‘Saturday Night Live’ celebrates 50 years with comedy, music and show’s
many, many famous friends
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[February 17, 2025]
By ANDREW DALTON
Paul Simon and Sabrina Carpenter duetted on Simon's “Homeward Bound” to
open the show, five-decade “Saturday Night Live” luminary Steve Martin
delivered the monologue, and Paul McCartney gave an epic closing to a
50th anniversary special celebrating the sketch institution that was
overflowing with famous former cast members, superstar hosts and
legendary guests.
The 83-year-old Simon has been essential to “SNL” since its earliest
episodes in 1975, and told the 25-year-old pop sensation of the moment
Carpenter that he first performed “Homeward Bound” on “SNL” in 1976.
“I was not born then,” Carpenter said, getting a laugh. “And neither
were my parents,” she added, getting a bigger laugh.
McCartney closed with the rarely performed song cycle from the Beatles'
“Abbey Road," “Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End," with its
wistful ending, “the love you take, is equal to the love you make.”
Lil Wayne and Miley Cyrus were among the night's other musical guests,
though the show's musical legacy also had its own night with a Radio
City Music Hall concert on Friday.
“SNL50: The Anniversary Celebration" aired live from New York, of
course, on NBC and Peacock. The pop culture juggernaut has launched the
careers of generations of comedians including Eddie Murphy, Kristen Wiig
and Will Ferrell, who all appeared in early sketches.
And the evening included epic cameos that included Meryl Streep, Jack
Nicholson and Keith Richards.
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Steve Martin's opening sets tone for ‘SNL50,’ ‘Update’ keeps it rolling
Martin, one of the shows most prolific hosts and guests since the first
season in 1975, tried to keep it current in the monologue even on a
backward-looking night.
Martin said when the show's creator Lorne Michaels only told him he'd be
doing the monologue, “I was actually vacationing on a friend’s boat down
on the Gulf of Steve Martin.”
He was joined by former “SNL” luminaries and frequent hosts Martin Short
and John Mulaney, who looked at the star-studded crowd full of former
hosts in the same Studio 8H at 30 Rockefeller Plaza that has been the
show's longtime home.
“I see some of the most difficult people I have ever met in my entire
life," Mulaney said. “Over the course of 50 years, 894 people have
hosted ‘Saturday Night Live,’ and it amazes me that only two of them
have committed murder.”
Later, on the night's “Weekend Update,” anchor Colin Jost said there are
so many former hosts and musical guests that wanted to see the show that
many had to be seated in a neighboring studio and some had to watch
“from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn" as a photo of Sean
“Diddy” Combs appeared.
Martin took a jab at the always-difficult-to-wrangle Bill Murray in his
monologue.
“We wanted to make sure that Bill would be here tonight,” Martin said,
“so we didn’t invite him.”
Murray appeared on “Weekend Update” to rank the show's anchors since
they began with Chevy Chase. He poked at the whiteness of the group by
first ranking its Black anchors, a list of just one, current co-anchor
Michael Che.
The extravaganza came after months of celebrations of “Saturday Night
Live,” which premiered Oct. 11, 1975, with an original cast that
included John Belushi, Chase and Gilda Radner.
It’s become appointment television over the years as the show has
skewered presidents, politics and pop culture.
“It is a honor and a thrill to be hosting weekend update for the 50th
and if it was up to our president final season of SNL," Jost said.
The show had its typical ending, with all involved looking exhilarated
and exhausted on the studio stage. This night it was so crowded with
luminaries it looked like it might break. Led by Short, they all
applauded in tribute to Michaels, who created the show and has run it
for 45 of its 50 years.
Cameos and memorials
Alec Baldwin, the show's most frequent host with 17 stints, appeared to
introduce an evening of commercial parodies, seven months after his
trial was halted and an involuntary manslaughter charge was dropped in
the shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.
Aubrey Plaza made one of her first public appearances since the January
death of her husband when she introduced Cyrus and Howard's performance.
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The SNL50 logo is seen outside the Nasdaq Marketplace in New York's
Times Square, Friday, Feb. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz
Alvarez)
 The 87-year-old Nicholson was once a
constant in the front rows of the Oscars and Los Angeles Laker
games, but is rarely seen out anymore. He introduced his “Anger
Management” co-star Adam Sandler, who sang in his signature style
about the show’s history. He gave a roll-call of cast members,
giving special attention to several who have died, including his
friends Chris Farley and MacDonald along with Radner, Jan Hooks and
Phil Hartman.
It ended with, "six years of our boy Farley, five of our buddy
Norm."
The show didn't have a formal “in memoriam” section, though it
pretended to when 10-time host Tom Hanks came out somberly to mourn
“SNL characters and sketches that have aged horribly.”
A montage began with the late Belushi's “Samurai” character. The
word “Yikes” appeared on screen in a sketch that included Mike Myers
and a young Macaulay Culkin in a bathtub. A “body shaming” label
appeared over the beloved sketch of Farley and the late Patrick
Swayze as Chippendale's dancers, and “slut shaming” appeared over
one of the show's earliest, catchphrases, Dan Aykroyd saying “Jane,
you ignorant slut” to Jane Curtin. The current-day Aykroyd was a
notable absence.
The oldest former cast member, 88-year-old Garrett Morris, appeared
to introduce a film that showed the whole original cast.
“I had no idea y'all that I would be required to do so many reunion
shows,” he said.
Sketches and bits jam-packed with former cast and hosts
The first sketch featured a mash-up of former cast members and
hosts. Fred Armisen hosted a “Lawrence Welk Show” that featured
Ferrell as Robert Goulet.
Former hosts Kim Kardashian and Scarlett Johansson — Jost's wife —
gave an updated version of the elegant singing Maharelle Sisters
with former cast members Ana Gasteyer and Wiig, who provided the
traditional punchline “And I’m Dooneese” with a balding head and
creepy, tiny doll arms.
It was followed by “Black Jeopardy,” hosted by the show’s longest
running (and still current) cast member, Kenan Thompson, who called
the game show the only one “where every single viewer fully
understood Kendrick’s halftime performance.”
It showcased many of the show’s most prominent Black cast members
through the years including Tracy Morgan and Murphy, doing a Morgan
impression.
“Big Dog gonna make some big money!” Murphy-as-Morgan shouted.
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Streep walked on as the mother of McKinnon's constant alien abductee
Miss Rafferty, with the same spread legs and vulgar manner.
Streep's fellow all-time-great actor Robert De Niro paired with
Rachel Dratch in a “Debbie Downer” sketch with its traditional
trombone accompaniment.
Former cast member Amy Poehler and former lead writer Tina Fey, who
partnered as “Weekend Update” anchors, led a Q-and-A with audience
questions.
Ryan Reynolds stood, and they asked him how it's going.
“Great, why?” he said defensively. “What have you heard?”
Reynolds and wife Blake Lively, sitting next to him, have been
locked in a heated legal and media battle with her “It Ends With Us”
director and co-star Justin Baldoni.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Adam Driver, Cher, Bad Bunny, Peyton Manning
and Richards were also featured in the bit.
Poehler also paired with Rudolph for a revival of their mock talk
show “Bronx Beat,” that featured Mike Myers as his
mother-in-law-inspired, Streisand-loving character “Linda Richman.”
“Look at you, both of you, you look like buttah," Myers said.
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