of sketches, and do not follow this sequence ("Best of" cast member
collections, typically.)
[edit]
[edit]
[edit]
All "2006" marks are noted from NBCs SNL [Bio
page].
According to some new reports, SNL is facing
its biggest makeover in years. Due to budget cuts and the departure of many
fimilar faces. [[1]]
Nbc has neither denied nor approved of this claim. Although the questionable -2006 on many current players on the
websites bio page, is yet to be determined.
[edit]
For a
full list of past and present cast, see Saturday Night Live
cast.
[edit]
Although SNL has a rapid turnover of
supporting players, some performers have had long tenures with the show. Few
have broken the seven-year barrier. Among the longest serving cast
members are:
|
Cast
Member |
Cast
Status |
Tenure |
Total
Seasons |
Other
Notes |
|
Featured Player |
1977–1980, 1986 and October 1987–May,
1995 |
11½ |
Left SNL in 1980, returned near the end
of Season 11 in 1986 for a few episodes, left again, came back in 1987 and
stayed until 1995. | |
|
Repertory Player |
September 1995 –
present |
11 and counting |
Holds the record for the highest number of
consecutive seasons as a SNL cast
member. | |
|
Repertory Player |
February 1991 – May
2000 |
9½ |
Holds the record for the longest serving African-American
SNL cast member. Was often billed as a "Featured" Player during his first
1½ seasons. | |
|
Repertory Player |
October 1986– May 1995 |
9 |
Featured Player for his first
season. | |
|
Repertory Player |
October 1986 – May 1994 |
8 |
| |
|
Repertory Player |
September 1998 –
present |
8 and counting |
Holds the record for the longest serving Hispanic-American
SNL cast member. Is also the first Hispanic cast member in the show's
history. Featured Player for his first
season. | |
|
Repertory Player |
September 1998 – 2001 and March 2002 –
present |
7½ and counting |
He was fired from SNL at the end of the
2000-2001 season. However, he was rehired for the
remaining half of the 2001-2002 season. Featured
Player for his first season. | |
|
Repertory Player |
October 1999 – May 2006 |
7 |
Holds the record for the longest serving female
SNL cast member. Featured Player for her first two
seasons. |
[edit]
|
Cast
Member |
Tenure |
Total
Seasons |
Total
Episodes |
Other
Notes |
|
October 7, 2000 – May 21, 2005 and October
22, 2005 – May 20, 2006 |
6 seasons |
117 episodes |
Longest serving Weekend Update
anchor | |
|
November 9, 1985 – May 18, 1991 |
6 seasons |
111 episodes |
Longest serving male Weekend Update
anchor & Longest "consecutive" Weekend Update
anchor | |
|
4 seasons |
80 episodes |
| ||
|
October 23, 1976 – May 24, 1980 |
4 seasons |
78 episodes |
| |
|
4 seasons |
69 episodes |
| ||
|
September 28, 1991 – May 14, 1994 |
3 seasons |
60 episodes |
| |
|
January 10, 1998 – May 20, 2000 |
3 seasons |
50 episodes |
|
[edit]
Some
cast members are related to former staff on the show. The most prominent example
is Jim
Belushi, younger brother of Not Ready for Prime Time player John
Belushi. Before that, Bill Murray's older brother
Brian Doyle-Murray
was a writer and cast member. When Dan Aykroyd left the show in
1979, he was replaced
by a series of short-lived featured players, one of whom was his brother
Peter.
Other
family connections are not as obvious. For instance, long-time writer and
sometime performer Jim Downey is
former cast member Robert Downey, Jr.'s
uncle. Cast member Gilda Radner was briefly
married to G.E. Smith, who later became
the show's bandleader. The same is true for Michael O'Donoghue.
He was married to SNL band pianist Cheryl Hardwick. Julia Louis-Dreyfus
and Brad
Hall were an item during their tenure, and were
married in 1987.
[edit]
Although SNL is well-known as the launchpad
for many successful careers, a few cast members (and active crew members) have
died tragically young. This has given rise to a theory known as the
Saturday Night Live Curse. [2] [3]
[4]
[edit]
|
Cast
Member |
Date of
Death |
Cause(s) of
Death |
Notes |
|
Was the first SNL cast member to die. Ironically, years before Belushi's death, there
was a short film on SNL called, Don't Look Back In
Anger that showed an elderly John Belushi as the last living
member of the Not Ready For Primetime Players. | |||
|
She was scheduled to host the last episode of
season 13 (1987-1988), a first for a former female cast member, but the
season was cut short due to a writer's strike and her condition worsened.
