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Why Lorne Michaels Would Allegedly Ban Chris Farley From ‘SNL' For 'Weeks at a Time'
Why Lorne Michaels Would Allegedly Ban Chris Farley From ‘SNL' For 'Weeks at a Time'

Yahoo

time04-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Why Lorne Michaels Would Allegedly Ban Chris Farley From ‘SNL' For 'Weeks at a Time'

During Chris Farley's time on Saturday Night Live, creator Lorne Michaels would allegedly ban the late actor-comedian for 'weeks at a time' to help him with his alcohol and drug use. Susan Morrison, the author of Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live, made a recent appearance on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast, where she opened up about Michaels changing his regulations on the sketch comedy show's cast's alcohol and drug use following John Belushi's overdose death in 1982. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'SNL': Sabrina Carpenter Joins Quinta Brunson to Honor "Shorties" Mike Myers Explains Origins of Recent Canadian Political Activism 'Saturday Night Live': Quinta Brunson, Walton Goggins, Scarlett Johansson Close Out Season 50 'When Belushi died, it really hit him hard,' she explained. 'And I think he felt like, oh my God, this whole approach of just letting people do their own thing on their own time, this was the wrong approach. We're a tribe, we're a group, and we have to look out for each other.' 'So by the time Chris Farley comes along, you know, 10 years later or whatever, from the beginning he clearly had addiction issues,' Morrison said, adding that Michaels would reportedly 'call him into his office and give him these talks about the drinking or the drugs.' She said Bob Odenkirk, who worked as a writer on SNL from 1987 to 1991, once told her that Farley 'would be excited to be called into' Michaels' office, despite it often being difficult conversations. 'It was like the kind of thrill of being in the principal's office, but at the same time, you're getting in trouble,' Morrison recalled. 'He couldn't metabolize it, but Lorne had really changed his approach. He would ban Farley from the show for weeks at a time if he was too fucked up. And he sent him to a series of really tough love rehab places. And obviously, it didn't do it for him.' Farley, who was a castmember on SNL from 1990 to 1995, died of a drug overdose in 1997. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise 'Yellowstone' and the Sprawling Dutton Family Tree, Explained

Lorne Michaels banned Chris Farley from ‘SNL' for weeks due to his ‘addiction issues,' author claims
Lorne Michaels banned Chris Farley from ‘SNL' for weeks due to his ‘addiction issues,' author claims

New York Post

time04-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

Lorne Michaels banned Chris Farley from ‘SNL' for weeks due to his ‘addiction issues,' author claims

King Lorne. Susan Morrison, author of the biography 'Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live,' recently appeared on Dax Shepard's 'Armchair Expert' podcast and explained how Lorne Michaels handled Chris Farley's struggles with drugs and alcohol on the 'SNL' set. Morrison recalled that Michaels, 80, went into overdrive to help Farley after original cast member John Belushi died of a drug overdose in 1982. Advertisement 10 Lorne Michaels at the 2024 Olympics in Paris, France. Corbis via Getty Images 10 Chris Farley at the 'Excess Baggage' premiere in 1997. WireImage 'When Belushi died, it really hit him hard,' Morrison shared. 'And I think he felt like this whole approach of just letting people do their own thing on their own time, this was the wrong approach. We're a tribe, we're a group, and we have to look out for each other.' Advertisement 'By the time Chris Farley comes along, ten years later or whatever, from the beginning he clearly had addiction issues,' Morrison continued. 'Lorne would call him into his office and give him these talks about the drinking or the drugs.' 10 Susan Morrison at 92NY in New York City on March 9, 2025. Getty Images 10 'Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live.' Amazon 10 Lorne Michaels, Chris Farley on 'SNL' in 1993. NBCUniversal via Getty Images Advertisement Morrison recalled that Bob Odenkirk, who was a writer on the sketch comedy series at the time, once told her that Farley 'would often be excited' about his meetings in Michaels' office. 'It was like the kind of thrill of being in the principal's office, but at the same time, you're getting in trouble,' the author said. 'He couldn't metabolize it, but Lorne had really changed his approach. He would ban Farley from the show for weeks at a time if he was too f—ed up. And he sent him to a series of really tough love rehab places.' 10 Lorne Michaels at SNL50: The Homecoming Concert in Feb. 2025. Evan Agostini/Invision/AP 'And obviously,' Morrison added, 'it didn't do it for him.' Advertisement Farley starred on 'SNL' from 1990 to 1995. He died of a drug overdose (cocaine and morphine) in 1997, just like Belushi. 10 Chris Farley, Victoria Jackson on 'SNL' in 1990. NBCUniversal via Getty Images 10 Chris Farley, Paul McCartney on 'SNL' in 1983. NBCUniversal via Getty Images In her book that came out in Feb., Morrison claimed that Farley was once 'suspended' from 'SNL' because of his addiction. 'After getting clean once and relapsing, he'd been suspended by Michaels, who sent him to a tough-­love rehab facility in Alabama,' Morrison wrote. 'Michaels knew that the show was what Farley liked best, so taking it away from him, he hoped, would make an impression.' 10 Lorne Michaels attends IMDb LIVE After the Emmys in 2017. Rich Polk Morrison also recalled when Farley returned to the NBC show in October 1997, just two months before his death. 'Farley's manager, Marc Gurvitz, had asked for the hosting gig as a favor: he thought that, for Farley, being back at 8H might have a stabilizing effect,' Morrison said in her book. 'Michaels agreed. The discipline and rigor of 'SNL,' he always believed, helped keep people straight.' Advertisement 10 Chris Farley attends the 'Happy Gilmore' premiere in 1996. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images On 'Armchair Expert,' Morrison said that Michaels has become 'pretty hands-on' in helping former cast members Pete Davidson and John Mulaney who have both struggled with addiction. 'They all talk about how Lorne is a really helpful person to talk to about it,' she explained. 'So I think that he definitely realized, 'Okay, I can play a role here.''

