LIST OF SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE HOSTS AND MUSICAL GUESTS
''Saturday Night Live'' has been a mainstay of the NBC late-night schedule for over thirty years.
Four people have hosted the show at least ten times:
★ Steve Martin (14)
★ Alec Baldwin (13)
★ John Goodman (12)
★ Buck Henry (10)
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
★ This season was considered so disastrous that NBC has barred episodes from being put into syndication. However, there have been rare times when these episodes would show up: Comedy Central (in America) has aired a few episodes from this season up until the mid-1990s, particularly the Bill Murray/Delbert McClinton episode (albeit a scaled-down 60-minute version instead of the full 90-minute version) during a marathon featuring films and ''SNL'' episodes starring Eddie Murphy. The Comedy Channel in Canada has aired the entire season uncut, and even left Charles Rocket's "fuck" incident uncensored. The most recent sighting of a Jean Doumanian-era episode in the USA happened in 2005 when NBC aired a full 90-minute rerun of the episode hosted by Jamie Lee Curtis.
★ The March 7 episode announced a planned show for March 14, with guest host Robert Guillaume and musical guest Ian Dury. The show ended up getting cancelled due to Jean Doumanian's termination and the show being put on hiatus for retooling.
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
★ The original season finale with Gilda Radner as the host and U2 as the musical guest was never performed due to a writers' strike. U2 would be musical guests for episodes hosted by Val Kilmer (season 26) and Luke Wilson (season 30). Gilda Radner, however, would die before getting the chance to host.
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
★ This season contained the first "Best of the Season" special since the 1996-1997 season, though it aired with two episodes remaining in the season.
★ This is the first season since season 23 (the 1997-1998 season) to have a repertory cast and no feature players.
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
The following are shows that do not follow the normal show format and filmed earlier.
1. http://snlarc.jt.org/ep.php?i=199805028
2. LeBron James to host 'Saturday Night Live' Tom Withers
Four people have hosted the show at least ten times:
★ Steve Martin (14)
★ Alec Baldwin (13)
★ John Goodman (12)
★ Buck Henry (10)
| 'Season:' 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Specials |
Season 1
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | October 11, 1975 | George Carlin | Billy Preston Janis Ian | ★ During the opening credits, announcer Don Pardo flubbed the first-ever mention of the regular cast as "the ''Not For Ready'' Prime Time Players". According to the cast list shown on screen, the Players include George Coe and Michael O'Donoghue. ★ Future cast member Billy Crystal was scheduled to appear, but his stand-up segment was cut when the dress rehearsal ran long. Andy Kaufman's segment, which consisted of him playing the Mighty Mouse theme on a record player, survived. |
| 2 | October 18, 1975 | Paul Simon | Randy Newman Phoebe Snow Art Garfunkel Jesse Dixon Singers | ★ This episode contains an all-time record 11 musical performances. Among the comedy pieces, only Weekend Update and a sketch in which Paul Simon tells the Bees their piece has been cut involve the Not Ready for Prime Time Players. ★ Most of the sketches were cut in order to extend Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel's musical set. They performed "The Boxer", "Scarborough Fair" and their then-new single "My Little Town". |
| 3 | October 25, 1975 | Rob Reiner | John Belushi as Joe Cocker | ★ Rob Reiner is the first host to appear in full sketches with the regular cast. ★ Denny Dillon appears as a "special guest" with Mark Hampton in a sketch as nuns running a parish talent show. Dillon would later become a cast member during the show's infamous sixth season. ★ Rob Reiner's then-wife Penny Marshall makes cameo appearances in this episode. |
| 4 | November 8, 1975 | Candice Bergen | Esther Phillips | |
| 5 | November 15, 1975 | Robert Klein | ABBA Loudon Wainwright III | ★ ABBA makes two appearances, set on board the sinking ''Titanic'', and lip-synch their second number. Captions informed the audience that "It's not their fault. The tapes didn't arrive from Sweden". |
| 6 | November 22, 1975 | Lily Tomlin | Tomlin with Howard Shore & the All Nurse Band | ★ Lily Tomlin is the first host to interact with the Muppets. |
| 7 | December 13, 1975 | Richard Pryor | Gil Scott-Heron | ★ This episode had the first seven-second delay for ''SNL''. ★ This episode had the first black celebrity to host ''SNL''. ★ The West Coast airing of this episode bleeped out Richard Pryor saying "ass" during one of his stand-up routines. It has since been shown intact. |
| 8 | December 20, 1975 | Candice Bergen | Martha Reeves The Stylistics | ★ Candice Bergen is the first person to host the show a second time. |
| 9 | January 10, 1976 | Elliott Gould | Anne Murray | |
| 10 | January 17, 1976 | Buck Henry | Bill Withers Toni Basil | |
| 11 | January 24, 1976 | Peter Cook Dudley Moore | Neil Sedaka | ★ Don Pardo reads the names of the regular cast members during the opening credits for the first time. |
| 12 | January 31, 1976 | Dick Cavett | Jimmy Cliff | |
| 13 | February 14, 1976 | Peter Boyle | Al Jarreau | |
| 14 | February 21, 1976 | Desi Arnaz | Desi Arnaz & Desi Arnaz Jr. | |
| 15 | February 28, 1976 | Jill Clayburgh | Leon Redbone The Singing Idlers | |
| 16 | March 13, 1976 | Anthony Perkins | Betty Carter | ★ This is the first episode to feature pictures of the cast in the opening credits. |
| 17 | April 17, 1976 | Ron Nessen | Patti Smith | ★ Ron Nessen, press secretary for President Gerald Ford, is the first political figure to host the show. Ford himself appears in a filmed segment during the cold opening where he opens the show with "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!" |
| 18 | April 24, 1976 | Raquel Welch | Phoebe Snow John Sebastian | ★ Lorne Michaels performs on air, famously offering the Beatles $3,000 to perform three songs. |
| 19 | May 8, 1976 | Madeline Kahn | Carly Simon | |
| 20 | May 15, 1976 | Dyan Cannon | Leon and Mary Russell | |
| 21 | May 22, 1976 | Buck Henry | Gordon Lightfoot | ★ Lorne Michaels appears again, offering the Beatles $3,200 and free hotel accommodations to perform three songs. |
| 22 | May 29, 1976 | Elliott Gould | Leon Redbone Harlan Collins & Joyce Everson | |
| 23 | July 24, 1976 | Louise Lasser | Preservation Hall Jazz Band | ★ Lasser was the first SNL host to be banned from ever hosting again. The episode was not shown in syndication until 2002. |
| 24 | July 31, 1976 | Kris Kristofferson | Rita Coolidge |
Season 2
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
Season 3
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 47 | September 24, 1977 | Steve Martin | Jackson Browne | ||
| 48 | October 8, 1977 | Madeline Kahn | Taj Mahal | ||
| 49 | October 15, 1977 | Hugh Hefner | Libby Titus | ||
| 50 | October 29, 1977 | Charles Grodin | Paul Simon | ★ Charles Grodin had missed all of his rehearsals during the week and, as a result, stumbled and ad-libbed his way through the episode. He was never asked to host again. ★ One of the more notable moments in this episode was the sketch in which Paul Simon and Charles Grodin attempted to sing "The Sounds of Silence" (with Grodin wearing an Art Garfunkel wig). After several aborted starts (with Grodin singing off-key and forgetting the lyrics), Simon walked off the stage. Grodin then proceeded to sing a verse of "Bridge Over Troubled Water", after which Art Garfunkel (himself) walked on the stage and asked Grodin to take off the wig. | |
| 51 | November 12, 1977 | Ray Charles | |||
| 52 | November 19, 1977 | Buck Henry | Leon Redbone | ||
| 53 | December 10, 1977 | Mary Kay Place | Willie Nelson | ||
| 54 | December 17, 1977 | Miskel Spillman | Elvis Costello | ★ Miskel Spillman was the winner of the first and only "Anyone Can Host" contest. ★ Elvis Costello halted his band the Attractions seven seconds into the song "Less Than Zero", launching into "Radio Radio", an as-yet unreleased song critical of mainstream broadcasting. He did not appear on the show again until 1989. | |
| 55 | January 21, 1978 | Steve Martin | Randy Newman The Dirt Band | ||
| 56 | January 28, 1978 | Robert Klein | Bonnie Raitt | ||
| 57 | February 18, 1978 | Chevy Chase | Billy Joel | ||
| 58 | February 25, 1978 | O.J. Simpson | Ashford and Simpson | ||
| 59 | March 11, 1978 | Art Garfunkel | Stephen Bishop | ||
| 60 | March 18, 1978 | Jill Clayburgh | Eddie Money | ||
| 61 | March 25, 1978 | Christopher Lee | Meat Loaf | ||
| 62 | April 8, 1978 | Michael Palin | Eugene Record | ||
| 63 | April 15, 1978 | Michael Sarrazin | Keith Jarrett | ||
| 64 | April 22, 1978 | Steve Martin | The Blues Brothers | ||
| 65 | May 13, 1978 | Richard Dreyfuss | Jimmy Buffett | ||
| 66 | May 20, 1978 | Buck Henry | Sun Ra | ||
Season 4
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
Season 5
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1975-1980) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 87 | October 13, 1979 | Steve Martin | Blondie | Blondie performed "Dreaming" | |
| 88 | October 20, 1979 | Eric Idle | Bob Dylan | ★ Eric Idle performed with a fever (which explains why he was in a stretcher during the monologue). Buck Henry was brought in just in case Idle was too sick to perform. | |
| 89 | November 3, 1979 | Bill Russell | Chicago | ||
| 90 | November 10, 1979 | Buck Henry | Tom Petty | ||
| 91 | November 17, 1979 | Bea Arthur | The Roches | ||
| 92 | December 8, 1979 | Howard Hesseman | Randy Newman | ||
| 93 | December 15, 1979 | Martin Sheen | David Bowie | ★ Klaus Nomi and Joey Arias made appearances; they sang backup for Bowie. | |
| 94 | December 22, 1979 | Ted Knight | Desmond Child & Rouge | ||
| 95 | January 26, 1980 | Teri Garr | The B-52's | ||
| 96 | February 9, 1980 | Chevy Chase | Marianne Faithfull | ||
| 97 | February 16, 1980 | Elliott Gould | Gary Numan | ||
| 98 | February 23, 1980 | Kirk Douglas | Sam & Dave | ||
| 99 | March 8, 1980 | Rodney Dangerfield | The J. Geils Band | ||
| 100 | March 15, 1980 | James Taylor Paul Simon David Sanborn | ★ The show went hostless to celebrate their 100th episode. John Belushi and Michael O'Donoghue made return appearances in the cold opening. Bill Murray turned the monologue into a musical tribute to New York City. ★ During the sketch "The Minstrels of Newcastle", Paul Shaffer inadvertently said "fuckin'" on the air. ★ Paul Simon and James Taylor performed a duet version of "Take Me to the Mardi Gras". | ||
| 101 | April 5, 1980 | Richard Benjamin Paula Prentiss | The Grateful Dead | ||
| 102 | April 12, 1980 | Burt Reynolds | Anne Murray | ||
| 103 | April 19, 1980 | Strother Martin | The Specials | ★ Martin died the following August, causing a repeat to have aired August 9, 1980 to be pulled. | |
| 104 | May 10, 1980 | Bob Newhart | Amazing Rhythm Aces with Bill Murray Bruce Cockburn | ||
| 105 | May 17, 1980 | Steve Martin | 3-D Paul McCartney Linda McCartney | ||
| 106 | May 24, 1980 | Buck Henry | Andrew Gold Andrae Crouch Voices of Unity | ★ This is the final program with the remaining original cast and Lorne Michaels. |
Season 6
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 107 | November 15, 1980 | Elliott Gould | Kid Creole & the Coconuts | ||
| 108 | November 22, 1980 | Malcolm McDowell | Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band | ||
| 109 | December 6, 1980 | Ellen Burstyn | Aretha Franklin Keith Sykes | ★ This episode almost didn't make it to air because of Jean Doumanian's insistence on airing three controversial sketches: one about a heroin addict (played by Charles Rocket) who is taken in by a clean-cut family, one featuring Gail Matthius's Valley Girl Vicki character annoying a receptionist at an abortion clinic, and a filmed piece about NBC talent scouts looking for a virgin female to be an SNL castmember (this caused controversy because of its sequence where the NBC talent scouts go to a convent and find out that one of the nuns there isn't a virgin). The "Virgin Search" short film ended up being cut from this episode, but would air on the episode hosted by David Carradine. | |
| 110 | December 13, 1980 | Jamie Lee Curtis | James Brown Ellen Shipley | ||
| 111 | December 20, 1980 | David Carradine | Linda Ronstadt The Cast of ''The Pirates of Penzance'' | ||
| 112 | January 10, 1981 | Ray Sharkey | Jack Bruce & Friends | ||
| 113 | January 17, 1981 | Karen Black | Cheap Trick Stanley Clarke Trio | ||
| 114 | January 24, 1981 | Robert Hays | Joe "King" Carrasco & the Crowns 14 Karat Soul | ||
| 115 | February 7, 1981 | Sally Kellerman | Jimmy Cliff | ||
| 116 | February 14, 1981 | Deborah Harry | Funky Four Plus One | ||
| 117 | February 21, 1981 | Charlene Tilton | Todd Rundgren Prince | ★ The word "fuck" was said twice in this episode: once by Prince during his song "Partyup" (though nothing was made of it since no one knew if Prince actually said it) and (more infamously) during the goodnights when Charles Rocket (in a wheelchair after getting shot during the last sketch) grumbles, "I'd like to know who the fuck did it" in response to Tilton's query on how Rocket felt after being gunned down. ★ Larry Hagman, also from "Dallas", was originally asked to host. He declined. | |
| 118 | March 7, 1981 | Bill Murray | Delbert McClinton | ★ This is the last episode for producer Jean Doumanian, castmembers Ann Risley, Gilbert Gottfried, and Charles Rocket, and feature players Patrick Weathers, and Matthew Laurance. Denny Dillon and Gail Matthius would appear in the next episode, but be fired after that, while Eddie Murphy and Joe Piscopo would continue as cast members. Yvonne Hudson makes only a few uncredited cameos in the next season. | |
| 119 | April 11, 1981 | Jr. Walker & the All-Stars | ★ Dick Ebersol begins producing the show. A show scheduled to be hosted by Al Franken and Tom Davis was set to air after this one, but cancelled due to a writers' strike. ★ This episode has no host (though Chevy Chase, Christopher Reeve, and Robin Williams made appearances on this episode, and Chevy Chase returned to Weekend Update). It is the second episode of the show to be hostless. ★ As of this episode both Denny Dillon and Brian Doyle-Murray become the first two people to appear on screen during all three of the Doumanian, Ebersol, and Michaels eras. Bill Murray and Yvonne Hudson, the only others to do it, would complete the feat the following season. |
★ This season was considered so disastrous that NBC has barred episodes from being put into syndication. However, there have been rare times when these episodes would show up: Comedy Central (in America) has aired a few episodes from this season up until the mid-1990s, particularly the Bill Murray/Delbert McClinton episode (albeit a scaled-down 60-minute version instead of the full 90-minute version) during a marathon featuring films and ''SNL'' episodes starring Eddie Murphy. The Comedy Channel in Canada has aired the entire season uncut, and even left Charles Rocket's "fuck" incident uncensored. The most recent sighting of a Jean Doumanian-era episode in the USA happened in 2005 when NBC aired a full 90-minute rerun of the episode hosted by Jamie Lee Curtis.
★ The March 7 episode announced a planned show for March 14, with guest host Robert Guillaume and musical guest Ian Dury. The show ended up getting cancelled due to Jean Doumanian's termination and the show being put on hiatus for retooling.