When Steve Martin hosted the last episode of the 1988-1989 season (Season
14), his original monologue about photographing his good and bad sides was
scheduled for later in the show when news hit that Radner had died. The
new monologue was Steve showing a clip from a sketch on an episode he
hosted in 1978 (Steve Martin/The Blues Brothers) where two strangers
(played by Martin and Radner) meet each other in a disco and start dancing
elegantly around the studio until they return to the sketch and go about
their business as if nothing happened between them. This famous sketch is
called Dancing In The Dark (transcript) | |||
|
She was the first black female repertory cast
member (not to be confused with Season 6 featured player/recurring extra,
Yvonne Hudson). She claimed to have quit
the show because she was sick of being put in stereotypical roles, but
according to Al Franken in the book, Live From New York: The Uncensored History of
Saturday Night Live, Danitra Vance quit because her dyslexia
made it difficult to memorize lines and read from cue
cards. | |||
|
He was a one-time SNL cast member and
SNL writer who long suffered from severe chronic migraine headaches. Bill
Murray cameoed in a Season 20 (1994-1995) episode (hosted by Sarah Jessica
Parker with musical guest R.E.M.) to honor him by
replaying O'Donoghue's famous sketch, Mr. Mike's Least Loved Bedtime
Stories: The Soiled Kimono from December 1977. (transcript of Bill
Murray's appearance; transcript of Mr.
Mike's Least Loved Bedtime Stories: The Soiled Kimono
sketch) | |||
|
Not unlike his idol, John Belushi, Farley
also died from an accidental drug overdose of cocaine and heroin,
commonly known as a speedball, at the age of
33 (which was also how old Belushi was when he died). Farley's death
occurred nearly two months after he came back to host SNL. That
appearance turned out to be his last television
appearance. | |||
|
Murder (Gun shot
wounds) |
Hartman's wife, Brynn, had been in
treatment for her depression, after months of speculated marriage
problems. One day, she consumed a dangerous combination of alcohol, cocaine and
the prescription drug Zoloft then shot Hartman
that morning while he slept. She later turned the gun on herself. Hartman
is the only SNL cast member to have been
murdered. | ||
|
Suicide |
Local police in Canterbury,
Connecticut found Rocket dead near his backyard with a slashed throat.
The death was ruled a suicide. Rocket is the first SNL castmember
to commit suicide, not to mention the first Weekend Update anchor
to die, and the first castmember from Jean Doumanian's
widely panned, low-rated season (1980-1981) to
die. |
[edit]
SNL received some negative publicity in 1999 when it
was leaked that, henceforth, actors joining the show would have to agree in
their five-to-six year contract that, upon request, they would act in up to
three movies by SNL Films, for fees of US$75,000,
US$150,000, and then US$300,000; and also that, upon request, they would leave
SNL and act in an NBC sitcom for up to an additional
six years. This appeared to be a reaction to former cast members such as Adam
Sandler and Mike Myers going on
to movie stardom. [citation needed]
Some
agents and managers characterized these long-term contracts as involuntary
servitude, saying that almost any young, undiscovered comic would
immediately agree to any given set of exploitative contractual restrictions for
the opportunity to launch a career via the show. NBC publicly defended the new
contracts, saying that SNL was doing a service to young comics by
launching so many careers. [citation needed]Jay Mohr
reported in Gasping
for Airtime: Two Years in the Trenches of Saturday Night Live (ISBN
1-4013-0006-5), that his starting salary of his 5 year deal was US$5,500 per
episode (in 1994) plus $1,500 for his writing credit. Following year's salary
was $6,500 per episode., up to $12,500 for a 5th year
tenured player.
It
was reported in 1999 that the starting salary for SNL cast members was
US$5,000 per episode. [citation needed]
[edit]
Charles
Rocket anchoring Weekend
Update.
Since
the show's inception, SNL has aired from Studio 8H, located on floors 8 and 9 of 30
Three
of the first four shows of the 1976-77 season were shot at the former NBC
Studios in Brooklyn, due to NBC News using Studio 8H for
Presidential election coverage.
During the summer 2005 shooting hiatus, crews
began renovations on Studio 8H. With its thirty-first season premiere in October
2005, the show began broadcasting in High
Definition, appearing letterboxed on conventional
screens.
The
offices of SNL writers, producers, and other staff can be found on the
17th floor of "30 Rock". Last Call with
Carson Daly used the studio until 2005, when the show moved to Studio 9
at the NBC Studios in Burbank,
California.
