Difference between revisions of "Saturday Night Live"

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The American TV comedy and variety show [[wikipedia:Saturday Night Live|Saturday Night Live]] started in 1975.
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__NOTOC__
  
Zappa appeared on:
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[[File:Frank Zappa Saturday Night Live.jpg|500px|thumb|right|Frank Zappa on ''Saturday Night Live'' with Laraine Newman and Dan Aykroyd.]]
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'''Saturday Night Live''' is an American TV comedy and variety show based in [[wikipedia:New York City|New York City]] that has been broadcast by [[NBC]] on Saturday nights since October 11, 1975.
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==Zappa's guest appearances==
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[[File:I'm The Slime.jpg|500px|thumb|right|Zappa during a performance of ''I'm The Slime'' in ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''.]]
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Frank Zappa appeared on two occasions, both with comedian [[John Belushi]].
  
 
*[[76/12/11 Saturday Night Live NBC|December 11th 1976]]
 
*[[76/12/11 Saturday Night Live NBC|December 11th 1976]]
 
*[[78/10/21 Saturday Night Live NBC|October 21st 1978]]
 
*[[78/10/21 Saturday Night Live NBC|October 21st 1978]]
  
On both occasions comedian [[John Belushi]] performed with Zappa.
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Zappa was allegedly "banned" from the show due to his mugging to camera and pointedly reading  
 
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from [[wikipedia:Cue card|cue cards]]:
He was allegedly "banned" from the show due to his mugging to camera and pointedly reading  
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<blockquote><p> ''"It's a very difficult thing to do; they never make it easy on anyone who hosts the show. All the direction and attention goes to the sketches. They're not called skits--they become 'incensed' if you call them skits--and it's all designed to accommodate the people who are regulars on the show, so anybody who goes on there to hosts is at a severe disadvantage. Because they never tell you what camera is on, and you're not supposed to memorize your script because they're rewriting right up to show time. And so you're looking at the cue cards, and unless you're used to acting live on TV, you haven't got a prayer; you'll be looking at the wrong camera. It was really hard. And the other thing that happened was--and I didn't find out about it until the day after the show--that the first day I went there for the meetings with them they didn't like me and wanted to get rid of me. But no one said anything to my face while I was working on the thing. So they had written dialogue for me to say that I wouldn't normally say; they wouldn't let me write any of my own stuff. I think I'd be a fantastic television personality. I think I'd be a real good interviewer if I had a talk show, or a variety show. I'd be really good at it. But just to get up there and be the dumbbell in '[[A Night On Freak Mountain]]'... I mean, sure, I'll do that for a laugh, but I'm not gonna build a life on it."''</p></blockquote>
from [[wikipedia:Cue card|cue cards]].
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<div align=right>— [[Biography|Frank Zappa]], [[Stereo Review Interviews FZ|interviewed]] by [[Stereo Review]], April 1979.</div>
 
 
  
<blockquote><p>  
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<blockquote><p>''"(...) We were doing the Coneheads scene, which Frank loved. We were all in position to do it when Frank, said, 'What am I supposed to do? Read these cards?' It totally broke the reality; it was awful. (...) Maybe he thought he was above the whole thing or he was nervous or he didn't like the script. Maybe he thought he was being funny. But in fact the audience sort of gasped."''</p></blockquote>
    It's a very difficult thing to do; they never make it easy on anyone who hosts the show. All the direction and attention goes to the sketches. They're not called skits--they become "incensed" if you call them skits--and it's all designed to accommodate the people who are regulars on the show, so anybody who goes on there to hosts is at a severe disadvantage. Because they never tell you what camera is on, and you're not supposed to memorize your script because they're rewriting right up to show time. And so you're looking at the cue cards, and unless you're used to acting live on TV, you haven't got a prayer; you'll be looking at the wrong camera. It was really hard.</p>
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<div align=right>— [[wikipedia:Dan Aykroyd|Dan Aykroyd]], interviewed by [[Playboy]], August 1993.</div>
<p>
 
    And the other thing that happened was--and I didn't find out about it until the day after the show--that the first day I went there for the meetings with them they didn't like me and wanted to get rid of me. But no one said anything to my face while I was working on the thing. So they had written dialogue for me to say that I wouldn't normally say; they wouldn't let me write any of my own stuff.</p>
 
<p>
 
    I think I'd be a fantastic television personality. I think I'd be a real good interviewer if I had a talk show, or a variety show. I'd be really good at it. But just to get up there and be the dumbbell in "A Night On Freak Mountain" . . . I mean, sure, I'll do that for a laugh, but I'm not gonna build a life on it.</p>
 
</blockquote>  
 
<div align=right>Frank Zappa - Interview Stereo Review 1979</div>
 
  
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==Records Of This Show==
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*DVD [[Frank Zappa At SNL 1976–78]]
  
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[[wikipedia:Dana Carvey|Dana Carvey]] appeared as Zappa in a sketch on the May 12, 1990 edition. (This was the episode hosted by then-controversial comedian [[Wikipedia:Andrew Dice Clay|Andrew Dice Clay]]. The cold open was a parody of ''[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0038650/reference It's A Wonderful Life]'', with Dice looking to jump off a bridge and his guardian devil {played by [[Wikipedia:Jon Lovitz|Jon Lovitz]]} shows Dice what happened because he didn't host,  which included Frank Zappa hosting instead and him going on a long rant about censorship, and [[Wikipedia:Nora Dunn|Nora Dunn]] being crushed by one of [[Wikipedia:Sinéad O'Connor|Sinéad O'Connor]]'s amplifiers. [Dunn and O'Connor, the originally scheduled musical guest, both refused to appear on the show because of Clay.]) 
  