Season 7
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 120 | October 3, 1981 | ''(none)'' | Rod Stewart | ★ James Caan was originally scheduled to host, but he backed out at the last minute because his sister had fallen ill. |
| 121 | October 10, 1981 | Susan Saint James | The Kinks | |
| 122 | October 17, 1981 | George Kennedy | Miles Davis | |
| 123 | October 31, 1981 | Donald Pleasence | Fear | ★ John Belushi appears in the cold opening. Three sketches from this episode were cut after dress rehearsal: "Grand Guingol White House" where Ronald and Nancy Reagan cannibalize Jane Fonda, a sketch where an old man (played by Pleasence) drains the blood of his date and uses it as wine, and a sketch where Nazis discuss "good" reasons why they kill Jewish people. ★ Fear's performance, which only happened on the insistence of John Belushi, took place in front of a group of east coast punks. One of them, Ian MacKaye of Minor Threat, grabs a live mic and screams, "NEW YORK SUCKS!!" several times between songs. The performance is cut short during the song "Let's Have a War". |
| 124 | November 7, 1981 | Lauren Hutton | Rick James & the Stone City Band | ★ Beat-generation writer William S. Burroughs appeared to perform spoken word. |
| 125 | November 14, 1981 | Bernadette Peters | The Go-Go's Billy Joel | |
| 126 | December 5, 1981 | Tim Curry | Meat Loaf | |
| 127 | December 12, 1981 | Bill Murray | The Spinners Yale Whiffenpoofs | ★ The sketch, "At Home With The Psychos", was modified because a prop was deemed to resemble too much like a vagina [1]. |
| 128 | January 23, 1982 | Robert Conrad | The Allman Brothers Band | |
| 129 | January 30, 1982 | John Madden | Jennifer Holliday | ★ Andy Kaufman made a special guest appearance as Elvis Presley. |
| 130 | February 6, 1982 | James Coburn | Lindsey Buckingham | |
| 131 | February 20, 1982 | Bruce Dern | Luther Vandross | |
| 132 | February 27, 1982 | Elizabeth Ashley | Hall & Oates | |
| 133 | March 20, 1982 | Robert Urich | Mink DeVille | ★ John Belushi died 2 weeks before this show aired; he was the first castmember to die. The original airing has a tribute to him at the end of the show. |
| 134 | March 27, 1982 | Blythe Danner | Rickie Lee Jones | |
| 135 | April 10, 1982 | Daniel J. Travanti | John Cougar Mellencamp | |
| 136 | April 17, 1982 | Johnny Cash | Elton John | |
| 137 | April 24, 1982 | Robert Culp | The Charlie Daniels Band | |
| 138 | May 15, 1982 | Danny DeVito | Sparks | |
| 139 | May 22, 1982 | Olivia Newton-John | ||
Season 8
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 140 | September 25, 1982 | Chevy Chase | Queen | ★ This was the first (and only) time that the host did not appear on stage. Chase was stuck in Burbank, California after missing his flight to New York. The producers improvised by using a satellite link to show Chase on a small TV monitor on stage. ★ Queen gave their first performance on American television. |
| 141 | October 2, 1982 | Louis Gossett, Jr. | George Thorogood & the Destroyers | |
| 142 | October 9, 1982 | Ron Howard | The Clash | ★ Howard hosts less than three months after the release of his film ''Night Shift''; The Clash perform "Straight to Hell" and "Should I Stay or Should I Go", two songs from their recently released album ''Combat Rock''. ★ Harry Anderson makes a guest appearance. |
| 143 | October 23, 1982 | Howard Hesseman | Men at Work | |
| 144 | October 30, 1982 | Michael Keaton | The New Joe Jackson Band | |
| 145 | November 13, 1982 | Robert Blake | Kenny Loggins | ★ Blake was banned from hosting after a week of giving writers a hard time, including a fight in which he crumpled up the script of a sketch written by cast member Gary Kroeger and allegedly threw it in Kroeger's face. |
| 146 | November 20, 1982 | Drew Barrymore | Squeeze | ★ During this episode, the audience at home was given the chance to vote on whether or not Andy Kaufman, a regular cameo on ''SNL'', should be banned from the show. The vote was conducted by a 1-900 number. At the end of the night, the people had spoken, and Kaufman was banned from ever performing on ''SNL'' again. ★ Barrymore is the youngest person ever to host ''Saturday Night Live'', beating Jodie Foster (the former youngest celebrity to host SNL) by seven years. |
| 147 | December 4, 1982 | The Smothers Brothers | Laura Branigan | |
| 148 | December 11, 1982 | Eddie Murphy | Lionel Richie | ★ Eddie Murphy substituted for Nick Nolte after Nolte fell ill. Steve Martin appeared near the end to chastise Eddie Murphy for being a second choice. This was Steve Martin's only appearance on ''SNL'' which was not produced by Lorne Michaels. |
| 149 | January 22, 1983 | Lily Tomlin | Tomlin as Pervis Hawkins | |
| 150 | January 29, 1983 | Rick Moranis Dave Thomas | The Bus Boys | |
| 151 | February 5, 1983 | Sid Caesar | Joe Cocker Jennifer Warnes | |
| 152 | February 19, 1983 | Howard Hesseman | Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers | |
| 153 | February 26, 1983 | Beau Bridges Jeff Bridges | Randy Newman | |
| 154 | March 12, 1983 | Bruce Dern | Leon Redbone | |
| 155 | March 19, 1983 | Robert Guillaume | Duran Duran | |
| 156 | April 9, 1983 | Joan Rivers | Musical Youth | |
| 157 | April 16, 1983 | Susan Saint James | Michael McDonald | |
| 158 | May 7, 1983 | Stevie Wonder | ||
| 159 | May 14, 1983 | Ed Koch | Kevin Rowland Dexys Midnight Runners | |
Season 9
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
Season 10
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1980-1985) for background information.''
Season 11
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 196 | November 9, 1985 | Madonna | Simple Minds | ★ The episode originally had a cold opening that only aired once where Lorne Michaels and Brandon Tartikoff issue urine tests to check the new castmembers for drug use, ending with Anthony Michael Hall delivering the opening line, "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!". Network executives found this to be "in bad taste" and asked for it to be cut, so all syndicated versions and reruns go straight to the opening sequence. | |
| 197 | November 16, 1985 | Chevy Chase | Sheila E | ★ This is the first of three episodes to feature a different opening than what was shown in the Madonna/Simple Minds episode. This opening (consisting of paper cut-outs of castmembers and shots of New York City) would only be used for this episode, the Pee-Wee Herman episode, and the John Lithgow episode. | |
| 198 | November 23, 1985 | Pee Wee Herman | Queen Ida & the Bon Temps Zydeco Band | ★ Former SNL castmember Robin Duke appears in the "Pee Wee Herman Thanksgiving Special" sketch as one of the audience members during Diana Ross's (Terry Sweeney) performance. In addition, Phil Hartman (who would later be hired as a season 12 castmember) appeared as a Pilgrim in the same sketch and was credited for writing the "Pee Wee Herman Thanksgiving Special" sketch. Hartman and Herman/Reubens worked together on ''The Pee-wee Herman Show'', ''Pee-Wee's Big Adventure'', and the first season of ''Pee-Wee's Playhouse''. | |
| 199 | December 7, 1985 | John Lithgow | Mr. Mister | ★ This is the last episode to use the paper cut-out opening sequence. | |
| 200 | December 14, 1985 | Tom Hanks | Sade | This episode (up until the Anjelica Huston and Billy Martin episode) goes back to using the "limo ride through the city" opening sequence that was used on the Madonna/Simple Minds episode. | |
| 201 | December 21, 1985 | Teri Garr | Dream Academy The Cult | ||
| 202 | January 18, 1986 | Harry Dean Stanton | The Replacements | ★ The Replacements were banned from playing on the show again as some of the band members were under the influence of alcohol and the lead singer yelled the "f word" during the first song. They played Bastards of Young and Kiss Me On the Bus, both from the Tim album. | |
| 203 | January 25, 1986 | Dudley Moore | Al Green | ★ The episode has a live show sketch that was only shown once about a beauty pageant for pregnant teenaged girls featuring Danitra Vance's Cabrini Green Jackson character. In reruns, the sketch is replaced with a taped sketch called Big Ball of Sports (from the previous episode hosted by Harry Dean Stanton) and a dress rehearsal sketch where Dudley Moore plays a man who dates a woman (played by Nora Dunn) who reminds him of his ex (played by Joan Cusack). | |
| 204 | February 8, 1986 | Ron Reagan | The Nelsons | ★ According to the book, "''Live From New York: The Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live''", there was a sketch cut after dress rehearsal where a pair of homosexual men (Terry Sweeney and Ron Reagan) are hired to redecorate a woman's (Nora Dunn) house. | |
| 205 | February 15, 1986 | Jerry Hall | Stevie Ray Vaughan Jimmie Vaughan | ★ Mick Jagger appears in this episode's cold opening where Tommy Flanagan (Jon Lovitz) hits on the host at a bar. | |
| 206 | February 22, 1986 | Jay Leno | The Neville Brothers | ||
| 207 | March 15, 1986 | Griffin Dunne | Rosanne Cash | ★ Damon Wayans, unhappy with the parts he had been getting, decided to play the minor police officer character he'd been assigned in one sketch as gay, though it did not fit the role. For this, Lorne Michaels fired him. | |
| 208 | March 22, 1986 | George Wendt Francis Ford Coppola | Philip Glass | ★ The Philip Glass Ensemble performs "Rubric" from ''Glassworks'' and "Lightning" from ''Songs from Liquid Days''. The show's opening theme song was replaced by "Façades," also from ''Glassworks''. ★ Francis Ford Coppola only appears in between sketches in a running gag throughout the episode where he, Lorne Michaels, and Terry Sweeney try to fix up SNL on the air to boost the show's sagging ratings. | |
| 209 | April 12, 1986 | Oprah Winfrey | Joe Jackson | ||
| 210 | April 19, 1986 | Tony Danza | Laurie Anderson | ||
| 211 | May 10, 1986 | Catherine Oxenberg Paul Simon | Ladysmith Black Mambazo | ||
| 212 | May 17, 1986 | Jimmy Breslin Marvin Hagler | Level 42 E.G. Daily | ||
| 213 | May 24, 1986 | Anjelica Huston Billy Martin | George Clinton Parliament-Funkadelic | ★ This is the last episode for Joan Cusack, Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Michael Hall, Randy Quaid, Terry Sweeney, Don Novello, Dan Vitale, and Danitra Vance. ★ After having been fired from SNL, Damon Wayans returns to perform stand-up. ★ Brandon Tartikoff, unhappy with SNL's ratings at the time, wanted this episode to be the last one, but Lorne Michaels pleaded with Tartikoff to keep the show on provided that he find a better cast. |
Season 12
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 214 | October 11, 1986 | Sigourney Weaver | Buster Poindexter | ★ Madonna appears in the cold opening to read a statement from NBC about the 1985-1986 season: "It was all a dream—a horrible, horrible dream" in a ''Dallas''-esque spoof. |
| 215 | October 18, 1986 | Malcolm-Jamal Warner | Run-DMC | ★ Contrary to tradition, the host appeared in only two sketches: The Crosby Show and The Parent-Child Drinking Contract [2]. |
| 216 | November 8, 1986 | Rosanna Arquette | Ric Ocasek | ★ This episode marks the first time that a first-run ''SNL'' episode did not air live on the East Coast. The episode was originally supposed to air live on October 25, but was pre-empted by the 1986 World Series until 1:00 am. Rather than air the episode live at that time, it was videotaped, and aired the week after the World Series. |
| 217 | November 15, 1986 | Sam Kinison | Lou Reed | ★ This episode, much like the Richard Pryor episode from 1975 and later the Andrew "Dice" Clay episode from 1990, was put on a seven-second delay. ★ During Sam Kinison's guest performance, the part where he encourages the legalization of marijuana has been muted out. |
| 218 | November 22, 1986 | Robin Williams | Paul Simon | |
| 219 | December 6, 1986 | Chevy Chase Steve Martin Martin Short | Randy Newman | |
| 220 | December 13, 1986 | Steve Guttenberg | The Pretenders | |
| 221 | December 20, 1986 | William Shatner | Lone Justice | |
| 222 | January 24, 1987 | Joe Montana Walter Payton | Deborah Harry | |
| 223 | January 31, 1987 | Paul Shaffer | Bruce Hornsby & the Range | |
| 224 | February 14, 1987 | Bronson Pinchot | Paul Young | |
| 225 | February 21, 1987 | Willie Nelson | ||
| 226 | February 28, 1987 | Valerie Bertinelli | Robert Cray Band | |
| 227 | March 21, 1987 | Bill Murray | Percy Sledge | ★ On the original version of this episode, there is a Donahue sketch where one of the guests (played by Nora Dunn) reveals that she had a bad relationship with Jean Doumanian-era/Dick Ebersol-era castmember Joe Piscopo. All reruns of this sketch are replaced with a dress rehearsal version where Nora reveals that she had a bad relationship with Gallagher. |
| 228 | March 28, 1987 | Charlton Heston | Wynton Marsalis | |
| 229 | April 11, 1987 | John Lithgow | Anita Baker | |
| 230 | April 18, 1987 | John Larroquette | Timbuk 3 | |
| 231 | May 9, 1987 | Mark Harmon | Suzanne Vega | |
| 232 | May 16, 1987 | Garry Shandling | Los Lobos | |
| 233 | May 23, 1987 | Dennis Hopper | Roy Orbison | |
Season 13
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 234 | October 17, 1987 | Steve Martin | Sting | ★ This is the only episode that did not have a dress rehearsal. A fire near Studio 8H caused everyone to evacuate before rehearsal could begin. Steve Martin convinced everyone to go on with the show instead of cancelling it. |
| 235 | October 24, 1987 | Sean Penn | LL Cool J Michael Penn | ★ Michael Penn, younger brother of host Sean, performed "This and That" with his band The Pull. He would later have a hit with the song as a solo artist. |
| 236 | October 31, 1987 | Dabney Coleman | The Cars | |
| 237 | November 14, 1987 | Robert Mitchum | Simply Red | |
| 238 | November 21, 1987 | Candice Bergen | Cher | |
| 239 | December 5, 1987 | Danny DeVito | Bryan Ferry | |
| 240 | December 12, 1987 | Angie Dickinson | Buster Poindexter David Gilmour | ★ The music in the Drunk Man sketch would later be used as the intro music to "Weekend Update with Norm MacDonald". ★ David Gilmour's appearance on SNL marked the first time a member of Pink Floyd played live on US television (Pink Floyd, without Gilmour and with his predecessor Syd Barrett, appeared 20 years earlier on American Bandstand miming to "Apples and Oranges"). He played an otherwise unreleased instrumental guitar jam with the SNL house band called "Song For My Sara" (which was mistakenly called "Aah Robinson It's You" on many Gilmour ROIOs), and he plays lead guitar using a Steinberger electric guitar instead of his famed Fender Stratocaster. |
| 241 | December 19, 1987 | Paul Simon | Linda Ronstadt | |
| 242 | January 23, 1988 | Robin Williams | James Taylor | |
| 243 | January 30, 1988 | Carl Weathers | Robbie Robertson | |
| 244 | February 13, 1988 | Justine Bateman | Terence Trent D'Arby | ★ D'Arby performed "Wishing Well" and "Under My Thumb." |
| 245 | February 20, 1988 | Tom Hanks | Randy Travis | |
| 246 | February 27, 1988 | Judge Reinhold | 10,000 Maniacs |
★ The original season finale with Gilda Radner as the host and U2 as the musical guest was never performed due to a writers' strike. U2 would be musical guests for episodes hosted by Val Kilmer (season 26) and Luke Wilson (season 30). Gilda Radner, however, would die before getting the chance to host.