[edit]
The
following is a summary of the process used to produce the show. It is based in
part on an August 2000 Writer's Digest
article and an April 2004 Fresh Air interview with
writer and performer Tina Fey:
The
status of the show during the week is maintained on a bulletin board. Sketches
and other segments are given labels which are put on index cards and put on the
board in the order of their performance. The order is based on content as well
as production limitations such as camera placement and performer availability.
Segments which have been cut are kept to the side of the board. As the broadcast
approaches, often the writer/producer discovers the fate of his or her segment
only by consulting the bulletin board.
A
60
Minutes report taped in October 2004 depicted the intense writing frenzy
that goes on during the week leading up to a show, with crowded meetings and
long hours. The report particularly noted the involvement of the guest hosts in
developing and selecting the sketches in which they will
appear.
[edit]
SNL is one of the few shows on television to have its
in- and off-season reruns aired out of its original broadcast sequence. The
sequence of the in-season reruns (that is, encore shows that air during the
season it originally aired) are usually determined by the episodes' popularity.
So, for example, if by the midway point of the season in December, a show hosted
by Robert DeNiro turned out
to be the highest rated show of the season thus far, it would be the first show
to be repeated when SNL begins airing its reruns during one of their live
breaks. Shows usually air twice during a particular season, but often the
highest rated shows of the season have a second encore show towards the end of
the off-season, or episodes will be repeated a second or third time to coincide
with who hosted. For example, on August 5, 2006, that prior
season's show hosted by Natalie Portman was
aired, as the video release for her movie V for Vendetta
was the following Tuesday.
Encore showings are not always identical to the
original broadcast. Frequently, successful sketches that aired later in the show
during the original broadcast will be reedited to appear earlier, and segments
that did not work well during the original showing are replaced by a) alternate
performances or b) completely different sketches that had been taped at the
dress rehearsal that preceded the live broadcast. In the earlier years of the
show's history, reruns occasionally replaced weaker sketches with segments from
other episodes, usually from episodes that did not have an encore showing at
all.
[edit]
From
time-to-time, SNL airs compilation shows. Such shows will feature the
best of a previous season (consisting of sketches and musical segments specially
selected by the producers), or of a particular cast member (such as Eddie
Murphy or Adam Sandler) or guest
(such as Tom
Hanks), or centered on a particular theme (for example, Halloween, Christmas, or a major news
event). Almost every election year since 1992, SNL airs, during
primetime, a "Presidential Bash" featuring both classic and new sketches
involving Presidents and presidential candidates. The 2000 Bash was notable for
having self-deprecating sketches taped by the actual candidates (George
W. Bush and Al Gore, though not together) in
addition to the sketches with the players normally assigned to impersonate them.
The 2000 Bash featured both Al Gore and George W. Bush poking fun at themselves,
as well as each other, and even a cameo appearance from Minnesota governor Jesse
Ventura with the famous opening line "Live from New York, It's Saturday
Night."
[edit]
Over
the years SNL has almost always been broadcast
live in the Eastern and Central time zones, in spite of the expletive
spoken by Charles Rocket in 1981.
Exceptions include shows hosted by Richard Pryor, Sam
Kinison, and Andrew Dice Clay, which
were broadcast on a five-second delay.
The
episode scheduled for October 25, 1986, hosted by Rosanna Arquette, was
not aired until November 8. NBC was
broadcasting Game 6 of the 1986 World Series on
the evening of October 25; the game entered
extra innings, causing that night's broadcast of SNL to be first delayed
and then cancelled. The show was performed for the studio audience starting at
1:30 a.m. Eastern Time, recorded, and broadcast two weeks
later.
The
episode scheduled for February 10, 2001, hosted by Jennifer Lopez, aired on
tape delay by almost 45 minutes due to a late-running XFL game that was airing on NBC
during prime time. Lopez and the cast were not told by Michaels that they were
not being seen live [5].
During Eddie Murphy's last season,
he was only available for part of the season, so they recorded a number of extra
sketches in September 1983 that featured him and were broadcast in episodes he
was not available for, according to the book Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night
Live by Doug Hill and Jeff Weingrad.
Some
live shows may also be altered and edited for the West
Coast (where it is broadcast at 11:35 p.m. Pacific Time, three hours after
the live broadcast); in some cases recordings of sketches or performances from
the program's dress rehearsal have been substituted for the later feed. During
Richard Pryor's monologue, he twice used the word "ass," which was muted on the
West Coast (but has been restored for syndication). When Sam Kinison delivered a
comic monologue in 1986, NBC removed his plea for the legalization of marijuana from
the West Coast broadcast and all subsequent repeats. There were even rumors that
Ashlee Simpson's live
performance recording fumble in 2004 was to have been
edited out of the West Coast broadcast, but publicity surrounding the fiasco
forced West Coast affiliates to keep the original footage aired that night. The
original uncut version aired on the mid-season rerun, and also aired uncut on E!, which syndicates the
show.