New book on ‘Saturday Night Live' creator Lorne Michaels touches on Chris Farley's time in Alabama trying to get clean
New book on ‘Saturday Night Live' creator Lorne Michaels touches on Chris Farley's time in Alabama trying to get clean

Yahoo

time05-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

New book on ‘Saturday Night Live' creator Lorne Michaels touches on Chris Farley's time in Alabama trying to get clean

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WIAT) — A new book on Lorne Michaels, creator and producer of the long-running variety show 'Saturday Night Live,' touches on one of the show's biggest stars going to Alabama in an attempt to get clean. In 'Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live,' author Susan Morrison writes about the television producer's life and his connection to the show he has, with the exception of a few years in the 80s, run since 1975 on NBC. Morrison, an articles editor at The New Yorker magazine, goes through many of the big stars who started on the show, from John Belushi to Bill Murray and Adam Sandler, but several pages are dedicated to Chris Farley, who appeared on the show for five seasons from 1990 to 1995, becoming one of its breakout stars. In one passage, Morrison discussed the first and only time he hosted the show on October 25, 1997, less than two months before he died from a heroin overdose at his apartment in Chicago. This would be the last time Michaels would see Farley alive. When Chris Farley went to 'the place in Alabama' to get sober 'He was in terrible shape then, too– drinking, taking drugs, even bringing a couple of of prostitutes up to the office,' Morrison wrote. Morrison used this episode to discuss how several years prior in 1992, Michaels had put Farley on leave from the show after discovering his drug use. 'Farley had struggled with heroin while he we on the show; after getting clean once and relapsing, he'd been suspended by Michaels, who sent him to a tough-love rehab facility in Alabama.' Although Morrison doesn't specifically mention the facility by name, it was later revealed to be the Mary Lee Zawadski Clinic, which operated in the basement of the Randolph County Hospital in Roanoke. 'He was a very kind, kind man and caring, very sweet,' founder Mary Lee Zawadski said in an interview with CBS 42 on the 25th anniversary of Farley's death. 'But Chris had little self-control. He was very impulsive. He could get in trouble.' Morrison said Michaels wanted to send Farley to rehab not only as a way to scare him straight, but to avoid past mistakes he had made with other cast mates who had died, such as Farley's comedic hero, John Belushi, who also died from a heroin overdose in 1980. Michaels knew that the show was what Farley liked best, so taking it away from him, he hoped, would make an impression,' she wrote. 'Since Belushi's squalid death, Michaels had rethought his approach to employees' drug problems. His former value system, he said, was 'As long as people showed up on time and did their job, it was nobody's business what they did in their bedroom or in their house. That value system turned out to be wrong. He'd tried much harder with Farley, but it wasn't enough.' Zawadski said the first time Farley went through her program, he and dedicated himself to staying sober. 'He followed directions, he did all his assignments, and he was very serious,' Zawadski said. 'He was a very serious recovering person at that time.' However, sobriety would not be a road Farley would stay on long, relapsing in 1997 and going back a second time. However, this time it didn't take. 'The second time he came back, he was totally different,' she said. 'He was an ass. He was arrogant,' Zawadski said. In her book, Morrison said Michaels and his children were on vacation in Aspen, Colorado when he received the news that Farley had died. Within a few days, he and many other SNL counterparts made their way to Madison, Wisconsin–Farley's hometown–for the funeral. 'In the the jammed pews, Chris Rock and and Adam Sandler were sobbing,' she wrote. For her part, Zawadski said Hollywood and fame proved to be too much for Farley to handle. 'Chris is someone, in my opinion, who should've worked at a bank or with people he could have fun with,' she said. 'Instead, he worked in a place that had no reality. LA is a place with no reality. He didn't know how to handle it. It was too much for him.' The book is available now. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