Season 14
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 247 | October 8, 1988 | Tom Hanks | Keith Richards | ★ Keith played "Take It So Hard" and "Struggle" |
| 248 | October 15, 1988 | Matthew Broderick | The Sugarcubes | |
| 249 | October 22, 1988 | John Larroquette | Randy Newman Mark Knopfler | |
| 250 | November 5, 1988 | Matthew Modine | Edie Brickell and New Bohemians | |
| 251 | November 12, 1988 | Demi Moore | Johnny Clegg & Savuka | ★ Future host Kirsten Dunst appears in the cold opening as one of George Bush's (Dana Carvey) grandchildren. A brief clip of this was later rebroadcast in her opening monologue when she hosted in 2002. |
| 252 | November 19, 1988 | John Lithgow | Tracy Chapman | |
| 253 | December 3, 1988 | Danny DeVito | The Bangles | |
| 254 | December 10, 1988 | Kevin Kline | Bobby McFerrin | |
| 255 | December 17, 1988 | Melanie Griffith | Little Feat | |
| 256 | January 21, 1989 | John Malkovich | Anita Baker | |
| 257 | January 28, 1989 | Tony Danza | John Hiatt | |
| 258 | February 11, 1989 | Ted Danson | Luther Vandross | |
| 259 | February 18, 1989 | Leslie Nielsen | Cowboy Junkies | |
| 260 | February 25, 1989 | Glenn Close | Gipsy Kings | |
| 261 | March 25, 1989 | Mary Tyler Moore | Elvis Costello | ★ Costello appears for the first time on the show since his unauthorized song switch on the Miskell Spillman episode. ★ Mary Tyler Moore refers to the nude beach sketch from the Matthew Broderick/Sugarcubes episode, notorious for its numerous repetitions of the word "penis." After feigning discomfort, Moore announces, "Elvis Costello's penis is here." ★ On the night of the live broadcast, Don Pardo had laryngitis, but he still announced during the opening montage, despite the deterioration in his voice. After his voice returned, his announcement was re-recorded for reruns. |
| 262 | April 1, 1989 | Mel Gibson | Living Colour | |
| 263 | April 15, 1989 | Dolly Parton | ★ The sketch "Planet of the Enormous Hooters" was originally written for episode number 18 hosted by Raquel Welch back in 1976. | |
| 264 | April 22, 1989 | Geena Davis | John Cougar Mellencamp | |
| 265 | May 13, 1989 | Wayne Gretzky | Fine Young Cannibals | |
| 266 | May 20, 1989 | Steve Martin | Tom Petty | ★ In the opening monologue, Steve Martin held back tears as he paid tribute to Gilda Radner, who had died of cancer on the afternoon before the broadcast. Martin and Radner's "Dancing in the Dark" sketch, originally shown in episode 64 in 1978, was also offered in tribute. ★ With this episode, Steve Martin becomes the most frequent host in SNL history, breaking the record previously held by Buck Henry. |
Season 15
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1985-1990) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 267 | September 30, 1989 | Bruce Willis | Neil Young | ||
| 268 | October 7, 1989 | Rick Moranis | Rickie Lee Jones | ||
| 269 | October 21, 1989 | Kathleen Turner | Billy Joel | ||
| 270 | October 28, 1989 | James Woods | Don Henley | ||
| 271 | November 11, 1989 | Chris Evert | Eurythmics | ||
| 272 | November 18, 1989 | Woody Harrelson | David Byrne | ||
| 273 | December 2, 1989 | John Goodman | K.d. lang | ||
| 274 | December 9, 1989 | Robert Wagner | Linda Ronstadt Aaron Neville | ||
| 275 | December 16, 1989 | Andie MacDowell | Tracy Chapman | ||
| 276 | January 13, 1990 | Ed O'Neill | Harry Connick, Jr. | ★ Maury Povich cameos during the monologue ★ Ed O'Neill is the first castmember from a FOX TV show (''Married...With Children'') to host SNL. ★ According to IMDb, Kirsten Dunst appeared in this episode as the girl in the Bizilady commercial. [3] | |
| 277 | January 20, 1990 | Christopher Walken | Bonnie Raitt | ||
| 278 | February 10, 1990 | Quincy Jones | Tevin Campbell Kool Moe Dee Big Daddy Kane | ||
| 279 | February 17, 1990 | Tom Hanks | Aerosmith | ★ Aerosmith were special guest on the popular sketch Wayne's World where they perform the theme song. Tom Hanks plays their roadie. | |
| 280 | February 24, 1990 | Fred Savage | Technotronic | ★ Fred Savage is the first host to have been born after SNL premiered on television. | |
| 281 | March 17, 1990 | Rob Lowe | The Pogues | ||
| 282 | March 24, 1990 | Debra Winger | Eric Clapton | ||
| 283 | April 14, 1990 | Corbin Bernsen | The Smithereens | ||
| 284 | April 21, 1990 | Alec Baldwin | The B-52's | ||
| 285 | May 12, 1990 | Andrew Dice Clay | Julee Cruise Spanic Boys | ★ Sinéad O'Connor was originally scheduled as the musical guest, but pulled out in protest against the controversial guest host, Andrew Dice Clay. O'Connor subsequently appeared at the beginning of Season 16. ★ SNL castmember Nora Dunn would also protest and did not appear in the episode due to Clay's profane jokes about women. ★ The musical segment featuring the Spanic Boys is not shown in syndication. | |
| 286 | May 19, 1990 | Candice Bergen | The Notting Hillbillies | ★ This is Nora Dunn and Jon Lovitz's last episode. |
Season 16
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 287 | September 29, 1990 | Kyle MacLachlan | Sinéad O'Connor | |
| 288 | October 6, 1990 | Susan Lucci | Hothouse Flowers | ★ Gene Rayburn makes a cameo, trying to woo Lucci's character away from marrying another game show host, played by Phil Hartman. |
| 289 | October 20, 1990 | George Steinbrenner | Morris Day & The Time | ★ During Morris Day's second performance, he screams, "Where the fuck did this chicken come from? I thought I ordered ribs!" This section has been replaced with a dress rehearsal performance in all reruns and syndicated episodes. |
| 290 | October 27, 1990 | Patrick Swayze | Mariah Carey | |
| 291 | November 10, 1990 | Jimmy Smits | World Party | |
| 292 | November 17, 1990 | Dennis Hopper | Paul Simon | |
| 293 | December 1, 1990 | John Goodman | Faith No More | ★ During the break of Faith No More's performance of "Epic", lead singer Mike Patton climbed up into the background sets ventilation fan; only climbing back out in time to continue the song on cue. The audience really didn't know how to react. |
| 294 | December 8, 1990 | Tom Hanks | Edie Brickell & New Bohemians | ★ Paul Simon, Steve Martin, and Elliott Gould make cameo appearances as members of the "Five Timer's Club"; Ralph Nader appears as a onetime former host trying to get into the club. |
| 295 | December 15, 1990 | Dennis Quaid | The Neville Brothers | |
| 296 | January 12, 1991 | Joe Mantegna | Vanilla Ice | |
| 297 | January 19, 1991 | Sting | ||
| 298 | February 9, 1991 | Kevin Bacon | INXS | |
| 299 | February 16, 1991 | Roseanne Barr | Deee-Lite | |
| 300 | February 23, 1991 | Alec Baldwin | Whitney Houston | |
| 301 | March 16, 1991 | Michael J. Fox | The Black Crowes | ★ Songs played were "Thick-N-Thin" and "She Talks To Angels" |
| 302 | March 23, 1991 | Jeremy Irons | Fishbone | |
| 303 | April 13, 1991 | Catherine O'Hara | R.E.M. | ★ Kate Pierson of B-52's performed with R.E.M. on the second song Shiny Happy People. |
| 304 | April 20, 1991 | Steven Seagal | Michael Bolton | |
| 305 | May 11, 1991 | Delta Burke | Chris Isaak | |
| 306 | May 18, 1991 | George Wendt | Elvis Costello | ★ This is Dennis Miller and Jan Hooks' last episode. ★ In the cold opening, Dennis Miller tells Lorne that one of his final wishes before leaving the show is to open the show by shouting "Live From New York, it's Saturday Night!" In reality, Dennis Miller ''did'' say the famous line in a cold opening on the season 11 episode hosted by Harry Dean Stanton (Most fans purposefully forget this since season eleven is considered one of SNL's worst seasons). |
Season 17
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 307 | September 28, 1991 | Michael Jordan | Public Enemy | |
| 308 | October 5, 1991 | Jeff Daniels | Color Me Badd | |
| 309 | October 12, 1991 | Kirstie Alley | Tom Petty | ★ Ted Danson, Kelsey Grammer, Woody Harrelson and George Wendt make appearances as themselves in the opening monologue. |
| 310 | October 26, 1991 | Christian Slater | Bonnie Raitt | ★ John McLaughlin makes an appearance as himself in the cold opening. |
| 311 | November 2, 1991 | Kiefer Sutherland | Skid Row | |
| 312 | November 16, 1991 | Linda Hamilton | Mariah Carey | ★ Edward Furlong appears as his '' character John Conner in a ''Terminator'' parody. ★ Martin Scorsese appears as himself in ''The Chris Farley Show.'' |
| 313 | November 23, 1991 | Macaulay Culkin | Tin Machine | ★ Kieran Culkin appears as Froggy in a Richmeister sketch. ★ George Wendt reprises his role as Bob Swerski in ''Bill Swerski's Super Fans''. |
| 314 | December 7, 1991 | Hammer | ||
| 315 | December 14, 1991 | Steve Martin | James Taylor | |
| 316 | January 11, 1992 | Rob Morrow | Nirvana | ★ During the live closing credits, the members of Nirvana pretended to "make out" with each other, an event referenced in the original liner notes to their album ''Incesticide''. As a result, NBC replaced the closing credits with those from the rehearsal taping for all subsequent re-runs. ★ Rob Morrow shows a clip from the "Substitute Judge" sketch on the season five episode hosted by Rodney Dangerfield during the monologue, pointing out that Morrow played one of the jurors. |
| 317 | January 18, 1992 | Chevy Chase | Robbie Robertson Bruce Hornsby & the Range | |
| 318 | February 8, 1992 | Susan Dey | C&C Music Factory | |
| 319 | February 15, 1992 | Jason Priestley | Teenage Fanclub | |
| 320 | February 22, 1992 | Roseanne Barr(As Roseanne Arnold) Tom Arnold | Red Hot Chili Peppers | ★ Madonna appears in a Coffee Talk sketch as a panelist. In the end of the Coffee Talk sketch, Barbra Streisand makes an appearance as herself (Madonna, Myers and Roseanne were not told in advance that Streisand would be making an appearance, so their reaction in the sketch is their actual reaction to her surprise appearance).[4] ★ During the Red Hot Chili Peppers' performance of "Stone Cold Bush", singer Anthony Kiedis hits guitarist John Frusciante with his microphone. This upset the already unhappy Frusciante, who then proceeded to play "Under the Bridge" off key and scream nonsense during the chorus. |
| 321 | March 14, 1992 | John Goodman | Garth Brooks | |
| 322 | March 21, 1992 | Mary Stuart Masterson | En Vogue | |
| 323 | April 11, 1992 | Sharon Stone | Pearl Jam | |
| 324 | April 18, 1992 | Jerry Seinfeld | Annie Lennox | |
| 325 | May 9, 1992 | Tom Hanks | Bruce Springsteen | ★ Joe Pesci was originally supposed to host this episode, but had to back out due to a prior engagement. Tom Hanks spoofed Pesci's role in GoodFellas after his monologue in a sketch with Phil Hartman. |
| 326 | May 16, 1992 | Woody Harrelson | Vanessa Williams | ★ This is Victoria Jackson's last episode. |
Season 18
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 327 | September 26, 1992 | Nicolas Cage | Bobby Brown | |
| 328 | October 3, 1992 | Tim Robbins | Sinéad O'Connor | ★ At the end of her second song, "War", Sinéad O'Connor held up a picture of Pope John Paul II, exclaimed, "Fight the real enemy", and tore the picture to pieces. Subsequent airings have included the rehearsal taping of the song where Sinéad pulls out a picture of a starving African child before leaving the stage. |
| 329 | October 10, 1992 | Joe Pesci | The Spin Doctors | ★ During his monologue, Pesci displays the photo of Pope John Paul II that Sinead O'Connor had infamously destroyed during the previous week's episode, now taped back together. |
| 330 | October 24, 1992 | Christopher Walken | Arrested Development | ★ Jan Hooks cameos as Sinead O'Connor in two sketches. |
| 331 | October 31, 1992 | Catherine O'Hara | 10,000 Maniacs | |
| 332 | November 14, 1992 | Michael Keaton | Morrissey | ★ Morrissey performed "Glamorous Glue" and "Suedehead." |
| 333 | November 21, 1992 | Sinbad | Sade | |
| 334 | December 5, 1992 | Tom Arnold | Neil Young | |
| 335 | December 12, 1992 | Glenn Close | The Black Crowes | ★ Jon Lovitz cameos during Weekend Update. ★ The Black Crowes played "Sometimes Salvation" and "Non-Fiction" |
| 336 | January 9, 1993 | Danny DeVito | Bon Jovi | |
| 337 | January 16, 1993 | Harvey Keitel | Madonna | ★ During Madonna's second performance, she imitates Sinead O'Connor's actions from early in the season by ripping a photo and yelling "Fight the real enemy". The photo Madonna used, however, was of Joey Buttafuoco. |
| 338 | February 6, 1993 | Luke Perry | Mick Jagger | ★ This is Dana Carvey's last episode. |
| 339 | February 13, 1993 | Alec Baldwin | Paul McCartney | |
| 340 | February 20, 1993 | Bill Murray | Sting | |
| 341 | March 13, 1993 | John Goodman | Mary J. Blige | |
| 342 | March 20, 1993 | Miranda Richardson | Soul Asylum | |
| 343 | April 10, 1993 | Jason Alexander | Peter Gabriel | |
| 344 | April 17, 1993 | Kirstie Alley | Lenny Kravitz | |
| 345 | May 8, 1993 | Christina Applegate | Midnight Oil | ★ This episode is notable for featuring the first ever Matt Foley, Motivational Speaker sketch. |
| 346 | May 15, 1993 | Kevin Kline | Willie Nelson Paul Simon | ★ David Letterman was originally booked to host this episode, but pulled out due to his much-publicised problems with NBC. ★ This is Chris Rock's last episode. |
Season 19
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 347 | September 25, 1993 | Charles Barkley | Nirvana | |
| 348 | October 2, 1993 | Shannen Doherty | Cypress Hill | ★ During Cypress Hill's performance on stage, the band members were smoking marijuana on air, and their instruments were destroyed during their second single. Cypress Hill has been banned from ''SNL''. |
| 349 | October 9, 1993 | Jeff Goldblum | Aerosmith | |
| 350 | October 23, 1993 | John Malkovich | Billy Joel | |
| 351 | October 30, 1993 | Christian Slater | The Smashing Pumpkins | |
| 352 | November 13, 1993 | Rosie O'Donnell | James Taylor | |
| 353 | November 20, 1993 | Nicole Kidman | Stone Temple Pilots | |
| 354 | December 4, 1993 | Charlton Heston | Paul Westerberg | ★ The opening montage has the castmembers made over to look like apes to coincide with a running gag from the cold opening parodying "Planet of the Apes". |
| 355 | December 11, 1993 | Sally Field | Tony! Toni! Toné! | |
| 356 | January 8, 1994 | Jason Patric | Blind Melon | |
| 357 | January 15, 1994 | Sara Gilbert | Counting Crows | |
| 358 | February 5, 1994 | Patrick Stewart | Salt-N-Pepa | |
| 359 | February 12, 1994 | Alec Baldwin Kim Basinger | UB40 | ★ The 60-minute rerun of the episode has been edited to remove the infamous sketch where Adam Sandler's Canteen Boy is molested by his scoutmaster (played by Alec Baldwin). This is not cut in reruns of the 90-minute version and is included in the DVD versions of the SNL "Best Of" specials for Adam Sandler and Alec Baldwin (and is included in the DVD special: "SNL's Bad Boys"). |
| 360 | February 19, 1994 | Martin Lawrence | Crash Test Dummies | ★ The monologue in the syndication reruns is edited to remove Lawrence's comments about the decline in feminine hygiene, and is replaced with a graphic explaining the comments and how it almost cost everyone at ''SNL'' their jobs. Martin Lawrence was consequently banned from appearing on the show again. |
| 361 | March 12, 1994 | Nancy Kerrigan | Aretha Franklin | ★ Originally, the episode was supposed to be hosted by Michael Richards (the actor who played Kramer on ''Seinfeld'' and was a castmember on ABC's short-lived sketch show "Fridays"). To date, Richards is the only member of ''Seinfeld's main cast who has not appeared on the show; Jerry Seinfeld and Jason Alexander have both hosted, while Julia Louis-Dreyfus was a cast member on SNL in the 1980s and became the first female castmember from SNL to host SNL in May 2006. |
| 362 | March 19, 1994 | Helen Hunt | Snoop Doggy Dogg | |
| 363 | April 9, 1994 | Kelsey Grammer | Dwight Yoakam | |
| 364 | April 16, 1994 | Emilio Estevez | Pearl Jam | ★ Former castmember Dana Carvey was originally planned to host this episode. Pearl Jam performed an emotional version of 'Daughter' only 8 days after the discovery of the body of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain. Nirvana had performed on SNL earlier in the season. |
| 365 | May 7, 1994 | John Goodman | The Pretenders | |
| 366 | May 14, 1994 | Heather Locklear | Janet Jackson | ★ This is Phil Hartman, Julia Sweeney, Rob Schnieder, and Melanie Hutsell's last episode. |
Season 20
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1990-1995) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 367 | October 1, 1994 | Steve Martin | Eric Clapton | ★ Martin Short was originally planned to host, but backed out. | |
| 368 | October 8, 1994 | Marisa Tomei | Bonnie Raitt | ★ In one sketch, Tomei reprised her role as Mona Lisa Vito, a character from ''My Cousin Vinny'', for which she won an Academy Award. | |
| 369 | October 15, 1994 | John Travolta | Seal | ★ The Comedy Central version of this episode cuts out the cold opening where Travolta walks the halls of Studio 8H while The Bee-Gees' "Staying Alive" plays, parodying his role in the movie Saturday Night Fever. The E! version leaves the scene intact. ★ Quentin Tarantino (who would host in season 21) directs this episode. | |
