Eddie Murphy

Saturday Night Live and TV Icons

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Saturday Night Live has been and continues to be a launching pad for actors to break into the movies.

Chevy Chase and
Foul Play.

John Belushi and
Animal House.

Eddie Murphy and 48 Hours.

Mike Myers and Wayne’s World.

Tina Fey and Mean Girls.

But
Saturday Night Live is also the launching pad for television icons beyond Saturday nights in Studio 8H in Rockefeller Center.

In 1993,
SNL creator and executive producer Lorne Michaels took over NBC’s Late Night franchise after David Letterman bolted for CBS. Michaels tapped Conan O’Brien to succeed Letterman. O’Brien was a writer on Saturday Night Live in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s. He hosted Late Night for sixteen years, from 1993 to 2009.

Again, Michaels need to find a
Late Night host. He went to the ultimately likable Jimmy Fallon, an SNL icon who had the keystone role of a Weekend Update co-anchor with Tina Fey.

Fey created and stars in the comedy
30 Rock airing Thursday nights on NBC. Michaels’ company Broadway Video produces 30 Rock.

30 Rock, a multiple Emmy Award winner, concerns the behind-the-scenes antics of the staff at TGS or The Girlie Show, an NBC comedy-variety show, like Saturday Night Live. Fey plays Liz Lemon, the head writer. Alec Baldwin, a longtime guest host of SNL, also stars on 30 Rock. He plays NBC executive Jack Donaghy. Donaghy retools TGS by bringing in Tracy Jordan, played by Tracy Morgan in a thinly veiled depiction of his bombastic, hilarious, and affable public persona.

Another former
Weekend Update anchor has a Thursday night comedy on NBC. From the team that brought you The Office, you now have Parks and Recreation starring Amy Poehler as Leslie Knope, a dedicated public servant in the fictional Pawnee, Indiana. Though idealistic about Pawnee’s Parks and Recreation Department, she encounters apathy, bureaucracy, and ignorance among her staff, the town, and other public servants.

Wiseguy

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Wiseguy aired on CBS for four seasons, from 1987 to 1990.

Ken Wahl stars as Vinnie Terranova, a federal government agent in the Organized Crime Bureau who went deep undercover to capture criminals.

In the beginning of the show, he has just completed a year-and-a-half prison stint. It’s a set-up to give Vinnie a viable criminal background cover. To the outside world, he’s a wiseguy, a term applied to organized crime figures.

Jonathan Banks plays Frank McPike, Vinnie’s government handler who coordinates strategy with Vinnie. Banks appears in
Beverly Hills Cop as one of the henchman of Victor Maitlin, the nemesis of Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley character.

Daniel Burroughs plays Jim Burroughs. Nickname: Lifeguard. Essentially, he is Vinnie’s communications link to McPike. His nickname is appropriate -- if Vinnie gets in danger, he calls Lifeguard with appropriate codes to send backup.

Wiseguy rarely contained self-contained episodes. Rather, it used story arcs comprised of multiple episodes.

The first story arc sees Vinnie become a trusted member of the crime family of mob boss Sonny Steelgrave, played by Ray Sharkey. Steelgrave electrocutes himself in front of Vinnie when he discovers Vinnie’s true identity.

The second story arc showcases Kevin Spacey as Mel Profitt, an international criminal with roots in arms dealing.

Other story arcs focus on white supremacy, the garment district in New York City, the record industry, a Japanese Yen counterfeiting conspiracy, mafia wars, a small town in the Pacific Northwest rooted in corruption, a Cuban-American crime lord, and the drug trade in the New York City school system.

ABC aired a reunion tv-movie in 1996. The canon is questionable.

In the fourth season of
Wiseguy, Vinnie is killed.

The 1996 tv-movie stars Wahl as Vinnie. So either the fourth season story line did not occur in official
Wiseguy canon or the events in the tv-movie occurred before his death.

SNL at the Movies

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Saturday Night Live is in its 35th season.

35 years of sketches, recurring characters, and
Weekend Update.

35 years of
Live from New York, it’s Saturday night!

35 years of laughter.

Shortly after it premiered in 1975, cast members started appearing in movies. They soon became box office gold.