SNL turns 50! How Lorne Michaels made comedy cool again
SNL turns 50! How Lorne Michaels made comedy cool again

USA Today

time20-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

SNL turns 50! How Lorne Michaels made comedy cool again

SNL turns 50! How Lorne Michaels made comedy cool again | The Excerpt On a special episode (first released on February 19, 2025) of The Excerpt podcast: 50 years ago, a Canadian comedian named Lorne Michaels kicked off the first season of what would rapidly become a cultural institution. That show is SNL, aka Saturday Night Live, a mainstay of late-night entertainment. It's also the longest-running, most Emmy-nominated, and highest-rated weekly late-night show in television history. How has Michaels done it? Ten years ago, Susan Morrison, articles editor at The New Yorker, rolled up her sleeves to find out. Susan is the author of the newly released title 'Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live,' the definitive biography of SNL executive producer Lorne Michaels, and joins The Excerpt to share her insights. Hit play on the player below to hear the podcast and follow along with the transcript beneath it. This transcript was automatically generated, and then edited for clarity in its current form. There may be some differences between the audio and the text. Podcasts: True crime, in-depth interviews and more USA TODAY podcasts right here Chevy Chase: Live from New York, it's Saturday Night. Dana Taylor: Hello and welcome to The Excerpt. I'm Dana Taylor. Today is Wednesday, February 19th, 2025, and this is a special episode of The Excerpt. 50 years ago, a Canadian comedian named Lorne Michaels kicked off the first season of what would rapidly become a cultural institution. That show, of course, is SNL or Saturday Night Live, a mainstay of late-night entertainment. The show's well-earned reputation for poking fun at politicians and celebrities while pushing cultural boundaries has allowed it to stay relevant to varying degrees to multiple generations of Americans. Eddie Murphy: I just want to live in a house like yours, my friend. Maybe when there's nobody home, I'll break in. Dana Taylor: It's also the longest-running most Emmy-nominated and highest-rated weekly late-night show in television history. How has Michaels done it? 10 years ago, Susan Morrison, articles editor at The New Yorker, rolled up her sleeves to find out. Susan is the author of the newly released title, Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live, the definitive biography of SNL executive producer Lorne Michaels and joins us now to share her insights. Thanks for joining me on The Excerpt, Susan. Susan Morrison: Thank you for having me. It's fun to talk about Lorne. Dana Taylor: Lorne Michaels is famous for keeping to himself. When you first decided to write this biography, you resolved to do it even if he didn't give you direct access, which was likely, and then suddenly he opened his doors to you. Were you surprised and what do you think convinced him to let you in? Susan Morrison: Well, when I was thinking about writing this book, it was just after the 40th anniversary of the show and I realized that no one has had a bigger effect on what Americans think is funny than Lorne Michaels. It's an enormous influence on the culture. I knew Lorne a bit because I had worked for him briefly in the '80s when he was doing his one spectacular public flop, which was a comedy hour in prime time called The New Show. And then I went to see him in his office, and as I said, we knew each other. We had seen each other every few years since the '80s. So when I showed up there and I said, "Listen, I'm going to write this book about you. I don't need anything from you because you know I'm conversant in your world, but if you wanted to participate and talk to me, it would be a richer, better book and your legacy deserves this kind of a thing." SNL turns 50! How Lorne Michaels made comedy cool again. In the decades since its creation, SNL has become a cultural institution for American comedy. And he looked stricken at first because, as you say, he's a very private man and for 40 years he had pretty much stayed behind the curtain like the Wizard of Oz. And he said he'd think about it. And then within a couple of days we were sitting having a drink and he was just unspooling his many, many stories. He's a great talker, which is the best thing that you can have as a journalist. And I have a couple of theories as to why he decided to throw in with me. One is that after the 40th, he was really starting to be aware of his legacy. There were a lot of important people from the show's early days who had died, who were not there. There was no Gilda Radner, no Phil Hartman, no Chris Farley, and I think he sensed that the situation could even be worse by the time of the 50th. He was realizing the time was marching on. He also knew me a bit. He respected me as a journalist for The New Yorker, which is a magazine he reads and likes, and I think he thought if a biography was going to be inflicted upon him, better it be written by me than some entertainment biz hustler who was going to turn it around in a year. I don't think either one of us realized that it would take me 10 years, but it did because I have a rather absorbing day job. Dana Taylor: You wrote that when Lorne Michaels originally envisioned the show, he told NBC executives that he wanted to do a show that looked as if quote "a bunch of kids