'Saturday Night' is live again
"Saturday Night Live" cast member Amy Poehler, left, reunites with Tina Fey, formerly of "SNL" and now star of "30 Rock," and musical guest Carrie Underwood during the taping of promotions for the show's return on Feb. 23. (AP Photo / NBC / February 21, 2008)
"Saturday Night Live" has been gone for so long that you'll
never know who its Mitt Romney impersonator was going to be.
The writers'-strike-imposed absence of the NBC institution ends this weekend with the first of four straight weeks of new shows, the first time that breakneck schedule has been tried since 1976.
"The last time we did it, it almost killed us," said Lorne Michaels, the show's veteran executive producer.
Old friend Tina Fey is the first guest host, with Carrie Underwood the musical guest.
The last new "Saturday Night Live" aired Nov. 3. It was so long ago that the opening skit was about a party at Hillary Rodham Clinton's house where she was portrayed as the presumptive president - with the real Barack Obama taking a cameo.
That's what irked Michaels and lead writer Seth Meyers so much. The show prides itself on political parody and now, during one of the most exciting nomination contests in years, they've been sidelined.
"I was in a rage for three of the four months," Michaels said, "then I sort of calmed down."
Even though shows with Conan O'Brien, Jon Stewart, Jay Leno and Stephen Colbert returned without writers until the strike was settled, Michaels said it was never an option at "SNL."
Returning before the strike ended would have impaired the collaboration between writers and cast members, he said. It's a writers' show; internally, the skits are produced and identified with whoever writes them.
Meyers - who joined with O'Brien and David Letterman in growing a "strike beard" - shaved his off before going back to work. Some of his creative energies were burned off doing a weekly theater show with fellow cast member Amy Poehler and "a lot of wisecracks in bars," he said.
"I did that a lot," he said. "It pays almost nothing. You have to do it for hours to get people to pay for a drink."
One reason Michaels picked Fey for the show's return is that she's a former "SNL" head writer and cast member, which provides a comfort level for dealing with the expected rustiness.
Michaels said he learned from a 1988 strike that it took awhile to get viewers back in the habit of looking for the show following an absence.
"Our competition isn't other television shows," he said. "It's Guitar Hero. You have to re-establish the bond with the audience when you don't show up for a long time. It's like any other relationship. When you don't show up, people lose interest."
"SNL" averaged 5.8 million viewers for the four original episodes of this season, down 8 percent from the previous year. But Michaels said he felt some creative momentum building. Alec Baldwin, always a popular guest host, was booked for a show. So were Ben Affleck and Edie Falco.
Maybe the most painful missed opportunity: Amy Winehouse was the scheduled musical guest for the wiped-out show of Nov. 10.
Get breaking news | Most popular stories | Dining and Travel deals all via e-mail!
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
Popular stories
- Cops: Girl, 16, killed in Holtsville drunken driving crash
- Allan Houston's coming back as a New York Knick?
- Police: Woman with kids in car arrested on DWI charges
- A-Rod's slip of tongue indicts fading Yankees
- Ewing hoping his son can make it big with Knicks
New York City
-

AMNY -

Metromix




