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SATURDAY NIGHT
LIVE
 Third-season cast of Saturday Night Live ANNOUNCER
Don Pardo (1975-1981, 1982- )
REGULAR
PERFORMERS
Chevy
Chase (1975-1976)
John Belushi (1975-1979)
Dan Aykroyd (1975-1979)
Gilda Radner (1975-1980)
Garrett Morris (1975-1980)
Jane Curtin (1975-1980)
Laraine Newman (1975-1980)
Bill Murray (1977-1980)
Albert Brooks (1975-1976)
Gary Weis (1976-1977)
Jim Henson's Muppets (1975-1976)
Don Novello (1978-1980, 1985-1986)
Paul Shaffer (1978-1980)
Al Franken (1979-1980, 1988- )
Tom Davis (1979-1980, 1988- )
Denny Dillon (1980-1981)
Gilbert Gottfried (1980-1981)
Gail Matthius (1980-1981)
Joe Piscopo (1980-1984)
Ann Risley (1980-1981)
Charles Rocket (1980-1981)
Eddie Murphy (1981-1984)
Robin Duke (1981-1984)
Tim Kazurinsky (1981-1984)
Tony Rosato (1981-1982)
Christine Ebersole (1981-1982)
Brian Doyle-Murray (1981-1982)
Mary Gross (1981-1985)
Brad Hall (1982-1984)
Gary Kroeger (1982-1985)
Julia Louis-Dreyfus (1982-1985)
Jim Belushi (1983-1985)
Billy Crystal (1984-1985)
Christopher Guest (1984-1985)
Harry Shearer (1984-1985)
Rich Hall (1984-1985)
Martin Short (1984-1985)
Pamela Stephenson (1984-1985)
Anthony Michael Hall (1985-1986)
Randy Quaid (1985-1986)
Joan Cusack (1985-1986)
Robert Downey (1985-1986)
Nora Dunn (1985-1990)
Terry Sweeney (1985-1986)
Jon Lovitz (1985-1990)
Damon Wayans (1985-1986)
Danitra Vance (1985-1988)
Dennis Miller (1985-1990)
Dana Carvey (1986-1993)
Phil Hartman (1986-1994)
Jan Hooks (1986-1991)
Victoria Jackson (1986-1992)
A. Whitney Brown (1986-1991)
Kevin Nealon (1986-1991, 1993- )
Mike Myers (1989- )
G. E. Smith & the Saturday Night Live Band (1989- )
Chris Farley (1990- )
Chris Rock (1990-1993)
Julia Sweeney (1990-1994)
Ellen Cleghorne (1991- )
Siobhan Fallon (1991-1993)
Tim Meadows (1991- )
Adam Sandler (1991- )
David Spade (1991- )
Rob Schneider (1991-1994)
Melanie Hutshell (1991-1994)
Beth Cahill (1991-1993)
Sarah Silverman (1993-1994)
Norm MacDonald (1993-)
Jay Mohr (1993- )
Michael McKean (1994- )
Chris Elliott (1994- )
Janeane Garofalo (1994- )
Mark McKinney (1994- )
Laura Kightlinger (1994- )
Molly Shannon (1994- )
Morwenna Banks (1994- )
PRODUCERS
Lorne Michaels, Jean Doumanian, Dick Ebersol
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
October 1975- Saturday
11:30-1:00 A.M.
October 1979-March 1980 Wednesday
10:00-11:00
March 1980-April 1980 Friday
10:00-11:00
U.S. Comedy Variety
Program
Saturday
Night Live first aired on 11 October 1975 on NBC and has continued
since to hold that spot in the line-up despite major cast changes,
turmoil in the production offices and variable ratings. A comedy-variety
show with an emphasis on satire and current issues, the program
has been a staple element of NBC's dominance of late-night programming
since its inception.
The program was developed by Dick Ebersol with producer Lorne Michaels
in 1975 as a result of NBC's search for a show for its Saturday
late night slot. The network had long enjoyed dominance of the weekday
late night slot with The Tonight Show and sought to continue
that success in the unused weekend time period. With the approval
of Johnny Carson, whose influence at the network was strong, Ebersol
and Michaels debuted their show, which was intended to attract the
18-to-34 age demographic.
The
regulars on the show have always been relative unknowns in the comedy
field. The first cast (The Not Ready for Prime Time Players) included
Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner,
Laraine Newman and Garrett Morris, all of them from the New York
and Toronto comedy scenes. Featuring a different guest host each
week (comedian George Carlin was the first) and a different musical
guest as well, the programs reflected a non-traditional approach
to television comedy from the start. The cast and writers combined
the satirical with the silly and non-sensical, not unlike Monty
Python's Flying Circus, one of Michael's admitted influences.
The program was produced live from NBC's studio 8-H for 90 minutes.
