Saturday Night Live
1 9 7 5 - current (USA)
"Hi! I'm Chevy Chase and you're not".
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. What Laugh-In
did for the form of US TV variety shows, Saturday Night Live
did for content. Disaffected youth of the 60s were finally free to
express themselves in front of TV cameras.
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.
Baba
Wawa (the late Gilda Radner) was a famous TV interviewer, ring-tossing
Coneheads came from France and Land Sharks delivered Candygrams.
Shimmer was a floor polish and a dessert topping. SNL thumbed
its nose at tradition and more than any other show on US TV, it had
Attitude.
Though it began to run out of steam by the end of the 70s (but
regained it later), SNL did make TV ready for
anti-Establishment satire of the Dave
Letterman ilk. They even had their own cartoon short, way before
Tracey Ullman had The Simpsons.
Mr Bill was the supreme tragic character. It was the story of a
naive Play-Doh man with a high pitched whine and a cute dog called
Spot, trying to make it in this hard, cruel world . He was truly
the ultimate victim , and continuously suffered at the hands of Mr
Hand - a godlike father figure who pretended to be Mr Bill's friend :
He wasn't! Chopped, baked, blended, boiled, smashed
and destroyed - Mr Bill and Spot had it worse than WIle E. Coyote.
Strange to think that a man made from clay being endlessly destroyed
was adult humour at the time. Or maybe not . . .
Saturday Night Live was one of the landmark programs of the
1970s, an attempt to bring fresh, often outrageous comedy and the
excitement of live TV (from New York) to late-night viewers. It
featured "The Not Ready for Primetime Players," a repertory
company of wacky comics who presented 90 minutes of topical satire,
straight comedy, and music every Saturday night. Each week a different
guest star served as host and the person around whom many of the
sketches were written.
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 nonsensical, not unlike Monty
Python's Flying Circus, one of Michael's admitted influences.
The
program was produced live from NBC's studio 8H 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 favourites. 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
lacklustre 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.
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