sneaked into a studio after all the adults went home" unquote. What did he share with you about his initial vision for the show? Susan Morrison: Well, Lorne had been working in Hollywood for almost 10 years, bouncing around between very bland, middle-of-the-road, almost plasticky variety shows. So Lorne realized that when he was working for shows hosted by people like Perry Como and Phyllis Diller, that television at that time was stuck in a real backwater. He was always the youngest guy on the writing staff. Most of the people there were in their 50s and 60s. They had begun in radio, which was close to vaudeville, and he noticed that the rest of the culture, the movies, there were huge groundbreaking movies being put out by everyone from Scorsese to Robert Altman to Terrence Malick and music. It was rock and roll. It was David Bowie and The Stones, but somehow television was stuck a generation behind. It was stuck in the '50s. So his rather groundbreaking idea was to take this old format and bring it up to date by letting it be written and performed by people of his generation, what he called the TV generation. They were the first generation to have grown up with television all around them. Aside from it being programmed and acted by the kids after the grownups went home, the content would be different. TV would be a big target of their satire. They made fun of game shows and news shows and sitcoms and soap operas. And also the thing that distinguished what Lorne wanted to do is he wanted to put the stuff of his people's real lives on television. He wanted there to be sketches about your pot dealer and complicated sex and drugs, rock and rolls relationships, and the fact that everyone got mugged in New York City every other day in the '70s. It was a really a far cry from what you were seeing on the Donnie and Marie show. Dana Taylor: The original cast of SNL was full of comedic actors who went on to become huge stars, including Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, and Jane Curtin. Later on, there was Eddie Murphy, Tina Fey, and Maya Rudolph among many, many others. The list of superstars who made their names on the show is huge. How did and how does Michaels' adjust to the ongoing defection of talent? Susan Morrison: Well, Lorne likes to say that he's the world expert in what happens to people when they get famous. It's happened to him so many times. But what's interesting about the fact that he has turned out to be such a star maker and the show has produced so many stars is that in the beginning, that was the farthest thing from his intention. He hired people who were complete unknowns. They had never been on television. He didn't want anybody who had been on television. He was more interested in hiring people who had a little bit of theater experience. He always said that he had one foot in the theater. And he envisioned this troupe of the not ready for prime time players as always being background characters. So toward the middle of the first season of the show, Chevy Chase became a breakout star. He was on the cover of New York Magazine, and I think the headline was, "I'm Chevy Chase and You're Not. Chevy Chase is the heir apparent to Johnny Carson." This really threw Lorne. He had no idea that a star would emerge from his show. And in fact, it threatened his show. Once Chevy was getting movie offers and on the phone with the coast all the time, it really disrupted the ecology of the show. Everybody was like, "Wait a minute. He's the star. What am I? Chopped liver?" And it introduced an element of competition into the family feeling of the show. A couple of years later, Belushi left after Animal House. Then Dan Aykroyd left because he wanted to make the Blues Brothers movie. And he started to recognize that that was going to be the permanent state of this show, that over all the decades people would come, they would be green and grateful, and then they would develop and the phrase he uses a lot is, "They would build a bridge strong enough that they could walk across it and move on to the next thing." He realized that like New York City, which is the show's home, SNL exists to be in a permanent state of flux. Buildings will come down, new buildings will go up in the same way the cast has to remake itself again and again like a phoenix rising from the ashes. Dana Taylor: I'm picturing the SNL studio surrounded by scaffolding, which is what I think of when I think of New York City. Susan Morrison: Exactly. Dana Taylor: In the book, you chronicle how each week's show comes together beginning with Monday and ending with a 90-minute, somewhat magic window of time between the dress rehearsal and the live show when it all comes together. Tell me about that. Susan Morrison: It's so fascinating to be actually at the show every day of the week because each day has its own particular set of tasks and imperatives. And Monday starts, it's very mellow. Everyone is just getting to know the host, trying to make the host feel, "It's going to be fine. This is going to be scary. Everybody has your back." But day by day, the tension ratchets up. It's almost like The Hunger Games, if you think about it. On Wednesday, they read four hours worth of comedy sketches, but everybody in the room knows that by Saturday Night, they're only going to be seven or eight left. And what's interesting about watching Lorne is that he is very attentive to everybody else's opinion all during the week. He listens to