| 370 | October 22, 1994 | Dana Carvey | Edie Brickell Paul Simon | ★ George H. W. Bush made an appearance in the cold opening and monologue, critiquing Dana Carvey's impersonation of him. | |
| 371 | November 12, 1994 | Sarah Jessica Parker | R.E.M. | ★ Bill Murray appears near the end of the episode to announce the death of former SNL writer, Michael O'Donoghue, and to replay one of his famous sketches, "The Soiled Kimono". ★ R.E.M. lead singer Michael Stipe sings, "Don't fuck with me" in the song "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" The line was not caught by the censors and remains in all rebroadcasts. | |
| 372 | November 19, 1994 | John Turturro | Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers (w/ Dave Grohl on drums) | ★ Joey Buttafuoco cameos during the monologue. | |
| 373 | December 3, 1994 | Roseanne Barr | Green Day | ★ Green Day's use of the word "shit" in second song "Geek Stink Breath" was not caught by the censors and remains in syndicated versions of the broadcast. | |
| 374 | December 10, 1994 | Alec Baldwin | Beastie Boys | ★ Gary Sinise was originally scheduled to host. ★ Alec Baldwin mentions the infamous "Canteen Boy Goes Camping" sketch and the resulting complaints in the monologue (and performs a more politically correct version of the sketch with Adam Sandler as Canteen Boy). | |
| 375 | December 17, 1994 | George Foreman | Hole | ||
| 376 | January 14, 1995 | Jeff Daniels | Luscious Jackson | ★ The names of former NBA stars Bob McAdoo, Kevin McHale, and Kurt Rambis are used for characters in the "Mystery Dinner Theater" sketch. ★ This was the first episode for Mark McKinney. | |
| 377 | January 21, 1995 | David Hyde Pierce | Live | ★ This was the last episode for Mike Myers. | |
| 378 | February 11, 1995 | Bob Newhart | Des'ree | ★ The end of the episode has a part where Bob Newhart wakes up next to Suzanne Pleshette (as he did on the last episode of "Newhart") and tells him about his nightmare hosting ''SNL''. Pleshette's remark, "''Saturday Night Live''? Is that show still on?" is a jab at the show's longevity and (at the time) perceived decline in quality. | |
| 379 | February 18, 1995 | Deion Sanders | Bon Jovi Deion Sanders | ★ In the "Juggernaut Force" sketch, when Chris Farley runs up the stairs of the spaceship, his pants fall down, revealing his bare buttocks. All reruns on NBC and in the TV special "SNL Remembers Chris Farley" (during the montage of Farley's many pratfalls, culminating in the famous blooper where he flies over the Weekend Update desk and gets stuck in the stagelights) digitally blur out Farley's rear end. The 60-minute syndicated version doesn't air the "Juggernaut" force sketch at all. | |
| 380 | February 25, 1995 | George Clooney | The Cranberries | ★ This is Janeane Garofalo's last episode, as well as Molly Shannon's first as a featured performer. | |
| 381 | March 18, 1995 | Paul Reiser | Annie Lennox | ||
| 382 | March 25, 1995 | John Goodman | The Tragically Hip | ★ Dan Aykroyd made an appearance reprising two of his recurring characters in this episode: dangerous toy manufacturer Irwin Mainway from "Consumer Probe" and Elwood Blues from the Blues Brothers. | |
| 383 | April 8, 1995 | Damon Wayans | Dionne Farris | ★ Damon Wayans brought some of his famous characters from ''In Living Color'' over to this episode, including homeless wino Anton Jackson and flamboyant ''Men on Film'' film critic Blaine Edwards. During the sketch featuring the latter character, David Alan Grier reprised his role as Antoine Merriweather, Blaine's co-host. | |
| 384 | April 15, 1995 | Courteney Cox | Dave Matthews Band | ★ During Cox's monologue, Adam Sandler appeared on stage as Bruce Springsteen. Cox appeared in Springsteen's video, "Dancing in the Dark." | |
| 385 | May 6, 1995 | Bob Saget | TLC | ||
| 386 | May 13, 1995 | David Duchovny | Rod Stewart | ★ This is the last episode to feature Kevin Nealon, Chris Farley, Adam Sandler, Ellen Cleghorne, Michael McKean and Chris Elliott. Of that group, only Nealon and Cleghorne left on their own terms; the rest were fired. |
Season 21
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 387 | September 30, 1995 | Mariel Hemingway | Blues Traveler | ★ Prince (back when he was known as "The Artist Formerly Known As Prince") was originally booked for this episode as the musical guest. |
| 388 | October 7, 1995 | Chevy Chase | Lisa Loeb & Nine Stories | ★ Chevy Chase's monologue (where he reminisces about being in the original cast of ''SNL'' while singing "When You Wish Upon A Star") is edited from the 60-minute syndicated rerun. |
| 389 | October 21, 1995 | David Schwimmer | Natalie Merchant | ★ David's ''Friends'' co-stars Lisa Kudrow and Jennifer Aniston (The latter whom appears in a ''Spade in America'' sketch) appear in his opening monologue, along with Jimmie Walker, Gary Coleman and Barry Williams. ★ In the live show version of the "Rita Delvecchio" sketch, Cheri Oteri gets her housecoat stuck on a hockey net and mutters, "Look at this shit!" Nothing was made of the on-air cursing, except that Oteri had to put a dollar in a swear jar and all reruns of this episode (NBC, Comedy Central, and E!) muted out the word. |
| 390 | October 28, 1995 | Gabriel Byrne | Alanis Morissette | |
| 391 | November 11, 1995 | Quentin Tarantino | The Smashing Pumpkins | |
| 392 | November 18, 1995 | Laura Leighton | Rancid | |
| 393 | December 2, 1995 | Anthony Edwards | Foo Fighters | |
| 394 | December 9, 1995 | David Alan Grier | Silverchair | |
| 395 | December 16, 1995 | Madeline Kahn | Bush | |
| 396 | January 13, 1996 | Christopher Walken | Joan Osborne | ★ The 60-minute syndicated version adds three commercial parodies: Old Glory Insurance (from the Laura Leighton/Rancid episode, the Madeline Kahn/Bush episode, and the Teri Hatcher/Dave Matthews Band episode), Gangsta Bitch Barbie (from the Chevy Chase/Lisa Loeb episode and the Madeline Kahn/Bush episode), and John-John Mackey's Storm-Tracker AccuCast (from the Madeline Kahn/Bush episode) to fill up time lost by cutting all of Weekend Update, the Connie Stintson talk show sketch, and the monologue. ★ For the original broadcast, Osborne rehearsed a second song, "Right Hand Man", but it was cut. However, the rehearsal taping of the song was included on the "Best of 1995-1996" episode. |
| 397 | January 20, 1996 | Alec Baldwin | Tori Amos | ★ Tori Amos performs "Caught A Lite Sneeze" and "Hey Jupiter". |
| 398 | February 10, 1996 | Danny Aiello | Coolio | |
| 399 | February 17, 1996 | Tom Arnold | Tupac Shakur | |
| 400 | February 24, 1996 | Elle MacPherson | Sting | |
| 401 | March 16, 1996 | John Goodman | Everclear | ★ Everclear rehearsed a second song, "Heartspark Dollarsign", but it was cut from the original broadcast. |
| 402 | March 23, 1996 | Phil Hartman | Gin Blossoms | ★ This episode marked the first appearance of Will Ferrell and Chris Kattan's "Roxbury Guys" characters; however, their appearance differs greatly (notably lacking their "theme music" (Haddaway's ''What is Love?'' dance hit)) from all subsequent episodes and the film ''A Night at the Roxbury''. |
| 403 | April 13, 1996 | Steve Forbes | Rage Against the Machine | ★ Rage Against the Machine wanted to protest to having presidential candidate Steve Forbes as guest host on the program that night. To make that statement, RATM hung two upside-down American flags from their amps. Seconds before they took the stage to perform "Bulls on Parade", SNL and NBC sent stagehands in to pull the flags down. The inverted flags, says guitarist Tom Morello, represented "our contention that American democracy is inverted when what passes for democracy is an electoral choice between two representatives of the privileged class. America's freedom of expression is inverted when you're free to say anything you want to say until it upsets a corporate sponsor. Finally, this was our way of expressing our opinion of the show's host, Steve Forbes. They said the sponsors would be upset, and that because Steve Forbes was on, they had to run a 'tighter' show." SNL also told the band it would mute objectionable lyrics in "Bullet In The Head" (which was supposed to be RATM's second song). SNL even insisted that the song be bleeped in the studio because Forbes had friends and family there. |
| 404 | April 20, 1996 | Teri Hatcher | Dave Matthews Band | |
| 405 | May 11, 1996 | Christine Baranski | The Cure | |
| 406 | May 18, 1996 | Jim Carrey | Soundgarden | ★ Carrey was asked to host when the original host backed out at the last minute. ★ Carrey performs an impersonation of Jimmy Stewart during ''The Joe Pesci Show'' sketch. Stewart was one of Carrey's better-known (and first-ever) impersonations he did at comedy clubs during his early days in stand-up comedy. ★ Chris Kattan has stated in an interview that Carrey was the best "third Roxbury Guy" character he and Ferrell had ever performed with. ★ Last episode for stage manager Joe Dicso (who had been in his position since the show's 1975 inception) and cast members David Spade, Nancy Walls and David Koechner. |
Season 22
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 407 | September 28, 1996 | Tom Hanks | Tom Petty | ★ Olympic athlete Kerri Strug made a cameo appearance on Weekend Update alonsgide Chris Kattan, who would often imitate her on the show. |
| 408 | October 5, 1996 | Lisa Kudrow | Sheryl Crow | |
| 409 | October 19, 1996 | Bill Pullman | New Edition | |
| 410 | October 26, 1996 | Dana Carvey | Dr. Dre | |
| 411 | November 2, 1996 | Chris Rock | The Wallflowers | ★ Dana Carvey makes a cameo appearance, most notably as George H. W. Bush, who tells Norm MacDonald's Bob Dole to give up hope on the 1996 election. ★ Abe Vigoda makes a cameo appearance, saying only the line: "Clinton's a shmuck." |
| 412 | November 16, 1996 | Robert Downey, Jr. | Fiona Apple | ★ Bob Dole made an appearance in the cold opening in which he and his wife, Elizabeth, ask Norm MacDonald to stop impersonating him after the 1996 elections were over, and Dole lost. |
| 413 | November 23, 1996 | Phil Hartman | Bush | |
| 414 | December 7, 1996 | Martin Short | No Doubt | ★ Chevy Chase makes a cameo appearance (to massive applause) during a sketch featuring Short's Ed Grimley character. ★ This marked the fifth straight episode in which a former cast member hosts. |
| 415 | December 14, 1996 | Rosie O'Donnell | Whitney Houston | ★ O'Donnell's co-star in Kmart TV commercials, director/actress Penny Marshall, makes an appearance during the monologue and in a Mary Katherine Gallagher sketch. |
| 416 | January 11, 1997 | Kevin Spacey | Beck | ★ Monty Python cast members Michael Palin and John Cleese have cameos, appearing in the cold opening as well as in select sketches (at one point, Palin announces that he is "the star of TV's ''Home Improvement'', Tim Allen"). The highlight of the show came when Cleese and Palin took over the show for one segment to perform their classic ''Dead Parrot'' sketch from ''Monty Python's Flying Circus''. |
| 417 | January 18, 1997 | David Alan Grier | Snoop Doggy Dogg | |
| 418 | February 8, 1997 | Neve Campbell | David Bowie | ★ David Spade makes an appearance during the monologue, and he also does 'The Hollywood Minute' during ''Weekend Update.'' |
| 419 | February 15, 1997 | Chevy Chase | Live | ★ As an ''SNL'' host (as opposed to cast member), Chase had long had a reputation for being difficult and insulting to the cast and crew, as described in the book, "Live From New York: The Uncensored History of ''Saturday Night Live''". During the week of his 1997 appearance he offended the staff with lewd comments, and embarrassed Lorne Michaels so badly that he was subsequently banned for life from hosting SNL (although he would later cameo in several episodes, including the Chris Farley/Mighty Mighty Bosstones episode from season 23, the Bill Murray/Lucinda Williams episode from season 24, and the Seann William Scott/Sum-41 episode from season 27). |
| 420 | February 22, 1997 | Alec Baldwin | Tina Turner | |
| 421 | March 15, 1997 | Sting | Veruca Salt | |
| 422 | March 22, 1997 | Mike Myers | Aerosmith | |
| 423 | April 12, 1997 | Rob Lowe | The Spice Girls | ★ Joe Pesci and Robert DeNiro make cameo appearances during a "Joe Pesci Show" sketch. Colin Quinn portrays DeNiro (alongside Jim Breuer's Pesci) after Alec Baldwin had to back out of the guest role. ★ It is said that audience members laughing at the Spice Girls' musical numbers is clearly audible. ★ Norm MacDonald slips and says "What the fuck was that?" to himself after choking on his words in the middle of a ''Weekend Update'' joke. The audience applauds the error, prompting MacDonald to reply "My farewell performance" and "Maybe I'll see you next week, folks." NBC received only three complaints about the goof and all reruns on NBC and syndication mute out the obscenity. |
| 424 | April 19, 1997 | Pamela Anderson | Rollins Band | ★ Anderson's then-husband, rocker Tommy Lee, makes an appearance as himself in two sketches. |
| 425 | May 10, 1997 | John Goodman | Jewel | ★ Mike Myers makes a cameo appearance to promote ''. |
| 426 | May 17, 1997 | Jeff Goldblum | En Vogue | ★ Robert Smigel's "Fun With Real Audio" cartoon (about a talk show made from animal excrement, bodily fluid, and trash) was almost cut from this episode because it depicted animals defecating, but it aired anyway. ★ This is Mark McKinney's last episode. |
Season 23
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 427 | September 27, 1997 | Sylvester Stallone | Jamiroquai | ★ The initial 1996 Olympics bombing suspect Richard Jewell makes a guest appearance, where, in a highly publicized sketch, he punches Janet Reno (played by Will Ferrell) in the gut, with Reno responding, "Same time next week?". Jewell also appeared alongside Norm MacDonald on Weekend Update. | |
| 428 | October 4, 1997 | Matthew Perry | Oasis | ||
| 429 | October 18, 1997 | Brendan Fraser | Björk | ★ This episode marked the first appearance of Mango. [5] ★ A Roxbury Guys sketch was cut after dress rehearsal(footage from the week's rehearsal was shown on Access Hollywood) | |
| 430 | October 25, 1997 | Chris Farley | The Mighty Mighty Bosstones | ★ Chevy Chase and Chris Rock have cameo appearances in the cold opening and monologue. Chicago NewsAnchor and Reporter Bill Kurtis along with George Wendt and Mike Ditka appear in a pre-recorded ''Where Are They Now?''-type sketch featuring "Bill Swerski's Super fans." ★ This would turn out to be Farley's last-ever appearance on the show. ★ The 60-minute syndicated version edits out the cold opening where Lorne Michaels doesn't want Chris Farley to host, but Tim Meadows and Chevy Chase convince him. Also cut is the monologue where Chris Rock and Tim Meadows stall for time when Farley fails to show up. ★ The cast and crew were unsure if Farley would be able to perform on Saturday. Chris Rock hung around all week and had prepared a monologue and a few sketches in case Farley was unable to go on. | |
| 431 | November 8, 1997 | Jon Lovitz | Jane's Addiction | ||
| 432 | November 15, 1997 | Claire Danes | Mariah Carey | ||
| 433 | November 22, 1997 | Rudolph Giuliani | Sarah McLachlan | ★ The 60-minute rerun version of this episode only shows a minute of the "Freakin' Giuliani" sketch where a cab driver (played by Rudolph Giuliani) complains about the changes in New York thanks to the mayor at the time (Giuliani). The sketch fades to black after the cab driver says, "Freakin' Giuliani!" | |
| 434 | December 6, 1997 | Nathan Lane | Metallica | ★ Lane's ''The Lion King'' co-star, Ernie Sabella, makes a cameo appearance during the monologue, in which both sing a few bars of ''Hakuna Matata''. In the 60-minute rerun of this episode, the monologue where Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella, and Ana Gasteyer go around Studio 8H singing, ''Hakuna Matata'', cuts off after Ernie Sabella's surprise appearance. | |
| 435 | December 13, 1997 | Helen Hunt | Hanson | ★ Hunt's ''As Good As It Gets'' co-star Jack Nicholson makes a cameo appearance during the monologue and in a "Roxbury Guys" sketch. ★ Todd Hundley, Scott Rolen, Mark Wohlers, Marty Cordova, Jeff Fassero, Gregg Jefferies, Mark Grudzielanek, Rondell White, Todd Zeile, Russ Davis, Cliff Floyd, David Howard, Mike Sweeney and Gerald Williams make an appearance in one sketch. ★ This episode features Norm Macdonald's last appearance as Weekend Update anchor. | |
| 436 | January 10, 1998 | Samuel L. Jackson | Ben Folds Five | ★ Colin Quinn takes over as Weekend Update anchor in this episode. | |
| 437 | January 17, 1998 | Sarah Michelle Gellar | Portishead | ★ The Buffy the Vampire Slayer/Seinfeld sketch is not shown in the 60-minute rerun versions. Portishead performs what is often considered their best live version of "Only You" to an audience that seems to think they are from another planet. After the final notes of the performance, a stagehand begins to applaud, sparking a delayed response from the audience. | |
| 438 | February 7, 1998 | John Goodman | Paula Cole | ★ Dan Aykroyd cameos in this episode, reprising two of his popular recurring characters, Elwood Blues from The Blues Brothers (during the monologue) and Irwin Mainway from "Consumer Probe" (in the Judge Judy sketch), and impersonating Bob Dole in the cold opening. | |
