Saturday Night Live cast

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The following is a list of Saturday Night Live cast members, past and present. The cast members of Saturday Night Live are often referred to as the "Not Ready For Prime Time Players".

Contents

All cast members on Saturday Night Live are expected to write as well as perform. Those that don't write end up with fewer parts and face-time and often eventually leave the show.

Three groups serve as “farm clubs” for the cast and writing staff: The improvisational comedy troupes The Groundlings and The Second City, and the publication Harvard Lampoon. Recently the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre has become a noted "club" as well.

Each of the three brings a different perspective: [1]

  • performers from the Groundlings often end up creating the vivid recurring characters which are one hallmark of the show;
  • writer-performers from Second City are known for “aesthetic perfectionism”; they tinker obsessively with the wording and inflections of a punch line or the behavioral details of a character;
  • writers from the Lampoon emphasize the conceptual premise of a sketch, taking a boyhood fantasy to an extreme, for example.

The following list of cast members includes both featured and repertory players, but omits SNL writers and others who weren't listed as cast members during the show's credits. The dates given are the dates of the season in which they first appeared as a player and the season when they left. For example, Bill Murray first appeared on the show in 1977. However, the season began in 1976. Therefore, the date given on the listing will specify 1976.

Cast members who have left a memorable legacy on the show often have been the subject of a Best of SNL videotape, DVD, or compilation special. Cast members where this applies are marked with a (•) on the list below. In addition, some hosts have had such compilation videos made for their performances even though they were never members of the cast of Saturday Night Live: Steve Martin, Christopher Walken, Tom Hanks and Alec Baldwin. Cast members who were only featured (never promoted to contract player) are marked with an (F).

In alphabetical order:

Note that beginning with the 1978-79 season, SNL no longer referred to its cast as "The Not Ready For Prime Time Players".

Currently None.

Although SNL has a rapid turnover of cast members, 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
Darrell Hammond Repertory Player September 1995–present 13 and counting Only cast member to receive a "Best Of" while still on the show.
Al Franken Featured Player 1977–1980, 1986, and October 1987–May 1995 11½ Never promoted to Repertory player, and so took part in few sketches per season.
Tim Meadows Repertory Player February 1991–May 2000 Longest-serving African-American SNL cast member. Second longest-serving cast member by number of episodes (190). Has a "Best Of".
Kevin Nealon Repertory Player October 1986–May 1995 9 Weekend Update anchor
Phil Hartman Repertory Player October 1986–May 1994 8 Has a "Best Of". Referred to as the 'glue' of SNL in early '90s.
Horatio Sanz Repertory Player September 1998–May 2006 8 First and longest-serving Latino SNL cast member. Often laughed at himself during sketches.
Maya Rudolph Repertory Player May 2000–present 8½ and counting Longest-serving female cast member. On maternity leave much of season 31.
Chris Parnell Repertory Player September 1998–2001 and March 2002–May 2006 Fired at the end of the 2000–2001 season. Rehired for the remaining half of the 2001–2002 season.
Chris Kattan Repertory Player March 1996–May 2003 7 1/2 Has a "Best Of".
Rachel Dratch Repertory Player October 1999–May 2006 7 Longest-serving female cast member by number of episodes.
Tracy Morgan Repertory Player September 1996–May 2003 7 Has a "Best Of".
Will Ferrell Repertory Player September 1995–May 2002 7 Has two "Best Of" shows. Broke the record for highest-paid cast member.
Amy Poehler Repertory Player September 2001–???? 2008 7 Featured player for part of her first season. Current Weekend Update anchor
Seth Meyers Repertory Player September 2001–present 7 and counting Current Weekend Update anchor

Some cast members are related to former staff of the show. The most prominent example is Jim Belushi, younger brother of cast member 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 Aykroyd. Long-time writer and sometime performer Jim Downey is former cast member Robert Downey, Jr.'s uncle.