<blockquote>
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==Musical references by Zappa to ''"Saturday Night Live"''==
<p>...We were doing the Coneheads scene, which Frank loved. We were all in position to do it when Frank, said, "What am I supposed to do? Read these cards?" It totally broke the reality; it was awful.</p>
 
<p>
 
...Maybe he thought he was above the whole thing or he was nervous or he didn't like the script. Maybe he thought he was being funny. But in fact the audience sort of gasped.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
<div align=right>[[wikipedia:Dan Aykroyd|Dan Aykroyd]] - Playboy magazine interview 1993</div>
 
  
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One of the regular skits on ''"Saturday Night Live"'' were the Coneheads, a family of extraterrestrial aliens from the planet Remulak stuck on planet Earth, whose heads were all cone shaped. Later Zappa wrote a song called ''[[Conehead]]''. The Coneheads were also the subject of a 1993 live action comedy film called ''"Coneheads"''.
  
[[wikipedia:Dana Carvey|Dana Carvey]] appeared as Zappa in a sketch on the May 12, 1990 edition.
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==See Also==
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*[[wikipedia:Saturday Night Live|Wikipedia Article]]
  
[[category:videography]]
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[[category:Videography]]
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[[Category:Favorite TV shows]]
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[[Category:1976]]
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[[Category:1978]]

Latest revision as of 13:33, 16 December 2021


Frank Zappa on Saturday Night Live with Laraine Newman and Dan Aykroyd.

Saturday Night Live is an American TV comedy and variety show based in New York City that has been broadcast by NBC on Saturday nights since October 11, 1975.

Zappa's guest appearances

Zappa during a performance of I'm The Slime in Saturday Night Live.

Frank Zappa appeared on two occasions, both with comedian John Belushi.

Zappa was allegedly "banned" from the show due to his mugging to camera and pointedly reading from cue cards:

"It's a very difficult thing to do; they never make it easy on anyone who hosts the show. All the direction and attention goes to the sketches. They're not called skits--they become 'incensed' if you call them skits--and it's all designed to accommodate the people who are regulars on the show, so anybody who goes on there to hosts is at a severe disadvantage. Because they never tell you what camera is on, and you're not supposed to memorize your script because they're rewriting right up to show time. And so you're looking at the cue cards, and unless you're used to acting live on TV, you haven't got a prayer; you'll be looking at the wrong camera. It was really hard. And the other thing that happened was--and I didn't find out about it until the day after the show--that the first day I went there for the meetings with them they didn't like me and wanted to get rid of me. But no one said anything to my face while I was working on the thing. So they had written dialogue for me to say that I wouldn't normally say; they wouldn't let me write any of my own stuff. I think I'd be a fantastic television personality. I think I'd be a real good interviewer if I had a talk show, or a variety show. I'd be really good at it. But just to get up there and be the dumbbell in 'A Night On Freak Mountain'... I mean, sure, I'll do that for a laugh, but I'm not gonna build a life on it."

Frank Zappa, interviewed by Stereo Review, April 1979.

"(...) We were doing the Coneheads scene, which Frank loved. We were all in position to do it when Frank, said, 'What am I supposed to do? Read these cards?' It totally broke the reality; it was awful. (...) Maybe he thought he was above the whole thing or he was nervous or he didn't like the script. Maybe he thought he was being funny. But in fact the audience sort of gasped."

Dan Aykroyd, interviewed by Playboy, August 1993.

Records Of This Show

Dana Carvey appeared as Zappa in a sketch on the May 12, 1990 edition. (This was the episode hosted by then-controversial comedian Andrew Dice Clay. The cold open was a parody of It's A Wonderful Life, with Dice looking to jump off a bridge and his guardian devil {played by Jon Lovitz} shows Dice what happened because he didn't host, which included Frank Zappa hosting instead and him going on a long rant about censorship, and Nora Dunn being crushed by one of Sinéad O'Connor's amplifiers. [Dunn and O'Connor, the originally scheduled musical guest, both refused to appear on the show because of Clay.])

Musical references by Zappa to "Saturday Night Live"

One of the regular skits on "Saturday Night Live" were the Coneheads, a family of extraterrestrial aliens from the planet Remulak stuck on planet Earth, whose heads were all cone shaped. Later Zappa wrote a song called Conehead. The Coneheads were also the subject of a 1993 live action comedy film called "Coneheads".

See Also