[edit]
NBC
holds the copyright to every episode of the show made thus far. The syndication
rights to the original incarnation (1975–1980) were originally acquired by Filmways Television
(later Orion
Television and MGM), while the
syndication rights to the shows made from 1980 forward (that is, rerun rights
beginning two years after its original NBC airings) have been held by Broadway Video, Lorne
Michaels' production company.
The
home video rights have also been scattered. Warner Home Video originally
released several episodes from the original incarnation (1975–1980). Paramount released a
"Best Of Eddie Murphy" video compilation in the 1980s
(Murphy had a multi-picture deal with
For
many years, Comedy Central aired
SNL reruns from 1980-93 under license from Broadway Video. In 1998 or so, Comedy
Central began getting reruns from 1993 to the (then) present. In 2001, E! Entertainment
Television contracted with Orion/MGM to show reruns from the 1975-80
seasons. At the same time, a deal was signed to move the 1980-present reruns to
E! starting March 2003. By fall 2003, the 1975-80
reruns were rarely programmed by E! and had disappeared
entirely by 2005. The reruns
currently shown on E! are edited down to 60-minute
shows.
The
only episodes that have not been included in any syndication package (including
the current deal with E!) are the prime time special at Mardi Gras in New
Orleans (the only time the show has originated outside of New York), and the
infamous 1990 episode which Andrew Dice Clay
hosted. A one hour edited version of the Andrew Dice Clay episode did air on one
occasion, during a "Bleep Day" marathon on Comedy Central in the late
1990s.
[edit]
In Canada, episodes
from 1975–1980 are aired in late night programming hours, weeknights on some Global Television
Network owned stations such as CHAN, CHCA, and CIII. However, these episodes are
edited considerably to fit into to its one hour timeslot, rather than the usual
hour and a half.
In Australia,
SNL is seen on cable TV network Arena. It
airs late night Weeknights and Saturday as well Premiere Episodes at 6.30 p.m.
Saturday for a limited run. However, all episodes are edited considerably to fit
into to its one hour timeslot, rather than the usual hour and a
half.
Recently, CNBC Asia dropped SNL
from Starhub Cable
Vision (SCV). SNL used to be broadcased on CNBC Asia via SCV on
Channel 15, every Saturday at 11 p.m., with an encore telecast on Sunday in a
similar time slot.
[edit]
A separate list
of Saturday Night Live hosts and musical guests is
available.
Will Ferrell in the famous
sketch with Christopher Walken
constantly requesting "more cowbell"
There
have been many people who have been invited to host SNL. The hosts have
ranged from stand-up comedians, like Steve Martin, Robin
Williams and George Carlin, to serious
character actors, like Robert DeNiro, Tom Hanks,
Charlize Theron and Charlton Heston; from
pop music icons, like Janet Jackson, Madonna and Britney Spears, to sports
figures like Deion Sanders, Tom Brady,
The Rock, O.J.
Simpson and Derek Jeter. SNL has
also had many of its distinguished alumni, like Eddie Murphy, Chevy
Chase, Billy Crystal, Dana
Carvey, Norm Macdonald and Will
Ferrell to return to host the show.
Even
elected political figures, like former Vice-President
Al Gore, U.S. Senate members
John
McCain and George McGovern and New
York Mayors, Ed
Koch and Rudy Guiliani have hosted
the show. Other notable public figures to have hosted SNL have included
Al
Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and Ralph
Nader. The following are lists of notable categories of SNL
hosts.
[edit]
There
have been many people who have been invited to come back and host SNL
again, but few have broken the "five time hosting" barrier. Since December 1990, performers
who have either hosted SNL (or appeared as a musical guest) for five
times are considered members of SNL's Five Timer's
Club.