| 439 | February 14, 1998 | Roma Downey | Missy Misdemeanor Elliott | ★ While not appearing in any sketches, soon-to-be-ousted cast member Norm MacDonald surprised Downey and others by rushing onstage to join the cast during the show's goodnights. ★ Newt Gingrich was scheduled to host this episode. | |
| 440 | February 28, 1998 | Garth Brooks | ★ Robert Duvall made a guest appearance in two sketches, one of which is the game show parody "Who's More Grizzled?" where he tells the game show host (played by Norm MacDonald) that he doesn't like him. In a bit of an in-joke, Norm replies, "Yeah, I get that a lot". | ||
| 441 | March 7, 1998 | Scott Wolf | Natalie Imbruglia | ★ This is Norm MacDonald's last episode as a castmember. | |
| 442 | March 14, 1998 | Julianne Moore | Backstreet Boys | ★ All reruns on NBC, Comedy Central, and E! edit out the "Conspiracy Theory Rock" TV Funhouse cartoon. | |
| 443 | April 4, 1998 | Steve Buscemi | Third Eye Blind | ||
| 444 | April 11, 1998 | Greg Kinnear | All Saints | ||
| 445 | May 2, 1998 | Matthew Broderick | Natalie Merchant | ★ Tenacious D appear as a special guest. [1] | |
| 446 | May 9, 1998 | David Duchovny | Puff Daddy Jimmy Page | ★ This is the last episode for Jim Breuer. | |
Season 24
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 447 | September 26, 1998 | Cameron Diaz | Smashing Pumpkins | ★ Jonathan Richman and Tommy Larkins, who performed musical interludes in Diaz' film ''There's Something About Mary'', make a cameo appearance after a sketch. ★ Steve Martin and Dan Aykroyd have cameos, reprising their roles as The Fenstruk Bros. (a.k.a "The Wild and Crazy Guys") ★ Donald Trump was originally scheduled to host. He would eventually host five seasons later. ★ John Goodman makes a cameo appearance as Linda Tripp during the cold opening. | |
| 448 | October 3, 1998 | Kelsey Grammer | Sheryl Crow | ★ Grammer appears less than a month after ''Frasier'' had won five Emmys. ★ Shaquille O'Neal was the producers first choice to host, but he declined and said he just wanted to appear in a couple sketches. He appeared in two sketches: "Big Bernard" about an overgrown man who comes home late and receives a spanking by his father (played by Tracy Morgan) and "Morning Latte" as himself. | |
| 449 | October 17, 1998 | Lucy Lawless | Elliott Smith | ★ Chucky (the possessed doll from ''Bride of Chucky'' and related films) makes a guest appearance on "Weekend Update." ★ Judge Judy appears as herself in a sketch in which she's being mocked by Cheri Oteri. | |
| 450 | October 24, 1998 | Ben Stiller | Alanis Morissette | ★ Yankee players David Cone, Felix Heredia and David Wells appear in the opening monologue. | |
| 451 | November 7, 1998 | David Spade | Eagle-Eye Cherry | ★ Brad Pitt appears in the cold opening where David Spade visits his therapist (played by Pitt) about his overwhelming fame. ★ Former castmember Chris Rock cameos in a Mango sketch as an admirer of a new dancer named Kiwi (played by David Spade) | |
| 452 | November 14, 1998 | Joan Allen | Jewel | ★ In the Jensen Mint fake commercial, the NBC version and all reruns at the time it first came on actually show the middle finger on all of the currency (the coin given to the bum played by Horatio Sanz and the dollar given to the bum played by Tim Meadows). The 60-minute syndicated version digitally blurs out the obscene gesture. The NBC Late Night rerun of this episode cuts out the fake commercial altogether. | |
| 453 | November 21, 1998 | Jennifer Love Hewitt | Beastie Boys | ★ Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz makes a cameo appearance during the Spartan Cheerleaders sketch. | |
| 454 | December 5, 1998 | Vince Vaughn | Lauryn Hill | ||
| 455 | December 12, 1998 | Alec Baldwin | Luciano Pavarotti Vanessa Williams | ★ The musical segment featuring Vanessa Williams and Luciano Pavarotti is not shown in syndication. ★ The monologue where Alec Baldwin's mediocre monologue is mocked in a future episode of SNL is also cut from syndication. ★ John Goodman has a cameo appearance during Baldwin's monologue and in the "Bill Brasky" sketch featuring Goodman, Will Ferrell, and Alec Baldwin as the drunken businessmen. | |
| 456 | January 9, 1999 | Bill Paxton | Beck | ★ ''Titanic'' director James Cameron has a pre-recorded cameo in a sketch parodying his film. ★ Debbie Matenopoulos appears as herself in a parody of ''The View'' (After she was fired from the show). | |
| 457 | January 16, 1999 | James Van Der Beek | Everlast | ★ Darrell Hammond replaces an absent Don Pardo as announcer, particularly in a two-part running gag where Don Pardo (Darrell Hammond) tries to seduce Van Der Beek. | |
| 458 | February 6, 1999 | Gwyneth Paltrow | Barenaked Ladies | ★ This episode was submitted for Emmy consideration for 1998-1999. ★ Ben Affleck cameos in Gwenyth's opening monologue; she would later cameo in his opening monologue when he hosted in season 25. | |
| 459 | February 13, 1999 | Brendan Fraser | Busta Rhymes The Roots | ★ Former ''SNL'' writer/featured player Tom Davis appears in the monologue. ★ The monologue where Brendan Fraser and Lorne Michaels find Tom Davis in the SNL bomb shelter is cut in the 60-minute rerun versions. ★ Other cameos include: George Plimpton (after the "Shut Up and Enjoy the Ozzy" sketch) and John Goodman (as Linda Tripp during the cold opening). | |
| 460 | February 20, 1999 | Bill Murray | Lucinda Williams | ★ Former castmember (and co-star of Caddyshack) Chevy Chase appears in the "Quotable Caddyshack" sketch to re-enact his one scene with Bill Murray. ★ Stephanie Seymour cameos in the cold opening. | |
| 461 | March 13, 1999 | Ray Romano | The Corrs | ★ Romano's ''Everybody Loves Raymond'' co-stars Peter Boyle and Doris Roberts make cameo appearances during the monologue, in which Boyle discusses his time as host in the 1970s and Roberts discusses her role in ''My Giant''. | |
| 462 | March 20, 1999 | Drew Barrymore | Garbage | ★ Edward Norton cameos in a VH1 commercial parody as Daryl Dragon (with Drew Barrymore as Toni Tennille) | |
| 463 | April 10, 1999 | John Goodman | Tom Petty | ||
| 464 | May 8, 1999 | Cuba Gooding, Jr. | Ricky Martin | ★ Monica Lewinsky made a special appearance in the cold opening where Bill Clinton (played by Darrell Hammond) imagines life after his Presidency, and in a sketch with Tim Meadows's Ladies Man character. ★ The cold opening is replaced in reruns with a dress rehearsal because the dog Darrell Hammond was petting ran away in the live show version. | |
| 465 | May 15, 1999 | Sarah Michelle Gellar | Backstreet Boys | ★ David Boreanaz, Howie Dorough from the Backstreet Boys, and Seth Green cameo in the recurring sketch, "Tiger Beat's Ultra Super Duper Dreamy Love Show" |
Season 25
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (1995-2000) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 466 | October 2, 1999 | Jerry Seinfeld | David Bowie | ★ This episode features an ''Oz'' parody in which Dean Winters, Harold Perrineau, J.K. Simmons and Lee Tergesen appear as their TV characters. | |
| 467 | October 16, 1999 | Heather Graham | Marc Anthony | ★ A parody of Vh1's ''Where Are They Now?'' was featured with Hans and Franz, in which Dana Carvey and Kevin Nealon appear as said characters. This sketch was originally supposed to air on SNL's 25th anniversary special, but was cut. | |
| 468 | October 23, 1999 | Norm MacDonald | Dr. Dre Snoop Dogg Eminem | ★ This episode was delayed 14 minutes due to the World Series. ★ All reruns of this episode mute out Norm MacDonald's use of the word "goddamn" (he says it once in the monologue when he asked, "How did I get so goddamned funny?" and three times during the Inside the Actor's Studio sketch). ★ The 60-minute rerun of this episode only airs the performance of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, even though Eminem's name is mentioned in the opening credits. | |
| 469 | November 6, 1999 | Dylan McDermott | Foo Fighters | ||
| 470 | November 13, 1999 | Garth Brooks | Garth Brooks (as Chris Gaines) | ★ In a callback to Brooks' appearance on show #440, Brooks does a skit with Mango as Chris Gaines, then unmasks him. | |
| 471 | November 20, 1999 | Jennifer Aniston | Sting | ★ ''Who Wants to Be a Millionaire'' winner John Carpenter appeared in the cold opening, where he got the honor of announcing "Live from New York, It's Saturday Night!" | |
| 472 | December 4, 1999 | Christina Ricci | Beck | ||
| 473 | December 11, 1999 | Danny DeVito | R.E.M. | ★ Jim Carrey (who at the time was in the film, ''Man on the Moon'') was originally scheduled to host, but backed out due to scheduling conflicts. ★ R.E.M. lead singer Michael Stipe makes an appearance in a "Mango" sketch with Chris Kattan. ★ The Rockettes guest star in a sketch featuring Molly Shannon's character Sally O'Malley. ★ Almost all of the sketches in this episode either feature recurring characters or are recurring sketches. The only non-recurring sketch is the "Press Conference Playset" fake commercial. | |
| 474 | January 8, 2000 | Jamie Foxx | Blink-182 | ||
| 475 | January 15, 2000 | Freddie Prinze, Jr. | Macy Gray | ||
| 476 | February 5, 2000 | Alan Cumming | Jennifer Lopez | ★ Jon Stewart was originally asked to host, but backed out. He would host the show two seasons later. | |
| 477 | February 12, 2000 | Julianna Margulies | DMX | ||
| 478 | February 19, 2000 | Ben Affleck | Fiona Apple | ★ Gwenyth Paltrow makes an appearance in Affleck's monologue (Affleck made an appearance in Paltrow's monologue when she hosted in 1998). | |
| 479 | March 11, 2000 | Joshua Jackson | ★ NSYNC | ★ NSYNC makes appearances in two sketches. | |
| 480 | March 18, 2000 | The Rock | AC/DC | ★ Professional wrestlers Mick Foley (Mankind, Cactus Jack, and Dude Love), Triple H and The Big Show appear in the cold opening (alongside Vince McMahon), monologue, and the Nicotrel sketch where they (and The Rock) beat up Chris Parnell. | |
| 481 | April 8, 2000 | Christopher Walken | Christina Aguilera | ★ Former castmember Dana Carvey returns in this episode as George H.W. Bush during the cold opening. ★ The sketch ''Behind the Music: Blue Oyster Cult'' was an award winner for Christopher Walken, and the slogan - "More Cowbell!" - would be featured on various memorabilia. ★ Tina Fey (back when she was a writer for the show) appears in the "Viagra" fake commercial as one of the unhappy wives. ★ A sketch that got cut after dress rehearsal, about a dying hospital patient (Ana Gasteyer) who meets a strange angel (Christopher Walken) and doesn't believe that he's here to save her, can be seen as an extra in the DVD version of the SNL special, "The Best of Christopher Walken". | |
| 482 | April 15, 2000 | Tobey Maguire | Sisqó | ★ Eve was originally asked to be the musical guest. ★ Shortly before the end of the musical number, the Thong Song, one of the dancer's transparent skirts can be seen falling off, and is quickly pulled back up by the wearer. An embarrassed look on her face can be seen after the song ends during the applause. It is still shown in reruns of the episode. ★ Reruns on NBC and E! have a dress rehearsal version of Sisqo's musical performance because in the live show, his microphone went dead and he had to wait for a stage hand to give him another one. | |
| 483 | May 6, 2000 | John Goodman | Neil Young | ||
| 484 | May 13, 2000 | Britney Spears | ★ At 18, Britney Spears broke the record for being the youngest person in SNL history to host and musical guest the same episode. ★ Cheri Oteri's mother and Sarah Michelle Gellar appear in this episode to introduce Britney Spears's two performances, | ||
| 485 | May 20, 2000 | Jackie Chan | Kid Rock | ★ Cameos by Sarah Michelle Gellar, Gina Gershon, Florence Henderson (from "The Brady Bunch"), and former ''SNL'' band leader, G.E. Smith. ★ Phish guitarist Trey Anastasio joined Kid Rock on guitar for his second song Only God Knows Why. ★ The NBC rerun of this episode edits out the "Zimmermans At The Golf Course" sketch and replaces it with a short film called, "The Procedure" starring Andy Richter and Willem Dafoe. ★ This is the last episode for Tim Meadows, Cheri Oteri and Colin Quinn. | |
Season 26
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 486 | October 7, 2000 | Rob Lowe | Eminem | ★ Consumer advocate, former ''SNL'' host, and 2000 Presidential nominee Ralph Nader has a cameo appearance during the monologue. ★ As of this episode, Jimmy Fallon and Tina Fey are the new anchors of Weekend Update. | |
| 487 | October 14, 2000 | Kate Hudson | Radiohead | ★ Kevin Spacey was producers first choice to host this episode, but filming for his movie K-Pax prevented him from doing so. ★ Nomar Garciaparra appears as himself during a Sully and Denise sketch. ★ Radiohead performed The National Anthem with an accompaning horn section live for only the second time ever. | |
| 488 | October 21, 2000 | Dana Carvey | The Wallflowers | ★ Robert DeNiro appears as himself during Weekend Update to discuss Jimmy Fallon's negative review of ''Meet the Parents'', which was discussed on the previous episode. | |
| 489 | November 4, 2000 | Charlize Theron | Paul Simon | ||
| 490 | November 11, 2000 | Calista Flockhart | Ricky Martin | ★ Chris Kattan impersonates Ricky Martin right before the real Ricky Martin performs "Loaded." | |
| 491 | November 18, 2000 | Tom Green | David Gray | ★ Drew Barrymore was in the audience, and mentioned in the monologue by Tom Green, who said he would like to marry her during the show. Barrymore declined. ★ According to the book "Live From New York, The Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live", Tom Green brought in his own writers for this episode, which didn't please the cast. ★ The TV Funhouse cartoon, a Fun With Real Audio called Sex and the Country, was replaced in the NBC rerun with the TV Funhouse cartoon about Mr. T auditioning for a tampon commercial due to its depiction of humans having sex with animals. This was also cut on Comedy Central when they aired 60-minute reruns of SNL, but the version currently airing on E! has shown this cartoon. | |
| 492 | December 9, 2000 | Val Kilmer | U2 | ★ During U2's performance of "Elevation", Bono jumped off the stage and continued singing while playing with the camera and wandering around the studio. The unplanned move was parodied during the following week's "Weekend Update" segment. | |
| 493 | December 16, 2000 | Lucy Liu | Jay-Z | ★ Jimmy Fallon parodies Bono's antics during his performance of Elevation on the previous episode during Weekend Update. ★ Jay-Z cameos in the Robert Goulet Rap Album sketch. In that sketch, Jay-Z mutters the word, "Shit!" when the ashes off his marijuana joint fall off. This was not censored when it aired in reruns on NBC (the syndicated version of this episode doesn't air the sketch at all). | |
| 494 | January 13, 2001 | Charlie Sheen | Nelly Furtado | ||
| 495 | January 20, 2001 | Mena Suvari | Lenny Kravitz | ★ Janet Reno makes a special appearance in the cold opening, where she confronts the "Janet Reno" portrayed by Will Ferrell. She later appears herself in ''Janet Reno's Dance Party''. ★ Lenny Kravitz appears in two live sketches as himself; one as holding auditions for Kyle and Sean DeMarco (Chris Kattan and Chris Parnell) and another going through airport security. | |
| 496 | February 10, 2001 | Jennifer Lopez | ★ This episode was delayed due to coverage of the XFL games. Lorne Michaels was so upset over this that he demanded that the episode be rerun in its entirety three weeks after the original air date. | ||
| 497 | February 17, 2001 | Sean Hayes | Shaggy | ★ This is Molly Shannon's last episode as a castmember. | |
| 498 | February 24, 2001 | Katie Holmes | Dave Matthews Band | ★ Dave Matthews Band's second song, The Space Between, was its world premiere, other than the album version leaking on the internet. | |
| 499 | March 10, 2001 | Conan O'Brien | Don Henley | ★ Conan O'Brien served as a staff writer on the show from 1988-1991, making him the first non-castmember writer to return as host. ★ Ben Affleck's appearance at the end of the Boston Teens at the Liquor Store sketch was not in the dress rehearsal version. ★ Max Weinberg, drummer on the Conan O'Brien show, appears in O'Brien's opening monologue. | |
| 500 | March 17, 2001 | Julia Stiles | Aerosmith | ||
| 501 | April 7, 2001 | Alec Baldwin | Coldplay | ★ David Spade makes a cameo appearance on Weekend Update to plug his movie Joe Dirt. Co-star and rocker Kid Rock also makes an appearance and does a couple "Hollywood Minute" jokes. | |
| 502 | April 14, 2001 | Renée Zellweger | Eve | ★ During the week of this episode, the cast including the recently departed Molly Shannon would film the Mother's Day special that would air in May. As a favor, the writers wrote her into the crazy doctor sketch that aired during this episode. | |
| 503 | May 5, 2001 | Pierce Brosnan | Destiny's Child | ★ Julia Stiles made a cameo appearance in the cold opening, as George W. Bush's daughter, Jenna. | |