what everybody says, what everyone's opinion is. In fact, I've seen him have a little sheet of paper at a meeting and gently tick off people's names as they've spoken because he wants to hear from everybody. And what happens on Saturday, it's almost like Superman coming out of a phone booth, that all changes after dress rehearsal. Lorne is the decider. He is in charge. He has sat through the dress rehearsal in a little foxhole, a dim space under the audience bleachers where he watches the dress rehearsal on a monitor, and he takes it all in. It's like he has 10 eyes and 15 ears and barks changes and commands and orders, and "That lighting cue is off. You cut to the door. That wig is starring in the sketch. The sweater is too dowdy. She's too loud here." And assistants are writing it all down. And all of that is then brought in front of the whole cast and everybody, it's the most intense... You feel like you're at a NASA liftoff. It's an emergency room. And that is his secret sauce. That's his superpower that he can stand there between 10:30 and 11:30 and really remake the show. I think it's that adrenaline and the fact that it's live that makes it different from anything else that you see on television. There are no second chances. Dana Taylor: The show is known for what you've called its blistering political satire, and both Republicans and Democrats have seen themselves lampooned on a regular basis. How does Michaels think about the show's impact on how Americans see politics? Susan Morrison: Well, he's always felt that what the show's obligation was was to speak truth to power and to needle whoever it is who's in office. The first season, Dan Aykroyd did a hilarious Jimmy Carter impersonation, and probably the most well-known sketch featuring him was Carter in his call-in radio show talking a caller down from a bad acid trip, which is so incredibly funny. Of course, they did Bill Clinton, they did Obama. Sometimes I think he feels pressure from outsiders and sometimes even from his young cast members for the show to really function as an arm of the Democratic party. But that's not what he's doing. He's going for where the laughs are. If Bill Clinton is funny, I'm thinking of Daryl Hammond as Clinton making a secret service jog past and into a McDonald's, then that's where he is going to go. It's a challenge now that we're living in a time when I think almost all of his young staff feel like we're in a cataclysmic moment where our system of government could turn into a monarchy. And there's a real pressure from within the show to really hammer on Donald Trump, and they certainly have hammered on him. A lot of different performers have played him ably. He will always tell whoever's playing Trump to give him a spark of charm. And that's not because he wants to rehabilitate Trump in anyone's eyes. He doesn't want people to see Trump as a better leader because God knows, we all know that is not what he is, but it's about show business, which is what the show is at the core. Lorne knows that, and every person who's ever written a James Bond movie knows that you want to make the villain engaging in some way. You want to give him a little bit of oily charm. Think of Blofeld in Goldfinger or think of Alan Rickman in the Die Hard movies. If you just make them purely repellent. I mean, we see Donald Trump on the news enough. If you make them just purely repellent, people are going to want to turn off the television. You have to make it entertainment, and one of the things he likes to say is that "idiots play, assholes don't." And what he means is that they play to the crowd. They engage the audience. So I don't know if that answers your question, but he never forgets the fact that what he's doing is an entertainment show. It's comedy. He distinguishes what he does from what he thinks, I think, the Daily Show does, or say Samantha Bee, when she had her show. And those people were funny and they certainly put funny stuff on the air, but you get the sense as a viewer that the main mover was politics. Dana Taylor: Susan's book, Lorne is on bookshelves now. Susan, thanks for being on The Excerpt. Susan Morrison: Thank you very much. This was fun. Dana Taylor: Thanks to our senior producers, Shannon Rae Green and Kaely Monahan for their production assistance. Our executive producer is Laura Beatty. Let us know what you think of this episode by sending a note to podcasts@ Thanks for listening. I'm Dana Taylor. Taylor Wilson will be back tomorrow morning with another episode of The Excerpt.

Looking back at 50 years of "Saturday Night Live"
Looking back at 50 years of "Saturday Night Live"

Yahoo

time16-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Looking back at 50 years of "Saturday Night Live"

On October 11, 1975, people tuning into the debut of a late-night comedy show saw something unlike any TV variety extravaganza they'd ever seen. Fifty years later, "Saturday Night Live," produced almost continuously by Lorne Michaels, is now an entrenched part of pop culture – 90 minutes of live comedy sketches, commercial parodies and musical acts, headlined by a different celebrity host each week. Correspondent Mo Rocca talks with former cast members Rachel Dratch and Fred Armisen, writers Alan Zweibel and Paula Pell, and with Susan Morrison, author of "Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live," about the creation of a television landmark.

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