Some
of these "Five Timer" hosts (such as Steve Martin, Christopher Walken, Tom
Hanks, and Alec Baldwin) have hosted so many times that special episodes of
SNL have been compiled and aired as "Best of ..." episodes. Hosts who
have been the subject of a Best of SNL videotape, DVD, or compilation
special are marked with a (•) in the "Other Notes" section on the list
below. The following people have hosted SNL at least five
times:
|
Host |
Number of
Episodes |
First
Hosted |
Last
Hosted |
Number of Special
Cameos |
Other
Notes |
|
14 |
5 |
Hosted three times in one year, 1978. He
co-hosted with Chevy Chase and Martin Short on December
6, 1986
(•) | |||
|
12 |
9 |
Hosted once a season for 11 straight seasons;
holds SNL record for most total guest appearances
(21). | |||
|
12 |
2 |
Co-hosted with wife (Kim Basinger) on February 12, 1994
(•) | |||
|
10 |
5 |
Hosted twice a season for each of the first five
seasons. He is also the very first five-timer. | |||
|
9 |
5 |
First former cast member to host more than five
times. Was banned from ever hosting again in 1997.
(•) | |||
|
8 |
1 |
Had two recurring characters during his hosting
tenures: A short-term memory guy, and as one of the lady crooners in a
skit also featuring Jon Lovitz.
(•) | |||
|
6 |
1 |
| |||
|
6 |
3 |
Co-hosted with wife (Rhea Perlman) on October
15, 1983 | |||
|
6 |
0 |
(•) | |||
|
5 |
0 |
The only woman to host five times; hosted twice
in one season in 1975. | |||
|
5 |
1 |
Second former cast member to host five or more
times. |
[edit]
As of
May 2006, there have been 22 performers who have hosted SNL who, at one
point in their careers, were either a repertory or featured member of the
SNL cast. The following performers have hosted SNL either before, during or after their tenure as a member of
the SNL cast.
|
Host |
Number of
Episodes |
First
Hosted |
Last
Hosted |
Number of Special
Cameos |
Other
notes |
|
9 |
5 |
First former cast member to host and first to
host more than five times. He is the first former Weekend Update
anchor to come back to host SNL. As of 1997, he has
been banned from ever hosting again. | |||
|
5 |
1 |
Second former cast member to host five or more
times. He is the second former Weekend Update
anchor to come back to host SNL. Only cast member to host during Jean Doumanian's
tenure as producer. | |||
|
3 |
5 |
| |||
|
2 |
3 |
Sometimes appeared as Father Guido
Sarducci. | |||
|
2 |
0 |
He is the first African-American
cast member to host SNL. He is the only performer to host while
still a cast member. Also, he was the first of only four hosts who joined
the cast when Lorne Michaels was
not producing SNL. | |||
|
2 |
2 |
He is the first performer to join the cast after
he had hosted. He co-hosted with Ed Koch, Don
Novello, Betty Thomas and Edwin Newman on May 12, 1984. Also, he
is one of only four hosts who joined the cast when Lorne Michaels was not
producing SNL. | |||
|
2 |
1 |
He co-hosted with Chevy Chase and Steve Martin on December
6, 1986. He is one
of only four cast member hosts who joined the cast when Lorne Michaels was
not producing SNL. | |||
|
2 |
0 |
| |||
|
2 |
2 |
He is also the third of the Bad Boys of SNL to
host. | |||
|
1 |
8 |
He is the fourth former Weekend Update
anchor to come back to host SNL. | |||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the only former leader of the Saturday
Night Live Band to host. | |||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the second performer to join the cast
after hosting a show, and also the oldest individual to join the
cast. | |||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the second cast member to come back to
host SNL after being fired from the
show. | |||
|
1 |
7 |
| |||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the second African-American
cast member to host SNL. He is also the first cast member to come
back to host SNL after being fired from the show, and the first
cast member from In Living
Color to host (the other In Living Color cast members who
have hosted are Jim Carrey [Season 21],
David Alan Grier
[Seasons 21 and 22], Jamie Foxx [Season 25],
and Jennifer Lopez
[Season 26; was a musical guest in Season 25 on an episode hosted by Alan
Cumming]) | |||
|
1 |
2 |
He is the third African-American
cast member to host SNL. He is also the first of the Bad Boys of SNL to
host. | |||
|
1 |
3 |
| |||
|
1 |
1 |
He is also the second of the Bad Boys of SNL to
host. | |||
|
1 |
2 |
| |||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the third former Weekend Update
anchor to come back to host SNL and the only former WU
anchor to host after being fired from being an anchor on WU (he was
not fired from the cast). Even though he's technically a secondary member,
he is also the fourth of the Bad Boys of SNL to
host. | |||
|
1 |
2 |
| |||
|
1 |
0 |
She is the first female alum to host SNL.