| 504 | May 12, 2001 | Lara Flynn Boyle | Bon Jovi | ||
| 505 | May 19, 2001 | Christopher Walken | Weezer | ★ An April Fool's joke that got out of control stated that Drew Carey would host this episode and that he had convinced Lorne Michaels to let him do an all-improv show. Many wire services even picked up on the rumor, but it was debunked a few days later by Drew Carey's publicist. ★ Former castmember Kevin Nealon appears during Weekend Update to tell viewers that he's not on SNL anymore and that viewers who do see him are watching reruns from the 1990s that used to air on Comedy Central. ★ Winona Ryder, who would later host the last episode of season 27, appears during The Weekend Update Cliffhanger. | |
Season 27
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 506 | September 29, 2001 | Reese Witherspoon | Alicia Keys | ★ The episode premiered less than 3 weeks following the terrorist attacks of September 11. New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, along with members of the New York Fire Department appear in the cold opening to encourage New York and Saturday Night Live to carry on in the face of adversity. When asked by Lorne Michaels "can we be funny?", Giuliani replied "why start now?" In addition to appearances by Giuliani and the NYFD, Paul Simon played The Boxer during the cold opening. ★ This marks the first time that Michaels (or any other executive producer) approved the use of the word fuck on air. Instead of "I'm freezing my balls off," the original punchline to Reese's joke in the monologue was "I'm fucking freezing!" Michaels wanted her to swear (promising he'd pay the fine) since he wanted to show that New York was back up and running. She decided not to at the last minute since she has so many young fans. ★ On the original airing of this episode and the next, Chris Parnell's voice-over remained for the Weekend Update opening sequence (even though he had been fired from the show). It was subsequently re-recorded by Amy Poehler. |
| 507 | October 6, 2001 | Seann William Scott | Sum 41 | ★ Former castmember Ben Stiller was asked to host the episode, but backed out due to the 9/11 attacks stating "It's impossible to be funny at this time.". SNL crew member Rosie Shuster said in the "Live from New York" book that "Ben is from New York, he should be fucking showing up with bells on to help the city through this". She was also displeased that while he disagreed to promote his film ''Zoolander'' by hosting SNL, he was appearing on ''Today'', ''The View'', and various other programs. ★ Seann William Scott was originally booked to host the following episode, but he was bumped up when Ben Stiller canceled. |
| 508 | October 13, 2001 | Drew Barrymore | Macy Gray | ★ Drew Barrymore nearly backed out of hosting, citing fear of flying after the 9/11 attacks. After agreeing to host, rehearsals for this week's episode were interrupted when an NBC employee tested positive for anthrax in the same building where SNL is broadcast. The show went on that Saturday as scheduled. |
| 509 | November 3, 2001 | John Goodman | Ja Rule | ★ Former castmember and special guest Dan Aykroyd revises his recurring character, Leonard Pinth-Garnell, for the sketch "Bad Conceptual Theater". ★ Dan Aykroyd was brought in to pad sketches during rehearsals when John Goodman was too sick to come in. |
| 510 | November 10, 2001 | Gwyneth Paltrow | Ryan Adams | ★ The original version of this episode has a TV Funhouse cartoon about Michael Jackson proving to his weird entourage that he doesn't lust after boys anymore. On the NBC rerun, this was replaced with another TV Funhouse cartoon, a "Fun With Real Audio" about Pat Robertson promoting stem cells which turns into a cartoon about Britney Spears that played on the West Coast airing of this episode (the syndicated reruns don't air either cartoon). |
| 511 | November 17, 2001 | Billy Bob Thornton | Creed | ★ Future host Ashton Kutcher makes a cameo appearance during the monologue. |
| 512 | December 1, 2001 | Derek Jeter | Shakira Bubba Sparxxx | ★ Bubba Sparxxx's performance is cut out in the 60-minute versions of the episode. |
| 513 | December 8, 2001 | Hugh Jackman | Mick Jagger | ★ On December 31, 2006, this became the final Classic SNL aired. The timeslot went to Poker After Dark starting on January 5, 2007. |
| 514 | December 15, 2001 | Ellen DeGeneres | No Doubt | ★ Chris Parnell makes a vocal cameo appearance as Tom Brokaw during the "Narrator Who Ruined Christmas" cartoon. Robert Smigel did not agree with Parnell's firing and pushed for him to reprise his impression. Smigel notes on the "Best of TV Funhouse" DVD commentary that Parnell had nothing but good things to say about the show that had fired him when he came in to record his lines. Parnell will subsequently rejoin the cast a few episodes later. |
| 515 | January 12, 2002 | Josh Hartnett | Pink | ★ Cameron Diaz and Outkast were scheduled to be host and musical guest respectively in this episode. Both backed out at the last minute, but would appear in episodes later in the season. ★ Will Ferrell does not appear in this episode since he was off filming the movie "Old School." He was removed from the opening credit sequence, which caused many fans to fear that he had permanently left the show. |
| 516 | January 19, 2002 | Jack Black | The Strokes | ★ Will Ferrell was prominently featured in the promos for this episode to assure viewers that he had not left the show (after being absent for the previous episode). |
| 517 | February 2, 2002 | Britney Spears | ★ Britney Spears is the only female to pull double-duty (Hosting & Performing on the same episode) twice. Former cast member Dan Aykroyd cameos in two sketches (the Mormon skiers cold opening and Jimmy Fallon's Leather Man sketch) ★ Future host Justin Timberlake makes a cameo appearance during Britney's monologue. | |
| 518 | March 2, 2002 | Jonny Moseley | Outkast | ★ Chris Parnell rejoins the cast after being fired at the end of last season for budgetary reasons. His return was not known about until this episode aired, and it was not actually mentioned on-air by anyone (although a mention was cut after dress rehearsal). Parnell appeared in a number of sketches in this episode an attempt to reintegrate him back into the cast. ★ Darrell Hammond does not appear in this episode since he was in rehab for his alcohol addiction. Will Ferrell, who was originally not supposed to appear in this episode, was flown in from the set of "Old School" at the last minute to make up for Hammond's absence. Hammond's absence also contributed to Chris Parnell's return. ★ Olympic gold medalist Sarah Hughes was originally supposed to make an appearance on this episode, but she backed out when her managers did not approve of the material that had been written for her. |
| 519 | March 9, 2002 | Jon Stewart | India.Arie | ★ Mike Judge, creator of Beavis and Butthead and King of the Hill, appears in the TV Funhouse "Fun With Real Audio" providing the voices for Beavis and Butthead. ★ Chris Parnell is again featured in a number of sketches in an effort to reintegrate him back into the cast. ★ Will Ferrell did not appear in this episode since he was off filming "Old School." ★ Darrell Hammond returns from rehab with this episode. |
| 520 | March 16, 2002 | Ian McKellen | Kylie Minogue | ★ According to the book, "Live From New York: The Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live", the kiss between Maggie Smith (Ian McKellen) and Jimmy Fallon on Weekend Update was real and planned for the show, but McKellen slipping his tongue in Fallon's mouth, Jimmy's disgusted reaction, and Jimmy's lines "Maggie Smith should shave" and "Does this mean I'm knighted? Or did I just get queened" were not planned/scripted. ★ This episode won an Emmy for writing, the show's first since 1989 (for the Alec Baldwin/B-52's episode) ★ Will Ferrell did not appear in this episode since he was off filming "Old School." |
| 521 | April 6, 2002 | Cameron Diaz | Jimmy Eat World | ★ With the filming of his scenes from "Old School" complete, Will Ferrell returns to full-time duty. |
| 522 | April 13, 2002 | The Rock | Andrew W.K. | ★ The NBC rerun of this episode featured a tribute to SNL director Dave Wilson. The tribute consisted of behind-the-scenes footage of Wilson directing the beginning of the cold opening of his final show. |
| 523 | April 20, 2002 | Alec Baldwin | P.O.D. | ★ Elvis Costello was originally asked to be the musical guest, but declined. Alanis Morrissette was also asked, and declined as well. ★ NBC never reran this episode, and it has never aired in syndication for unknown reasons. However, sketches from this episode were included on the "Best of Alec Baldwin" DVD. |
| 524 | May 11, 2002 | Kirsten Dunst | Eminem | ★ In the monologue, when Horatio Sanz throws up, he was originally supposed to vomit in a bucket, but the stage hand missed his cue. All NBC reruns and one-hour syndicated versions replace this with a dress rehearsal version where the stage hand doesn't miss his cue. |
| 525 | May 18, 2002 | Winona Ryder | Moby | ★ The real Alex Trebek appears in Will Ferrell's last Celebrity Jeopardy sketch; in fact, this was Ferrell's final regular show appearance as he left the series to focus on his film career. ★ Producers originally asked Ewan McGregor to host, but he declined. ★ According to the "Live From New York" autobiography, Winona Ryder was chosen to host as a way to appear in public again after getting caught shoplifting at Saks Fifth Avenue. ★ Musical guest Moby appears in a Mango sketch parodying Winona Ryder's infamous shoplifting experience wearing a T-shirt that reads, "I Heart Eminem" (a back-reference to Eminem's appearance the previous week). ★ The real Neil Diamond appears in the live show version of Weekend Update, but not the dress rehearsal. ★ This is Will Ferrell and Ana Gasteyer's last episode. |
Season 28
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 526 | October 5, 2002 | Matt Damon | Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band | ★ Jim Cummings who does voicework in such children's cartoons as ''The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'', ''Chip and Dale Rescue Rangers'', and ''Animaniacs'', was credited for doing voicework in the "Smurfette Show" TV Funhouse (Cummings voiced Gargamel and Papa Smurf). ★ Ben Affleck was originally supposed to appear in the sketch where Matt Damon meets a doctor (played by Chris Parnell) who is also named Matt Damon, but backed out. ★ Darrell Hammond played George W. Bush in the cold opening at dress rehearsal, but it was cut due to a poor response from the audience. ★ According to a post show interview, Bruce Springsteen was asked to participate in sketches but he declined. |
| 527 | October 12, 2002 | Sarah Michelle Gellar | Faith Hill | ★ John McCain was originally booked to host this episode, but was rescheduled to October 19 prior to the season premiere. ★ Chris Parnell takes over as George W. Bush from Will Ferrell. Parnell will play Bush five more times throughout the year and then be replaced by Darrell Hammond next season. ★ NBC never reran this episode. |
| 528 | October 19, 2002 | John McCain | White Stripes | ★ This episode was pre-empted in many areas, including Washington DC, due to a sniper shooting earlier in the evening. |
| 529 | November 2, 2002 | Eric McCormack | Jay-Z & Beyoncé | ★ NBC never reran this episode. |
| 530 | November 9, 2002 | Nia Vardalos | Eve | ★ Anthony Hopkins was scheduled to host this show, but backed out the month before. |
| 531 | November 16, 2002 | Brittany Murphy | Nelly | ★ Nelly was originally planned to musical guest on the Sen. John McCain episode, but due to schedule conflicts, he backed out, and were booked for this episode instead. ★ Kelly Rowland performs with Nelly on the first song. Cameos for this episode include former ''SNL'' castmembers Garrett Morris, Rob Schneider, and Adam Sandler. |
| 532 | December 7, 2002 | Robert De Niro | Norah Jones | ★ Harvey Keitel makes a cameo appearance during the Versace sketch. ★ Jimmy Fallon makes a joke about Phish during Weekend Update. He then ad-libs, "see you next week Trey" as Phish was the musical guest the following week. ★ Director Beth McCarthy-Miller later said that Robert DeNiro was "the worst host ever." due to his blatant disregard for direction. However, this did not keep DeNiro from hosting the show for a second time in season 30. |
| 533 | December 14, 2002 | Al Gore | Phish | ★ Al Franken returns in this episode to reprise his recurring character Stuart Smalley. |
| 534 | January 11, 2003 | Jeff Gordon | Avril Lavigne | ★ According to a post-show interview, Jeff Gordon rejected many sketch ideas, and didn't want to participate in too many sketches. ★ A DeMarco Brothers sketch was cut after dress rehearsal because Avril Lavigne had a sore throat. |
| 535 | January 18, 2003 | Ray Liotta | The Donnas | ★ Elijah Wood and Red Hot Chili Peppers were considered to be host and musical guest for this episode. Elijah Wood would later host a season 29 Christmas special (with musical guest, Jet) and Red Hot Chili Peppers would later become the musical guest in season 31 for the episode hosted by Tom Hanks. |
| 536 | February 8, 2003 | Matthew McConaughey | Dixie Chicks | ★ During the goodnights, Matthew McConaughey is seen wearing only a towel around his waist. ★ Matthew McConaughey grabbed Rachel Dratch's breasts during rehearsals of their blind date sketch. Dratch was not amused and showed footage of the incident when she appeared on "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" a few months later. |
| 537 | February 15, 2003 | Jennifer Garner | Beck | ★ During the credits, Beck and his band parody the "Clappin" commercial from earlier in the show. |
| 538 | February 22, 2003 | Christopher Walken | Foo Fighters | ★ Steve Martin, Will Ferrell, and Britney Spears all make cameo appearances in the Weekend Update segment. ★ Jim Carrey appeared during the Foo Fighters' second performance, using his leg as an air guitar on stage. ★ Two sketches from this episode are included in the DVD version of the SNL clip show special "The Best of Christopher Walken": one is a dress rehearsal version of this episode's "The Continental" , which can be found under the title "The Making of 'The Continental'", in the extras section along with two other sketches cut from dress rehearsal from other episodes hosted by Walken and a sketch where Walken plays a crazy ship captain who apologizes to his life raft mates (played by Seth Meyers, Will Forte, and Fred Armisen) for sinking the ship. ★ Christopher Walken receives over a minute of applause when he enters for his monologue, forcing him to repeatedly shush the audience so he can begin to deliever his lines. |
| 539 | March 8, 2003 | Queen Latifah | Ms. Dynamite | ★ Former castmember Dan Aykroyd appears as Bob Dole in the cold opening. ★ Voice artists Jeff Bergman (who is one of the current voices of Bugs Bunny) and Tom Kenny (who voices Nickelodeon character SpongeBob SquarePants) provide voicework on the X-President's TV Funhouse. |
| 540 | March 15, 2003 | Salma Hayek | Christina Aguilera | ★ Edward Norton makes a cameo appearance in the monologue because he was dating Salma Hayek. |
| 541 | April 5, 2003 | Bernie Mac | Good Charlotte | ★ The George W. Bush cold opening was a last-minute replacement for a sketch about TV newsanchors gabbing about the Iraq War. |
| 542 | April 12, 2003 | Ray Romano | Zwan | ★ The "Uday Hussein for President" fake commercial was cut when NBC reran this episode in July 2003 because the real Uday Hussein had been killed during the Iraq war. The fake commercial is also removed from the 60-minute syndicated version. |
| 543 | May 3, 2003 | Ashton Kutcher | 50 Cent | ★ Ashton Kutcher and Will Forte previously worked together on "That 70's Show," where Forte was a writer and story editor. |
| 544 | May 10, 2003 | Adrien Brody | Sean Paul Wayne Wonder | ★ The musical segment featuring Wayne Wonder is not shown (or mentioned in the opening credits) in syndication. ★ Adrien Brody was banned from hosting again following his long and improvised introduction of musical guest Sean Paul. ★ In a Howard Stern interview with castmember Tina Fey, Tina said that during a writer's meeting, Adrien Brody constantly dished out sketch ideas for the writers to write, but they were so bad that the writers turned it down, causing Brody to get upset. ★ Renée Zellweger was the producers' first choice to host, but she backed out due to personal reasons. |
| 545 | May 17, 2003 | Dan Aykroyd | Beyoncé | ★ As part of his monologue, Dan Aykroyd performs alongside John Belushi's brother, Jim, as a Blues Brothers-esque singing group called "The Dancing Refrigerators". ★ Rapper Jay-Z joined Beyoncé for her performance of "Crazy In Love." ★ Former host John Goodman cameos in 3 sketches as a sign of gratitude to Aykroyd who would make cameo appearances in episodes hosted by him. (John Goodman hasn't made any appearances since this show) ★ Dan Akyroyd didn't resurrect any former characters or impressions for the live show. There was a Fred Garvin male prostitute sketch that was cut after dress rehearsal. ★ The Astronaut Jones sketch becomes one of the few recent characters to feature guest appearances from Original "Not Ready for Prime Time Players" (Aykroyd in this episode and Garret Morris in the Thanksgiving episode). ★ This is Chris Kattan and Tracy Morgan's last episode, as well as Dean Edwards'. |