This difficult schedule and pressure-filled production environment
has resulted in some classic comedy sketches and some abysmally
dull moments over the years. Creating comedy in such a situation
is difficult at best and the audience was always aware when the
show was running dry (usually in the last half hour). But this sense
of the immediate and the unforeseen also gave the show its needed
edge. By returning to TV's live roots, Saturday Night Live
gave its audiences an element of adventure with each program. It
acquainted the generations who never experienced live television
programming in the 1950s with the sense of theatre missing from
pre-recorded programming.
For
the performers, crew and writers, the show was a test of skill and
dedication. The show has undergone several major changes since its
beginning. The most obvious of these were the cast changes. SNL's
first "star," Chevy Chase, left the show in the second season for
Hollywood. Aykroyd and Belushi followed in 1979. The rest of the
original cast, including Bill Murray who replaced Chase, left when
Lorne Michaels decided to leave the show after the 1979-80 season.
Michaels' departure created wide-spread doubt about the viability
of the show without him and his cast of favorites. Jean Doumanian
was chosen as producer and her tenure lasted less than a year. With
the critics attacking the show's diminished satirical edge and the
lackluster replacement performers, NBC enticed Ebersol to return
as producer in the spring of 1981. Ebersol managed to attract some
of the original staff for the 1981-82 season, particularly writer
Michael O'Donoghue. With the addition of Eddie Murphy, the show
began to regain some of its strength, always based in its focus
on a young audience and the use of relevant material.
Michaels
rejoined the show as producer in 1985 and oversaw a second classic
period of Saturday Night Live. With talented performers such
as Dana Carvey, Jon Lovitz, Jan Hooks and Phil Hartman, the program
regained much of its early edge and attitude. But the nature of
the the program is that the people who make it funny (the performers
and writers) are the ones who tend to move on after a few years
of the grind of producing a weekly live show. As the program moved
into the 1990s, this trend still affected the quality. But Michaels'
presence established a continuity which reassured the network and
provided some stability for the audience.
From
the beginning, Saturday Night Live provided America with
some of its most popular characters and catch-phrases. Radner's
Roseanne Roseannadana ("It's always something") and Emily Litella
("Never mind"), Belushi's Samurai, Aykroyd's Jimmy Carter, Murphy's
Mr. Robinson, Billy Crystal's Fernando ("You look mahvelous"), Martin
Short's Ed Grimley, Lovitz's pathological liar, Carvey's Church
Lady ("Isn't that special?") and Carvey and Kevin Nealon's Hans
and Franz have all left marks on popular culture. The program's
regular news spot has been done by Chase, Curtin, Aykroyd, Nealon
and Dennis Miller, among others and, at its best, provided sharp
comic commentary on current events. It was particularly strong with
Miller as the reader.
Saturday
Night Live has seen many of its cast members move on to success
in other venues. Chase, Aykroyd, Murray, Murphy and Crystal have
all enjoyed considerable movie success. Short, Lovitz, Carvey, Jim
Belushi, Adam Sandler, Chris Farley and Joe Piscopo have been mildly
successful in films. Curtin, Julia Louis-Dreyfuss, Hooks and Phil
Hartman moved on to other television shows.
As a stage for satire, few other American programs match Saturday
Night Live. As an outlet for current music, the show has featured
acts from every popular musical genre and has hosted both old and
new artists (from Paul Simon, the Rolling Stones and George Harrison
to REM and Sinead O'Connor.) Due to its longevity, SNL has
crossed generational lines and made the culture of a younger audience
available to their elders (and the opposite is also true). Ultimately,
Saturday Night Live must be considered one of the most distinctive
and significant programs in the history of U.S. television.
-Geoffrey
Hammill
FURTHER
READING
Barol, Bill, and Jennifer Foote. "Saturday Night Lives!" Newsweek
(New York), 25 September 1989.
Beatts,
Anne, and John Head, editors. Saturday Night Live. New York:
Avon, 1977.
Cader,
Michael, editor. Saturday Night Live: The First Twenty Years. Boston,
Massachusetts: Cader Books, 1994.
Corliss,
Richard. "Party on, Wayne-from TV to Movies." Time (New York),
2 March 1992.
Cullingford,
Elizabeth Butler. "Seamus and Sinead: From 'Limbo' to Saturday Night
Live by Way of Hush-A-Bye-Baby." Colby Quarterly (Waterville,
Maine), March 1994.
Greenfield,
Jeff. "Live from New York." New York, 19 April 1993.
Harkness,
John. "Out of the Joke Box." Sight and Sound (Leicestershire,
England), March 1994.
Hill,
Doug, and Keff Weingrad. Saturday Night: A Backstage History
Of Saturday Night Live. New York: Beech Tree, 1986.
Myers,
Mike, and Robin Ruzan. Wayne's World: Extreme Close-Up. New
York: Hyperion, 1991.
Partridge,
Marianne, editor. Rolling Stone Visits Saturday Night Live.
Garden City, New York: Dolphin, 1979.
Saltzman,
Joe. "The Agony and the Ecstasy: Live Television Comedy." USA
Today Magazine (New York), November 1987.
See
also Variety
Programs
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