She is one of only four cast member hosts who joined the cast when Lorne
Michaels was not producing
SNL. | |||
[edit]
The
following is a list of guest hosts who had previously auditioned for the show
earlier in their careers only to be turned down. This list does not include the
names of hosts, like Billy Crystal, who were
rejected but eventually joined the cast at a later date. The list of the hosts
and dates of their auditions are as follows:
|
Host |
SNL Season of
Audition |
First
Hosted |
Last
Hosted |
Other
notes |
|
Hosted once a season for 11 straight
seasons | ||||
|
Hosted as his kids show alter ego Pee Wee Herman in
1985 | ||||
|
He made a cameo on the Christopher
Walken/Foo Fighters episode,
playing his leg like a guitar during the Foo Fighters' second
performance. | ||||
|
She was actually hired
as a cast member towards the end of the sixth season. However, she
resigned, due to an incident involving Michael
O'Donoghue's harsh treatment of the 1980-1981 cast and writers, before
she appeared in any episode. She suggested to then 'SNL producer,
Dick Ebersol, that
her good friend, Robin Duke replace her
as a cast member. | ||||
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
|
He is married to former
SNL cast member Nancy Walls. In 1995,
lost the audition to Will Ferrell He
co-hosted SNL on April 26, 2006, along with Stephen Colbert,
as the The
Ambiguously Gay Duo. Colbert served as the voice of Ace and Carell
voiced his partner, Gary. Carell and Colbert are the first performers to
host SNL via voice over work and animation. | ||||
|
Cameoed on the Jack Black/Neil
Young episode of season 31 in an Appalachian
Emergency Room sketch | ||||
|
| ||||
[edit]
As of
May 2006, there have been 11 political figures who have hosted SNL. These
public figures include elected officials and/or political activists. The
following is a list of such hosts.
|
Host |
Office/Occupation |
Number of
Episodes |
First
Hosted |
Last
Hosted |
Number of Special
Cameos |
Other
notes |
|
1 |
2 |
He is the highest elected former public official
to host SNL. | ||||
|
1 |
0 |
| ||||
|
1 |
0 |
He is the first sitting Senator to host Saturday
Night Live. | ||||
|
2 |
0 |
As of May 2006, he is the only
political figure who has hosted more than once. The first Mayor of New
York to host SNL. | ||||
|
1 |
1 |
The second mayor of NYC to host
SNL. | ||||
|
Former Presidential Candidate (Democrat)/
Reverend |
1 |
1 |
| |||
|
Former Presidential Candidate (Democrat)/
Reverend |
1 |
0 |
| |||
|
Former Presidential
Candidate |
1 |
0 |
Musical guest was Rage Against
the Machine | |||
|
Former Presidential Candidate (Green
Party)/ Consumer Activist |
1 |
1 |
| |||
|
Press Secretary for US President Gerald
Ford (Republican) |
1 |
1 |
| |||
|
Civil Rights leader / Georgia Representative and
Senator |
1 |
0 |
| |||
[edit]
[edit]
The
following performers have been musical guests on SNL at least five
times:
|
Musical
Guest |
Number of
Episodes |
First Musical
Appearance |
Last Musical
Appearance |
Other
Notes |
|
7 |
Simon also hosted or co-hosted three shows. He
co-hosted the second episode with Art Garfunkel on October
18, 1975,
and co-hosted with Catherine
Oxenberg on May 10, 1986, during the 11th season.
He solely hosted on November 20, 1976, where he was
one of two musical guests. | |||
|
7 |
| |||
|
7 |
He was the drummer for Nirvana in their
two performances, was a drummer for Tom
Petty and the Heartbreakers on one performance, and performed with his
most recent band, Foo Fighters four
times. | |||
|
6 |
| |||
|
6 |
| |||
|
5 |
Only British performer
to appear as a musical guest at least five
times. | |||
|
5 |
|
[edit]
The
following performers have pulled a double duty as both musical guests and host
during the same SNL episode:
|
Musical
Guest |
Date of Hosting/Musical
Appearance |
Other
Notes |
|
He is the first performer to appear
simultaneously as host and musical guest. | ||
|
| ||
|
Are the only band to host and be musical guests
on SNL (even though Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, and
Ron
Wood were the only band members to appear in
sketches) | ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
Jones' hosting stint had ten musical guests on
one night, an SNL record. | ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
February 28, 1998 and November 13, 1999 |
He is one of only two performers to
simultaneously as host and musical guest more than once. Garth appeared in
the second episode as himself as host, and his alter ego Chris Gaines as
musical guest. | |
|
| ||
|
May 13, 2000 and February
2, 2002 |
At 18, she was the youngest person in SNL
History to host and musical guest the same time on May 13, 2000. She is
also the only female in SNL History to host and perform in the same
episode more than once. | |
|
Not only did he perform 3 times, but he also
starred in 8 live sketches all in one night. | ||
|
| ||
|
|
[edit]
See
also List
of last minute changes on Saturday Night Live.