Season 29
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 546 | October 4, 2003 | Jack Black | John Mayer | ★ The last sketch about telemarketers singing about their glory days ending is cut off abruptly due to the show running too long. ★ Jack Black mispronounces John Mayer's last name as "Meyer" when he introduces him as musical guest. This is fixed in all reruns. ★ Will Ferrell's cameo appearance in the monologue received so much applause that it extended the length of the monologue by an additional 45 seconds. |
| 547 | October 11, 2003 | Justin Timberlake | ★ Justin performed three songs and impersonated four celebrities: Michael Bolton, Robin Gibb, Ashton Kutcher and Jessica Simpson. ★ Reruns of this episode on NBC and E! redub Maya Rudolph's singing the Christina Aguilera song "Beautiful" with unintelligible vocalizing during the "Punk'd: Barely Legal" fake commercial. ★ The NBC rerun of this episode cuts Justin Timberlake's second performance and replaces it with the TV Funhouse from the Ben Affleck/N.E.R.D. episode and the "Fear Factor Kids" fake commercial from the Donald Trump/Toots and the Maytals episode. ★ Carl Weathers (who hosted SNL in its 13th [1987-1988] season) cameos in a short sketch announcing his candidacy as governor of any state, parodying his ''Predator'' co-stars Jesse Ventura and Arnold Schwarzenegger's successful campaign for governor, as well as the numerous celebrities running for governor in the 2003 California recall election | |
| 548 | October 18, 2003 | Halle Berry | Britney Spears | |
| 549 | November 1, 2003 | Kelly Ripa | Outkast | ★ Darrell Hammond takes over as George W. Bush, replacing Chris Parnell. However, Hammond will only play Bush once more before being replaced by Will Forte later this season. |
| 550 | November 8, 2003 | Andy Roddick | Dave Matthews | ★ John McEnroe cameos in a short piece after the "British Nanny" sketch where he and Chris Parnell comment on Roddick's hosting ★ This was the public debut of Dave Matthews' solo project Dave Matthews & Friends, which toured extensively in the winter of 2003. The band included Trey Anastasio, who had previously performed on SNL with Kid Rock and his own band Phish. |
| 551 | November 15, 2003 | Alec Baldwin | Missy Elliott | ★ Former castmember Mike Myers appears in the monologue to plug the film "The Cat In The Hat". |
| 552 | December 6, 2003 | Al Sharpton | Pink | ★ Many NBC affiliates (particularly in Iowa) did not air this episode due to fear of breaking equal time laws (Al Sharpton was a presidential candidate at the time), and aired either three half-hour infomercials or the SNL special "The Best of Steve Martin" in its place. It finally aired on all NBC affiliates on July 31, 2004. This gave fodder for a Weekend Update segment entitled "Tina and Jimmy Making Fun of Cities That Aren't Showing SNL Tonight". ★ Paris Hilton (who would later host a season 30 episode) appears on Weekend Update. ★ Former castmember Tracy Morgan appears in the monologue as the young Al Sharpton, a sketch about the 3 Wise Men getting pulled over and in a sketch about racial stereotypes in a 1930s film. ★ Johnny Cochran appears in the audience during the "Michael Jackson on a Roller Coaster" sketch. |
| 553 | December 13, 2003 | Elijah Wood | Jet | |
| 554 | January 10, 2004 | Jennifer Aniston | The Black Eyed Peas | |
| 555 | January 17, 2004 | Jessica Simpson Nick Lachey | G-Unit | ★ During the cold opening sketch, Jeff Richards ignored direction (indicative of the technical gaffes), which gave one more reason for the producers to fire him after this episode. ★ Former SNL Writer James Eagan wrote Nick and Jessica's campy variety monologue. He would go on to write their primetime variety special and Christmas special. |
| 556 | February 7, 2004 | Megan Mullally | Clay Aiken | |
| 557 | February 14, 2004 | Drew Barrymore | Kelis | ★ Among the items cut from dress rehearsal included a sketch about the art of bartending with Drew Barrymore playing the bartender, a sketch in which all the girls dress up as flowers and sing, and a commercial about smoked sausages cooked by Firestarter (the character from Drew's early film career) This commercial was cut after dress but would later show up on air in 2007 during Drew Barrymore's next hosting gig. ★ Will Forte plays George W. Bush for the first time. |
| 558 | February 21, 2004 | Christina Aguilera | Maroon 5 | |
| 559 | March 6, 2004 | Colin Firth | Norah Jones | ★ Ana Gasteyer makes a guest appearance in the cold opening. ★ Colin Firth was quite intrigued by the show and was very happy with his experience. He was grateful they let him host despite having nothing to promote. ★ NBC never reran this episode. |
| 560 | March 13, 2004 | Ben Affleck | N ★ E ★ R ★ D | |
| 561 | April 3, 2004 | Donald Trump | Toots & The Maytals, featuring Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Bootsy Collins, and The Roots | ★ Then-future cast member Rob Riggle appears as an extra in a pretaped sketch called "Fear Factor, Jr." George H. Ross and Carolyn Kepcher make appearances in the cold opening. |
| 562 | April 10, 2004 | Janet Jackson | ★ In an interview with Amy Poehler, Amy stated that Janet Jackson was one of the nicest hosts she worked with, and during the course of the week, Janet bought lunch for the whole cast and crew. ★ The writers axed a sketch where Janet's character would make fun of Michael Jackson when they 'sensed' that she was uncomfortable doing it. ★ Chris Kattan and Tracy Morgan both cameo to reprise their roles in a Season's Greetings From SNL musical number. Simon Cowell also cameos to criticize (then join) the number. | |
| 563 | May 1, 2004 | Lindsay Lohan | Usher | ★ Lindsay was origninally supposed to host the April 3 show to coincide with the movie Mean Girls, but when the movie was pushed back a month, so was her hosting appearance. ★ This episode was known for the Harry Potter sketch where Harry and Ron are enamored with Hermione (played by Lohan) when she returns from winter break with a larger chest and the Debbie Downer sketch where everyone at the table (save Fred Armisen) cracks up on camera. |
| 564 | May 8, 2004 | Snoop Dogg | Avril Lavigne | ★ Snoop Dogg was a replacement for Jake Gyllenhaal, who backed out at the last minute. Gyllenhaal eventually hosted for the first time in season 32. |
| 565 | May 15, 2004 | Mary-Kate Olsen Ashley Olsen | J-Kwon | ★ The Olsen Twins missed their own prom so they could host SNL. ★ This is Jimmy Fallon's final episode. J-Kwon's second performance was cut so there would be time to air Fallon's farewell sketch. |
Season 30
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2000-2005) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 566 | October 2, 2004 | Ben Affleck | Nelly | ★ Alec Baldwin cameos during the monologue. The monologue in the dress rehearsal originally had Darrell Hammond as Alec Baldwin, but the real Alec Baldwin was used instead. ★ This is Rob Riggle's first episode. ★ Amy Poehler co-anchors Weekend Update for the first time in this episode. | |
| 567 | October 9, 2004 | Queen Latifah | ★ Scissor Sisters were the producer's original choice for musical guest this episode. | ||
| 568 | October 23, 2004 | Jude Law | Ashlee Simpson | ★ Simpson had performed her hit single “Pieces of Me” without incident earlier. When she came back a second time, her band started playing and the first lines of her singing “Pieces of Me” could be heard again. She was holding her microphone at her waist at the time. Simpson looked momentarily confused as the band plowed ahead with the song and the vocal was quickly silenced. A flustered Simpson made some exaggerated hopping dance moves, then walked off the stage. NBC quickly cut to a commercial. Following her performance and negative publicity, Simpson claims it was simply a back-up track due to an attack of her acid reflux. | |
| 569 | October 30, 2004 | Kate Winslet | Eminem | ★ Eminem was originally chosen to host and perform but he declined the chance to host. ★ Kate Winslet only appears in 3 live sketches. | |
| 570 | November 13, 2004 | Liam Neeson | Modest Mouse | ||
| 571 | November 20, 2004 | Luke Wilson | U2 | ★ U2 performed three songs on air, including "I Will Follow" over the closing credits, and start playing All Because of You for the audience as the show ends. Bono began their first song by speaking into his microphone "Live mic, live mic" in reference to the Ashlee Simpson lip-synching controversy of show #568. | |
| 572 | December 11, 2004 | Colin Farrell | Scissor Sisters | ★ During the goodnights, Colin Farrell states how much he enjoyed hosting and ends with, "I shit you not!", which is now bleeped out in both NBC and E! reruns. ★ Lindsay Lohan appeared in the monologue and in Weekend Update. | |
| 573 | December 18, 2004 | Robert De Niro | Destiny's Child | ★ Jim Henson's Muppets (not the Muppets who appeared in SNL's first season) make two appearances in this episode. | |
| 574 | January 15, 2005 | Topher Grace | The Killers | ★ Topher Grace replaced Jennifer Garner as host after Garner had to bow out due to injury. | |
| 575 | January 22, 2005 | Paul Giamatti | Ludacris featuring Sum 41 | ★ Priducer's original choice was Ice Cube as host with musical guest Franz Ferdinand. ★ A blizzard hit New York City on the night of broadcast, limiting audience attendance. | |
| 576 | February 5, 2005 | Paris Hilton | Keane | ★ In an 2005 interview with Amy Poehler, when asked who was one of the hardest hosts to work with, she said Paris Hilton. In a 2006 Howard Stern interview, Tina Fey was asked about Hilton, with Fey explaining that Paris wanted to do a sketch playing Jessica Simpson because she "hated her", and "she was fat." Fey also noted there was originally a sketch entitled "Paris Hilton's House of Crabs", which followed the theme of such sketches as "Donald Trump's House of Wings" from the previous season and "Derek Jeter's Taco Hole" from season 27. However, Hilton was against the idea of making fun of herself and allegedly locked herself in her dressing room as a result. | |
| 577 | February 12, 2005 | Jason Bateman | Kelly Clarkson | ★ Kelly Clarkson participated in two sketches. | |
| 578 | February 19, 2005 | Hilary Swank | 50 Cent | ||
| 579 | March 12, 2005 | David Spade | Jack Johnson | ||
| 580 | March 19, 2005 | Ashton Kutcher | Gwen Stefani | ★ Demi Moore cameos in the monologue, dressed as an old woman. | |
| 581 | April 9, 2005 | Cameron Diaz | Green Day | ★ Jimmy Fallon, Drew Barrymore, and Justin Timberlake make guest appearances during "The Barry Gibb Talk Show" sketch. Fallon also made an appearance in the Weekend Update. | |
| 582 | April 16, 2005 | Tom Brady | Beck | ★ Alec Baldwin was producer's first choice to host to coincide with the buzz off the film The Aviator. But the producers later axed the idea, and he hosted December of this year. ★ Martin Short made a guest appearance during Weekend Update as Jiminy Glick. | |
| 583 | May 7, 2005 | Johnny Knoxville | System of a Down | ★ Paula Abdul was originally supposed to play herself in the cold opening, but after dress rehearsal, she felt uncomfortable and the writers re-wrote the sketch so that Amy Poehler played her. She did, however, say the opening phrase and introduce System of a Down's second performance. ★ Dave Matthews Band was originally going to perform, but had to decline because of scheduling conflicts. ★ This is Jason Sudeikis's first episode. Prior to this episode, Sudeikis was a writer for SNL who had bit roles in some sketches. ★ During this performance, towards the end of the song, guitarist Daron Malakian screamed, "Fuck yeah!" This was missed by the censors. | |
| 584 | May 14, 2005 | Will Ferrell | Queens of the Stone Age | ★ Will Ferrell performed with Queens of the Stone Age during "Little Sister" as his "More Cowbell" character, Gene Frenkle. | |
| 585 | May 21, 2005 | Lindsay Lohan | Coldplay | ★ It was reported in ''Vanity Fair'' that Tina Fey and Lorne Michaels had an intervention with Lohan over an eating disorder. Lohan denied the article. ★ This is Rob Riggle's last episode. ★ This is the last episode of SNL featured in analog format. As of the 31st season, SNL will be shown in high definition. ★ Donald Trump is seen to be in attendance during a shot of the audience. | |
Season 31
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 586 | October 1, 2005 | Steve Carell | Kanye West | ★ Former cast member Mike Myers made a special appearance spoofing Myers and West's joint appearance in "A Concert for Hurricane Relief". ★ This is Bill Hader's and Andy Samberg's first episode. ★ Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine performs with West during "Heard 'Em Say". ★ The first ''SNL'' episode broadcast in high definition. The show is now letterboxed in widescreen on standard definition screens, leading to new wider sets. | |
| 587 | October 8, 2005 | Jon Heder | Ashlee Simpson | ★ Rachel Dratch becomes ''SNL's longest-serving female castmember, surpassing Ana Gasteyer. ★ Chris Parnell does not appear in this episode since he was in Los Angeles filming an episode of his failed sitcom pilot "Thick and Thin." He is cut out of the opening montage to reflect this. | |
| 588 | October 22, 2005 | Catherine Zeta-Jones | Franz Ferdinand | ★ At the end of Weekend Update, a still photo of former castmember Charles Rocket, who had committed suicide the week before this episode, is shown in his memory. The NBC and E! reruns of this episode cut out the appearance of Charles Rocket's photo. ★ Chris Parnell does not appear again due to filming "Thick and Thin." He is once again cut out of the opening montage. | |
| 589 | October 29, 2005 | Lance Armstrong | Sheryl Crow | ★ Chicago White Sox outfielder Scott Podsednik made a guest appearance on Weekend Update shortly after his team swept the Houston Astros in the 2005 World Series. ★ Sheryl Crow, Armstrong's then-fiancé, made an appearance in the monologue and in two sketches as herself. | |
| 590 | November 12, 2005 | Jason Lee | Foo Fighters | ★ The NBC rerun replaces a sketch about "butt pregnancy" with a musical sketch centering around workers singing over desserts in the office cafeteria. ★ This is Kristen Wiig's first episode (coincidentally, her first sketch, where she and Jason Sudeikis play a couple who pick up an escaped prisoner while driving home, is cut in the 60-minute E! rerun). ★ This is the Foo Fighters 4th time appearing on SNL. Previously they had performed in 1995 (supporting their self titled debut), 1999 (supporting ''There Is Nothing Left to Lose'', and 2002 (supporting ''One By One''). On this appearance they supported their 5th album, ''In Your Honor''. Even though Foo Fighters have only performed on the show 4 times, singer Dave Grohl has been featured as a musical guest 7 times. Twice with his groundbreaking early 90's band Nirvana, who performed on the show in '92, and '93. Besides Foo Fighters and Nirvana, he drummed with Tom Petty on a 1994 episode. | |
| 591 | November 19, 2005 | Eva Longoria | KoЯn | ||
| 592 | December 3, 2005 | Dane Cook | James Blunt | ||
| 593 | December 10, 2005 | Alec Baldwin | Shakira | ★ Tim Meadows made a guest appearance during the monologue. ★ Alejandro Sanz sang in Shakira's second song, La tortura. ★ At the end of Weekend Update, Tina Fey shows a clip from the famous season one sketch where Chevy Chase and then-host Richard Pryor get into a word association that leads to the use of racial epithets in memory of comedian Richard Pryor (who died the day this episode first aired). | |
| 594 | December 17, 2005 | Jack Black | Neil Young | ★ The Digital Short in this episode, Lazy Sunday, soon became a cult phenomenon. ★ Neil Young makes an appearance in the Appalachian Emergency Room sketch, which also features a cameo from Johnny Knoxville. ★ Tracy Morgan makes a cameo appearance during Weekend Update. ★ Jack Black's Tenacious D partner Kyle Gass makes a cameo appearance during the spelling bee skit. ★ The sketch "Space War 2148" is reused from cast member Andy Samberg's unsold TV pilot ''Awesometown''. Samberg reprises his role; Black takes the role played by Jorma Taccone. | |
| 595 | January 14, 2006 | Scarlett Johansson | Death Cab for Cutie | ★ After a "Hardball" parody is cut, an excerpt from the night's TV Funhouse called "The 700 Gang" is the first (and so far, only) cartoon as a cold opening.[6] | |
| 596 | January 21, 2006 | Peter Sarsgaard | The Strokes | ★ Drew Barrymore made a special appearance in the Weekend Update segment. | |
| 597 | February 4, 2006 | Steve Martin | Prince | ★ Alec Baldwin, and Jimmy Fallon cameo in the live show; Baldwin, Kelly Ripa, Scarlett Johansson, Conan O'Brien, Brian Williams and Gideon Yago all appear in filmed segments. ★ Prince collaborated with Támar to perform his second song, "Beautiful, Loved and Blessed". ★ This episode was the highest rated episode of the season, drawing 9.3 million viewers. | |