Animal House, Caddyshack, Beverly Hills Cop, Wayne’s World, Wedding Crashers, Stripes, Meatballs, The Blues Brothers, Foul Play, Land of the Lost, Old School, Ghostbusters, Trading Places, Scrooged, Seems Like Old Times, Tootsie, Tommy Boy, 48 Hours, Driving Miss Daisy, Anchorman, Semi-Pro, Dr. Doolittle, Mean Girls, Baby Mama, and Shrek.

These movies all starred or featured at least one
SNL cast member in a prominent role.

Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin are not and were never cast members of
Saturday Night Live, but their numerous appearances as guest host arguably give them honorary cast member status.

Add their movies to the
SNL cast member movie roster.

Altogether, the total box office gross of these movies will likely be in the billions.

Quite a contribution for a show that was christened
Saturday Night Dead by the media at several times in its history.

Saturday Night Live cast members leave Studio 8H in Rockefeller Center for the big screen.

It’s part of the show’s history dating back to a little movie directed by John Landis that captures America’s fascination with a time that was simpler -- before the Vietnam War, the JFK assassination, and Watergate.

The setting was 1962.

The film was National Lampoon’s
Animal House.

Produced on a budget reportedly less than $3 million in 1978,
Animal House became a pop culture icon, conquered the box office dragon, and secured John Belushi’s rightful place as a box office attraction.

He was the first
SNL cast member to truly break through the television-film barrier.

Belushi was also a good dramatic actor. The romantic comedy
Continental Divide pits Belushi’s hardened, cynical, Chicago newspaper columnist Ernie Souchak against Blair Brown’s environmentally aware eagle researcher Nell Porter.

Belushi died in 1981 from a drug overdose at the age of 33. His premature death prevented us from knowing the true depths of his acting talents.

But Belushi’s breakthrough role as Bluto in
Animal House set a trend that continues today.

From Eddie Murphy to Mike Myers.

From Dan Aykroyd to Tina Fey.

From Bill Murray to Will Ferrell.

Late Night

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the late 1980's and early 1990's, the late night television arena was a free-for-all.

With Johnny Carson leaning toward the exit, Jay Leno and David Letterman battled for the dream job of any comedian -- host of
The Tonight Show.

Bill Carter captures the behind-the-scenes action in his excellent book --
The Late Shift.

Arsenio Hall attracted younger viewers when he debuted the first-run syndicated
The Arsenio Hall Show in 1989.

With friends including Magic Johnson and Eddie Murphy, Arsenio redefined 'hip' in the era of Vanilla Ice, Milli Vanilli and the first George Bush.

As Jimmy Durante used to say,
Everybody wants to get into the act.

CBS attempted to bring a powerhouse game show host into its nighttime galaxy.

Wheel of Fortune host Pat Sajak got the 11:30 pm job on the Eye Network. He competed with Johnny Carson for a little more than a year from January 1989 to April 1990.

It was a standard talk show format.

Pat Sajak performed a monologue.

Dan Miller was the announcer.

Couch for guests on the left, desk for host on the right.

Miller and Sajak worked together on WSM-TV newscasts in Nashville back in the day.

Tom Scott was the band leader.

Scott was also the band leader for another short-lived offering --
The Chevy Chase Show. It debuted in the Fall of 1993 concurrently with Late Night with Conan O'Brien.

Radio DJ Rick Dees gave late night a try on ABC with
Into the Night. It debuted in 1990.

Like Sajak, Dees' tenure could be measured in months, Chase's in weeks.

The Arsenio Hall Show ended in 1994 after a five-year run.

During this era, television entered a transition phase with a passing of the baton to the future custodians of late night television.

Why didn't these shows work?

Perhaps Sajak was overexposed because of his daily air time on
Wheel of Fortune.

Perhaps Dees simply couldn't compete with Arsenio for the younger viewers.

Perhaps Arsenio Hall got too political during the aftermath of the Los Angeles riots in 1992.

And, of course, the Johnny factor.

America could always revert to Johnny for familiarity, which breeds comfort.

At least the decision makers tried to take on the late night Goliath. In the cases of Dees and Sajak, the networks jumped into the fray. For Arsenio Hall, the strength of a network was absent.

Now, late night is dominated by the next generation -- Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Craig Ferguson, and the new eminence grise, David Letterman.