[edit]
|
Original
Host |
Replacement
Host |
Date of SNL
Episode |
Other
Notes |
|
None |
Guillaume was originally scheduled to host on March
14, 1981 with
musical guest Ian Dury, but the show
was cancelled upon Dick Ebersol's
takeover as executive producer. Guillaume would eventually host two years
later. | ||
|
None |
Franken and Davis, former writers and featured
players on the show, were scheduled to host on April 18, 1981 with The Grateful
Dead as musical guest (Franken and Davis appeared in The Grateful
Dead Movie of that year). It was cancelled due to a writers'
strike and the temporary "cancellation" of SNL after Jean Doumanian
and her cast were fired and Dick Ebersol was called in to retool the
show. | ||
|
None |
He was originally supposed to host the 1981-1982
season premiere on October 3, 1981. He backed
out to be with his ailing sister, and no host was booked to replace him
for the episode. | ||
|
Nolte was scheduled to host the December 11, 1982 Christmas
episode, but he became too ill to host, so his 48 Hrs.
co-star (and then current SNL cast member), Murphy took over as
host. He became the only cast member to host while still a regular, a
choice reportedly upsetting to his fellow cast members. Murphy opened the
show with the phrase, "Live from | |||
|
None |
Candy and Levy were scheduled to host an episode
on March
9, 1985, with
musical guest Hall and Oates. It
was cancelled due to a short writer's strike that
season. | ||
|
None |
Gilda Radner was
scheduled to host in 1988 but the
episode was cancelled due to a writers' strike, and she died the following
year. She would have been the first female alumnus to host SNL in
the history of the show. That honor went to Julia
Louis-Dreyfus on May 13, 2006. | ||
|
He was originally supposed to host on May 9, 1992, but had
to back out at the very last minute due to a change in the filming
schedule of Home Alone 2. He
was replaced by Tom Hanks. The show made
light of the switch by having Hanks deliver a monologue that appeared to
have been written for Pesci, complete with plugs of all of Pesci's recent
films and a parody of the "Whaddya mean I'm funny" scene from Goodfellas. Pesci
hosted five months later. | |||
|
Oldman was originally scheduled to host in 1992,
as announced on the "next week" ticket from the previous live show, but
backed out at the last minute, replaced by Tom
Arnold. | |||
|
Letterman was originally supposed to host the
finale episode of Season 18 (1992-1993), but backed out due to his
problems with NBC. Lorne Michaels also tried
to get Sharon Stone to host
again, but she declined as well. Kevin Kline would host
the last show of the 1992-1993 season. | |||
|
Richards was scheduled to host the March
12, 1994 episode,
but was dropped by producers in favor of skating sensation Nancy
Kerrigan. | |||
|
Carvey was supposed to host for the first time
in April 1994, but he had to back out at the last minute. He was replaced
by Emilio Estevez.
Carvey finally hosted six months later. | |||
|
Locklear was originally supposed to host the May 7, 1994 episode,
with musical guest The Pretenders. She
was replaced by John Goodman. She
would host the following week, May 14, with musical guest
Janet
Jackson. | |||
|
Short was originally supposed to host the 1994
season premiere but backed out at the last minute. He was replaced by Steve
Martin. | |||
|
Sinise was originally supposed to host the December 10, 1994 episode.
He was replaced by Alec
Baldwin. | |||
|
| |||
|
Carey was originally scheduled to host the December 12, 1998 episode.
He was replaced by Alec
Baldwin. | |||
|
Carvey was scheduled to host the April
10, 1999 show. John
Goodman, originally scheduled to host the next week, but as that
episode was cut due to budget constraints, Goodman was moved up to replace
Carvey. | |||
|
Carrey was originally supposed to host the 1999
Christmas show to promote Man on the
Moon. He had to drop out due to scheduling conflicts and was
replaced by his Man on the Moon co-star Danny
DeVito. | |||
|
Stewart was supposed to host in February 2000,
but had to back out at the last minute. He was replaced by Alan
Cumming. Stewart finally hosted the show in March
2002. | |||
|
Spacey was originally supposed to host for the
second time in October 2000. He had to back out when production of his
movie K-PAX got behind
schedule. He was replaced by Kate Hudson. Spacey
would finally host again in May 2006. | |||
|
Stiller was scheduled to host on October
6, 2001, but he
said it was "impossible to be funny at times like this" (shortly
after 9/11).