Other family connections exist that do not share the same name. For instance, cast member Gilda Radner was briefly married to G.E. Smith, who later became the show's bandleader. Michael O'Donoghue was married to SNL band pianist Cheryl Hardwick. Cast members Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Brad Hall were an item during their tenure, and were married in 1987. Cast member and writer Tina Fey is married to musical director Jeff Richmond.

Although cast members Brad Hall, Rich Hall and Anthony Michael Hall share the same last name, they are not related.

Although SNL is well-known as the launchpad for many successful careers, a few cast members (and active crew members) have died prematurely. This has given rise to a superstition known as the "Saturday Night Live Curse".[1][2][3]

Two cast members have died due to drug overdoses, in parallel situations. Both Chris Farley, deceased December 18, 1997, and John Belushi, deceased March 5, 1982, overdosed from a "speedball," an injection of cocaine and heroin. Farley's death occurred nearly two months after he came back to host SNL, which turned out to be his last television appearance. Belushi's death lead to the conviction of "friend" Cathy Smith for administering the fatal injection. Nearly four years prior to Belushi's death, SNL aired a short sketch titled Don't Look Back In Anger featuring an elderly John Belushi as the last living of the "not ready for prime time" cast members.

Yep, they all thought I'd be the first to go. I was one of those live-fast, die-young, leave-a-good-looking-corpse types, you know?

John Belushi

Cast member Gilda Radner, deceased May 20, 1989, succumbed to ovarian cancer after a long struggle. Radner was scheduled to host the last episode of season 13 (1987-1988), a first for a former female cast member, but the show was cancelled due to a writer's strike. Her condition worsened until a year later, when Steve Martin hosted the last episode of the 1988-1989 season (Season 14). Shortly before the episode, news came of Radner's death, and Martin's visibly shaken monologue now introduced a sketch called "Dancing in the Dark" that he performed with Radner on an episode he hosted in 1978, followed by a musical tribute to Radner performed by her former husband G.E. Smith and the SNL Band. Repertory player Danitra Vance, deceased August 21, 1994, died due to breast cancer.

Michael O'Donoghue, deceased November 8, 1994, died of a cerebral hemorrhage; the cast member and writer long suffered from severe chronic migraine headaches. Bill Murray honored his memory in an appearance on the season 20 (1994-1995) episode (hosted by Sarah Jessica Parker with musical guest R.E.M.) by replaying O'Donoghue's sketch, "Mr. Mike's Least Loved Bedtime Stories: The Soiled Kimono" from December 1977.

Long-time performer Phil Hartman, deceased May 28, 1998, was shot and killed while sleeping by his wife, Brynn. Before committing the act, she consumed a combination of alcohol, cocaine and the prescription drug Zoloft. She later shot herself.

Doumanian-era performer Charles Rocket was found deceased by local police in his Canterbury, Connecticut backyard on October 7, 2005. The death was ruled a suicide; Rocket had allegedly taken his own life by cutting his neck with a pair of box-cutters.

Julia Sweeney was diagnosed with cervical cancer in the mid-1990s, but has survived and transformed her experiences into a one-woman show, God Said, Ha!, developed at LA's alternative comedy show, "Un-Cabaret". Miramax released the film version of the show in 1998, produced by Quentin Tarantino. The film version of the play earned the Golden Space Needle Award, while Sweeney's recording earned her a Grammy nomination for best comedy album. It was released on DVD in 2003.

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.

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.

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. The following year's salary was $6,500 per episode, up to $12,500 for a 5th year tenured player.

  1. ^ Saturday Night Live Curse?. Who2?. Retrieved on September 21, 2006.
  2. ^ The SNL Curse. Saturday-Night-Live.com. Retrieved on September 21, 2006.
  3. ^ Worek, Steven. Live From Up There. SNLRA.com. Archived from the original on 2006-07-06. Retrieved on September 21, 2006.
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