| 598 | March 4, 2006 | Natalie Portman | Fall Out Boy | ★ Dennis Haysbert made a live-action cameo during TV Funhouse. | |
| 599 | March 11, 2006 | Matt Dillon | Arctic Monkeys | ★ According to an Interview with Seth Meyers, Matt Dillon did not show up for work until late Tuesday afternoon. This was probably due Matt's attendance at the Oscars in the past weekend. ★ Arctic Monkeys lead singer Alex Turner stopped in the middle of the band's performance of "A Certain Romance" and, visibly frustrated with the audience reaction, pointed into the crowd and yelled "That man just yawned!" The band then destroyed their instruments after the performance. | |
| 600 | April 8, 2006 | Antonio Banderas | Mary J. Blige | ★ Former cast member Chris Kattan makes a cameo during Weekend Update. | |
| 601 | April 15, 2006 | Lindsay Lohan | Pearl Jam | ★ Adult film star Savanna Samson makes a quick cameo in the TV Funhouse cartoon. The cameo wasn't seen on many affiliates. ★ Maya Rudolph and Horatio Sanz do not appear in this episode. | |
| 602 | May 6, 2006 | Tom Hanks | Red Hot Chili Peppers | ★ This episode earned a 3.4 rating, 14 share in 18-49 and 7.3 million viewers overall. ★ Seth Meyers does not appear in any sketches. ★ Tom Hanks was originally asked to host the season finale but had prior engagements. | |
| 603 | May 13, 2006 | Julia Louis-Dreyfus | Paul Simon | ★ This episode garnered a 3.4 rating, 14 share in 18-49, and 8.0 million viewers overall. ★ Special cameos by Al Gore, Jason Alexander, and Jerry Seinfeld. Al Gore's cold opening was written by his daughter and former ''SNL'' staff writer Kristin Gore. ★ This episode marked Paul Simon's eighth appearance as musical guest on the show. He performed "How Can You Live in the Northeast?" and "Outrageous". ★ Paul Simon was asked to appear as a pedophile in the Myspace Seminar sketch but he declined. | |
| 604 | May 20, 2006 | Kevin Spacey | Nelly Furtado | ★ This is Tina Fey, Chris Parnell, Rachel Dratch, Horatio Sanz and Finesse Mitchell's last episode as castmembers, and Beth McCarthy Miller's last episode as director. |
Season 32
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 605 | September 30, 2006 | Dane Cook | The Killers | ★ According to in-home live-plus-same-day viewership figures from Nielsen Media Research, this episode had a 3.2 rating, 13 share in 18-49 and 6.7 million viewers overall. ★ Starting with this episode, Seth Meyers is the new Weekend Update anchor with Amy Poehler. ★ This is the first episode featuring new director, Don Roy King ★ Brian Williams made a cameo appearance at the start of Weekend Update. ★ This episode has a different representation of the "Saturday Night Live" logo and how the host and musical guests appear in the opening credits than what's depicted in the next episode. ★ Lenny Pickett accompanied the Killers on saxophone during their 2nd song, "Bones". ★ This is the first episode since the Heather Graham/Marc Anthony episode in Season 25 that did not include any featured players or new cast members. ★ For reasons unknown, NBC reaired this episode just 2 weeks later. This marks the shortest span of time between an episode and its repeat. |
| 606 | October 7, 2006 | Jaime Pressly | Corinne Bailey Rae | ★ Jaime Pressly was two months pregnant while hosting this episode. |
| 607 | October 21, 2006 | John C. Reilly | My Chemical Romance | ★ John's Talledega Nights co-star Will Ferrell made a cameo appearance as James Lipton during Reilly's monologue. ★ This episode has not re-aired since its original airdate. |
| 608 | October 28, 2006 | Hugh Laurie | Beck | ★ Hugh Laurie sang an original comedic song. ★ Sacha Baron Cohen made a cameo appearance during the cold opening as Borat. Reports appeared in November that following the show, Laurie and Cohen went out in New York City with Cohen interacting with others in-character. This resulted in a man physically assaulting Cohen after being insulted by the Borat character, until Laurie broke up the fight. ★ Beck performed "Nausea" and "Clap Hands." |
| 609 | November 11, 2006 | Alec Baldwin | Christina Aguilera | ★ This episode averaged a 3.3 rating, 13 share in 18-49 and 7.4 million viewers overall (SNL's highest since the first time Julia Louis-Dreyfus hosted in season 31). When this episode reran on January 6, it delivered a 3.4 rating, 14 share in adults 18-49 and 7.6 million viewers overall, which was more than the original airing. ★ With this show, Alec Baldwin has hosted 13 times, surpassing John Goodman. ★ Cameos include Tina Fey & Tracy Morgan in the monologue, Takeru Kobayashi during TV Funhouse, Steve Martin, Martin Short, & Paul McCartney in the Platinum Lounge sketch, and Tony Bennett both during The Tony Bennett Show sketch and singing with Aguilera before the closing credits. ★ Martin Short mentioned in an interview on "Late Night With Conan O'Brien" that only he, Steve Martin, and Lorne were aware that McCartney was in the building before he appeared on camera. ★ The NBC rerun on June 9, 2007 cuts the ending of the Carpool sketch where Kristen Wiig's character turns on the radio and Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry, Be Happy" plays on the radio (the sketch ends after Alec Baldwin's character says, "Bobby McFerrin raped my grandmother!"); this is also how the sketch ended on the SNL special "The Best of the 2006-2007 Season." |
| 610 | November 18, 2006 | Ludacris | ★ Mary J. Blige performs with Ludacris during his second performance, "Runaway Love". ★ Jason Sudeikis opens the show impersonating George W. Bush, taking over the role from Will Forte. | |
| 611 | December 2, 2006 | Matthew Fox | Tenacious D | ★ Jason Reed cameos during the performance of "The Metal". |
| 612 | December 9, 2006 | Annette Bening | Gwen StefaniAkon | ★ Alec Baldwin makes a cameo during the monologue. ★ The final sketch (the Cat Lawyer fake commercial) was pre-emptively ended when the show displays a title card, cuts audio soon after, and then cuts to commercial early. ★ This episode has not re-aired since it's original airdate. |
| 613 | December 16, 2006 | Justin Timberlake | ★ Timberlake becomes the third in SNL history to simultaneously be a host and musical guest more than once, next to Garth Brooks and Britney Spears. ★ Jimmy Fallon appeared in the Barry Gibb Talk Show sketch, and also introduced "What Goes Around...". Cameron Diaz, Timberlake's girlfriend at the time, introduced "My Love." ★ After the episode, NBC put an uncensored version of the Digital Short "Dick in a Box" on their website and YouTube. The uncensored version is prefaced with a warning stating that the Digital Short has explicit language that was bleeped out on the TV version. It quickly became an internet phenomenon, much like "Lazy Sunday" did a year earlier. | |
| 614 | January 13, 2007 | Jake Gyllenhaal | The Shins | |
| 615 | January 20, 2007 | Jeremy Piven | AFI | ★ Rapper Common makes a cameo appearance. ★ This episode dominated its time period with a 3.0 rating, 11 share in 18-49 and 6.7 million viewers overall. |
| 616 | February 3, 2007 | Drew Barrymore | Lily Allen | ★ With this episode, Barrymore becomes the second woman to host five times after Candice Bergen. No other female celebrity has hosted more than five times. ★ Darrell Hammond does not appear live during the episode. ★ Horatio Sanz makes a guest appearance as Elton John during the "Donatella Versace Super Bowl Special." ★ This is the only episode this season to feature Seth Meyers outside of ''Weekend Update''. |
| 617 | February 10, 2007 | Forest Whitaker | Keith Urban | ★ In dress rehearsal, the Cold Open was about the NASA astronaut scandal. With an underwhelming response, the piece was scrapped save for Jason's lines which were revamped as a Weekend Update commentary. |
| 618 | February 24, 2007 | Rainn Wilson | Arcade Fire | ★ Arcade Fire appear in the SNL Digital Short. ★ Rashida Jones cameos as Karen Filippelli in the monologue's parody of ''The Office''. ★ In the March 31st and July 14th reruns of the episode, Bill Hader's character mentioning that his father had Down Syndrome was bleeped out during the "''Danny's Song'' Memories" sketch after NBC received complaints over the usage of the phrase. ★ Rainn Wilson is the only host this season to appear in the Cold Open; he did not say the opening phrase. |
| 619 | March 17, 2007 | Julia Louis-Dreyfus | Snow Patrol | ★ Chris Rock appears in the cold open, giving his insight on the 2008 presidential election; he suggested that there would be no reason that America would not be ready for a black president because we just had a retarded one. ★ Darrell Hammond does not appear in this episode(his weekend update commentary as John McCain was cut after dress) |
| 620 | March 24, 2007 | Peyton Manning | Carrie Underwood | ★ Eli Manning, Archie Manning, Cooper Manning and Olivia Manning make cameos; Dan Aykroyd has a cameo during Weekend Update as a crying fan of Sanjaya Malakar. ★ Manning hosted the show on his thirty-first birthday. During the goodnights, a cake was wheeled out by his brothers Eli and Cooper and a rendition of Happy Birthday was performed by the Saturday Night Live band. ★ Darrell Hammond is again absent from the live showing of this episode(his Weekend Update commentary was cut after dress-rehearsal) ★ The dress rehearsal version of the monologue originally had Amy Poehler as a New England Patriots fan who heckles Manning. Both the dress rehearsal and the live show monologue had the joke about Tom Brady and the circus having two more rings than Manning. ★ This episode dominated its timeslot with a 3.5 rating, 15 share in 18-49 and 7.9 million viewers overall. |
| 621 | April 14, 2007 | Shia LaBeouf | Avril Lavigne | ★ Alec Baldwin cameos in a filmed commercial parody. ★ Lavigne appears as Elle Fanning in The Dakota Fanning Show sketch. ★ The digital short ''The Shooting'' is removed from the iTunes version of the episode due to the Virginia Tech shootings that happened two days after this sketch aired, and was quickly removed from NBC.com and YouTube due to NBC's inability to clear the song "Hide and Seek" used in the short. Despite NBC's inability to clear the rights, the Digital Short aired in its entireity when the episode was rerun on August 4th. |
| 622 | April 21, 2007 | Scarlett Johansson | Björk | ★ Sen. Charles Schumer makes a pre-taped cameo in the cold opening. |
| 623 | May 12, 2007 | Molly Shannon | Linkin Park | ★ With this episode, Molly Shannon is the second female former castmember to come back and host, and the first who worked under Lorne Michaels as a cast member. |
| 624 | May 19, 2007 | Zach Braff | Maroon 5 | ★ According to their publicists, Johnny Depp, and Matt Damon, were asked to host the season finale but declined. ★ Zach's Scrubs co-stars Donald Faison and Sarah Chalke were in attendance for this episode. |
★ This season contained the first "Best of the Season" special since the 1996-1997 season, though it aired with two episodes remaining in the season.
★ This is the first season since season 23 (the 1997-1998 season) to have a repertory cast and no feature players.
Season 33
:''See History of Saturday Night Live (2005-2010) for background information.''
| Episode Number | Date | Host(s) | Musical Guest(s) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 625 | September 29, 2007 | LeBron James[2] | Kanye West | Despite earlier reports, Amy Winehouse will not be performing this episode. |
| 626 | October 6, 2007 | Seth Rogen | TBA | |
| 627 | October 13, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 628 | November 3, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 629 | November 10, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 630 | November 17, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 631 | December 1, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 632 | December 8, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 633 | December 15, 2007 | TBA | TBA | |
| 634 | January 12, 2008 | TBA | TBA | |
| 635 | January 19, 2008 | TBA | TBA | |
| 636 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 637 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 638 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 639 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 640 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 641 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 642 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
| 643 | May 10, 2008 | TBA | TBA | |
| 644 | May 17, 2008 | TBA | TBA |
Specials
The following are shows that do not follow the normal show format and filmed earlier.
| Original Air Date | Title | Original Content | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| February 28, 1977 | Mardi Gras Special | ★ Special Guests: Buck Henry, Eric Idle, Penny Marshall, The New Leviathan Orchestra, Randy Newman, Cindy Williams, Henry Winkler ★ This episode aired on a Sunday during NBC's primetime schedule. It is also one of the shows to never be rerun since its original airing. | |
| March 2, 1985 | SNL Film Festival | Hosted by Billy Crystal | ★ Special Guests: Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert |
| September 24, 1989 | Saturday Night Live 15th Anniversary Special | A look back at the first 15 years | ★ Most former cast returned, except Eddie Murphy. ★ Chevy Chase stumbled through the audience with an enormous bowl of popcorn, then fell to open the special. |
| September 26, 1999 | Saturday Night Live 25th Anniversary Special | A look back at the first 25 years. | ★ Many former cast members returned and performed new material ★ Available on DVD ★ The Beastie Boys performed "Sabotage" on the show, only to be interrupted by Elvis Costello. In a callback to his performance in show #54, the musicians then perform "Radio Radio." |
| February 20, 2005 | Live from New York: The First 5 Years of Saturday Night Live | A look back at ''SNL's rise to popularity from 1975 to 1979 | ★ Many former cast and crew members returned to comment. ★ Aired Sunday night, from 9-11 P.M. ★ Showed clips from "Live from Mardi Gras", the first time ever since 1977. ★ Available on DVD ★ Nominated for an Emmy |
| November 5, 2005 | SNL Goes Commercial | Hosted by Will Ferrell, a look back at the funniest and most memorable commercial parodies from the past 30 years of SNL. | ★ Includes commercials removed from the repeats after original respective broadcasts. ★ The Ferrell footage was taped in 2000, then shelved for five years. |
| November 20, 2005 | Lost & Found: SNL in the '80s | A look back at ''SNL's rocky history in the 1980s, from Jean Doumanian's tenure as producer for the 1980-1981 season to Lorne Michaels' return as producer in 1985 (and the threats of cancellation due to Lorne's cast in the 1985-1986 season) | ★ Many former cast and crew members returned to comment. |
| April 29, 2006 | Saturday Night Live: The Best of Saturday TV Funhouse | Hosted by The Ambiguously Gay Duo, a look back at Robert Smigels' funniest and most memorable cartoons from the past 15 years of SNL. | ★ Includes cartoons removed from the repeats after original respective broadcasts. |
| May 5, 2007 | Saturday Night Live: Best of 06-07 | Retrospective of the 32nd season's most memorable sketches and Weekend Update jokes from episodes hosted by Alec Baldwin, Rainn Wilson, Peyton Manning, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Dane Cook, Jake Gyllenhaal, Hugh Laurie, Jamie Pressly, Matthew Fox, and Justin Timberlake. | ★ The Digital Short "Dick in a Box" (a.k.a "A Special Gift") was voted in as Best Digital Short. ★ The August 28th, 2007 rerun of this episode includes sketches from the episode hosted by Molly Shannon (and replaces Hugh Laurie's mention in the opening credits with Molly Shannon's, even though the only sketch from the Hugh Laurie/Beck episode shown was the "Bad Star-Spangled Banner Singer at the World Series" sketch). ★ This special has been released on DVD and available at Starbucks. The DVD version includes an uncut version of the SNL Digital Short, "Dick in a Box" and sketches that never appeared in the TV version (or were cut in the August rerun). |
| May 6, 2007 | Saturday Night Live in the '90s: Pop Culture Nation [7] | A Look back at ''SNL's raucous (and sometimes raunchy) moments of the 1990s, including musical performances from Nirvana, Beck, and the Barenaked Ladies, as well as memorable sketches such as Will Ferrell's Dog Show, John Goodman's monologue where several audience members, castmember Jimmy Fallon, and Lorne Michaels tell him that his episode is a rerun, and the musical cold opening from the season 17 Steve Martin Christmas episode called "Not Gonna Phone It In Tonight". Including segments such as "Norm vs. The Network" and "More Cowbell". | ★ Many former cast and crew members returned to comment. |
References
1. http://snlarc.jt.org/ep.php?i=199805028
2. LeBron James to host 'Saturday Night Live' Tom Withers
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