Seann William
Scott took his place. | |||
|
Romano was supposed to host the show for the
second time in April 2002 but had to drop out due to a busy schedule. He
was replaced by The
Rock. | |||
|
Anthony Hopkins
was supposed to host the November 9, 2002 show. Nia
Vardalos, scheduled to host the next week, was his
replacement. | |||
|
Vardolos was originally supposed to host the
third show in November 2002. She was replaced by Brittany
Murphy. | |||
|
The show that Ray Liotta hosted in
Season 28 was originally supposed to be hosted by Elijah Wood. Wood
eventually appeared on SNL in Season
29. | |||
|
Zellweger was scheduled to host the May 10, 2003 show. She
backed out at the last minute and was replaced by Adrien
Brody. | |||
|
Martin and Prince were the
original choice to host and musical guest the 30th season premiere, but
Prince had to back out, and Steve Martin declined the invitation. They
were replaced by Ben Affleck and Nelly. Oddly enough, Martin
and Prince were later paired together for the 12th broadcast of Season
31. | |||
|
In a People Magazine
article in Fall of 2004, it reported that one of the few promotional stops
Britney Spears was
going to do was host the December 18 episode of
Saturday Night Live. But Jive Records later
ditched the idea because the singer suffered a knee injury on the set of
one of her videos, so producers tapped Robert De Niro to host
instead. | |||
|
During the 2004-2005 season, an article was released in November 2004
concerning the hosts and musical guests further in the season. It included
Ice
Cube with musical guest Franz
Ferdinand. Because the movie dates and albums were pushed back, Ice
Cube was replaced with Paul Giamatti and
Franz Ferdinand finally performed during Season 31, in October
2005. | |||
|
Jennifer Garner
and then eventually Topher
Grace |
During the 2004-2005 season, an article was released in November 2004
concerning the hosts and musical guests further in the season. It included
Gwyneth Paltrow
with musical guest Coldplay. Because the
movie dates and albums were pushed back, changes had to be made. Coldplay
was pushed back to perform on the season finale, and SNL replaced
them with The Killers.
Gwyneth Paltrow was replaced by Jennifer Garner, but she also had to
cancel due to an injury she sustained while filming Alias. She
was replaced by Topher Grace. | ||
|
Producers originally wanted Alec Baldwin to
host, straight off his The Aviator buzz
& to add sketches for his 'Best of SNL: Alec Baldwin' DVD but they
later ditched the idea for football player Tom Brady. Alec Baldwin would
host later on the same year in December. | |||
|
Dempsey was scheduled to host on April
15, 2006, but
pulled out at the last minute due to personal issues and was replaced by
Lindsay Lohan who
originally was to host the 2005-2006 season
finale. |
[edit]
|
Original Musical
Guest |
Replacement Musical
Guest |
Date of SNL
Episode |
Other
Notes |
|
|
The Sex Pistols were
supposed to be the musical guests of the December 17, 1977 episode,
but because of visa problems,
were replaced with Elvis
Costello and The Attractions. | ||
|
|
|
| |
|
|
The Chili Peppers were supposed to appear in
Year 28 but cancelled a couple of weeks beforehand. They went fourteen
years between their first SNL appearance in 1992 and their
second appearance in 2006. | ||
|
|
They were the first choice to musical guest for
the Queen Latifah
episode for the 30th season, but they ended up having Queen Latifah double
duty as host and musical guest. Scissor Sisters did later appear on the
episode of the same season hosted by Colin
Farrell. |
[edit]
See
Infamous
moments in Saturday Night Live history.
[edit]
See
Infamous
moments in Saturday Night Live history.
[edit]
See
also:
Below
is a short list of some of SNL's most popular recurring
sketches.
[edit]
The
early days of SNL spawned a few movies and low-budget films. However, it wasn't
until the huge success of Wayne's World that
Broadway Video (Lorne Michaels' production company) became encouraged to feature
more film spinoffs, with several popular 1990s sketch characters (and a few
unlikely ones) becoming adapted into movies. Producers tried their luck with a
revival of 1970s characters The Coneheads, followed by movies based around Pat,
Stuart Smalley, The Ladies Man, The Butabi Brothers and Mary Katherine
Gallagher. Some did moderate business but others bombed disastrously — notably
It's Pat and Stuart Saves His Family, with the latter losing US$15
million despite good reviews.
Wayne's World, the highest grossing movie based on an SNL
sketch ever.
[edit]