Jason Reitman’s ‘SNL’ movie is now titled ‘Saturday Night’.
Dylan O’Brien, Lamorne Morris and Cooper Hoffman are among the cast.
The film has now landed an October release date.
Jason Reitman might have been busy of late either co-writing and directing (in the case of ‘Afterlife’) or co-writing and producing (on ‘Frozen Empire’) the continuation of his father Ivan’s much-loved ‘Ghostbusters’ franchise.
Yet he’s also found time to work on another passion project, a chronicle of the tough birth of long-running (the series’ 50th season kicks off in the fall) sketch show ‘Saturday Night Live’.
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With a script by Reitman and his regular ‘Ghostbusters’ collaborator Gil Kenan, he’s been wrapped filming for a while on the movie, now titled ‘Saturday Night’, and Sony has handed down an October release date for what is expected to start its run at festivals and –– depending on critical reaction –– could be taking aim at the awards season.
(L to R) Laraine Newman, John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris and Chevy Chase on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ Photo: NBC.
On October 11, 1975, a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television forever. ‘Saturday Night’ is the true story of what happened behind the scenes that night in the moments leading up to the first broadcast of NBC’s ‘SNL’. It depicts the chaos and magic of a revolution that almost wasn’t, counting down the minutes in real time to the infamous words, “Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night!”
The screenplay is based on an extensive series of interviews conducted by Reitman and Kenan with all the living cast, writers and crew.
Who is starring in ‘Saturday Night’?
(Left) Lamorne Morris in ‘Fargo’ Season 5. Photo: FX. (Center) Dylan O’Brien in ‘American Assassin.’ Photo: Lionsgate. (Left) Cory Michael Smith in ‘Gotham.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Television.
There are also those behind the scenes of ‘Saturday Night Live’, with Gabriel LaBelle playing Lorne Michaels, the legendary creator and producer of the show whose eye for talent has led to careers for a host of people, with Hoffman as Dick Ebersol, an ambitious NBC executive who helped shepherd the show to air.
Rachel Sennott will be Rosie Shuster, a Canadian comedy writer and actor who was married to Michaels at the time and worked on the show.
Finally, we have Willem Dafoe as David Tebet, Vice President of Talent Relations at NBC, and because it surely wouldn’t be a Reitman movie without him, J.K. Simmons as Milton Berle, who had a famously awful one-night stint as host and ended up banned from the show (though that was in 1979, so it remains to be seen how he ties into the movie’s story of the first night).
When will ‘Saturday Night’ be in theaters?
Sony, which produced the new movie, has now set an October 11th release for ‘Saturday Night’ via its Columbia Pictures arm. There is already talk that it could premiere at the Toronto Film Festival. And that release, as you might have noticed from its mention in the earlier section, is the same day as the first episode of ‘SNL’ itself. Fitting!
(L to R) Jason Reitman and Ivan Reitman at Premiere of ‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife.’ Photo Courtesy of Reuters.
Will Forte in ‘MacGruber.’ Photo: Universal Pictures.
Preview:
Will Forte is the latest addition to Tina Fey’s ‘The Four Seasons’.
The new show adapts the 1981 Alan Alda comedy movie.
Steve Carell and Colman Domingo are also in the cast.
Having just appeared on a Netflix series (mystery comedy thriller ‘Bodkin’ about podcasters digging into a suspicious death), ‘Saturday Night Live’ veteran Will Forte is sticking with the streaming service for an upcoming project.
He’s the latest addition to former ‘SNL’ castmate Tina Fey’s latest comedy series, ‘The Four Seasons’ which will be based on a 1980s movie.
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What was the story of ‘The Four Seasons’?
(L to R) Carol Burnett and Alan Alda in ‘The Four Seasons’. Photo: Universal Pictures.
Written and directed by Alan Alda (who starred alongside Carol Burnett), the 1981 comedy also starred Rita Moreno, Sandy Dennis, and Len Cariou. It followed three married couples who take vacations together each season, but things are thrown for a loop when one of the husbands leaves his wife and begins bringing a younger woman with him.
Who is starring in ‘The Four Seasons’?
Steve Carell in ‘The 40-Year-Old Virgin’. Photo: Universal Pictures.
While it might have expected to end up at somewhere like Peacock (given that it’ll be produced by Universal Television), the project became the subject of a bidding war that Netflix won. The company is also not that much of a surprise, since it also carried Fey’s ‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’ when NBC turned it down and rescued ‘Girls5Eva’ from cancellation at Peacock for its third season, which launched recently.
And because he made the movie, Alda gets an executive producer credit alongside Marissa Bregman, daughter of the film’s producer, Martin Bregman.
Netflix has ordered eight episodes of the series, and the cameras should be rolling later this year.
(Left) Paul Walter Hauser in Netflix’s ‘Coba Kai’ season 5. (Right) Chris Farley in ‘Tommy Boy.’ Photo: Paramount Pictures.
Preview:
Paul Walter Hauser to is to play Chris Farley for a new biopic.
Josh Gad is directing a movie based on a biography co-written by Farley’s brother.
Saturday Night Live boss Lorne Michaels will produce the movie.
While many comedians and movie actors have been given the biopic treatment (though the current trend has been for musicians), it’s finally time for Saturday Night Live veteran Chris Farley to get his due.
And there’s a package deal coming together that includes the adaptation of a biography co-written by his brother (with the family giving their blessing for the project), actor Josh Gad turning director for the movie and Paul Walter Hauser starring as Farley.
(L to R) Chris Farley and David Spade in ‘Tommy Boy.’ Photo: Paramount Pictures.
Hailed as one of the greatest comic actors of his generation and has a tragic story that seems ideally suited to biopic treatment.
Born in Madison, Wisconsin in 1964, he graduated from Marquette University in 1986, with a double major in communications and theater. At Marquette, he played rugby union and discovered a love of comedy. Though he’d then go to work at the same oil company as his father, his love of performing never left him, and he began to study improv comedy.
That, in turn led him to legendary Chicago improv group Second City, where he started the same day as Stephen Colbert. From there, he was recruited by Lorne Michaels for ‘Saturday Night Live’.
He joined an all-time ensemble of ‘SNL’ greats including Adam Sandler, David Spade, Chris Rock, Rob Schneider and Norm Macdonald. From the start, Farley stood out with his amazing physical comedy, delivering iconic sketches like his ‘Van Down by the River’ performances as motivational speaker Matt Foley or trying out as a Chippendales dancer with Patrick Swayze that live in SNL lore.
His success on the show would translate over to the big screen, where Farley soon would join the A-list of ’90s comedians with such hit films as ‘Tommy Boy’, ‘Black Sheep’ and ‘Beverly Hills Ninja’.
But he also struggled with the addiction issues common to great comics: after being sober for three years, he would relapse and fall back in to drugs and alcohol, dying from an overdose in 1997 at 33. His death shocked the industry and his peers.
What will the biopic draw from?
(L to R) Kaley Cuoco, Kevin Hart and Josh Gad in ‘The Wedding Ringer’. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
The new movie will have a script by ‘500 Days of Summer’s Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber, who will work from biography ‘The Chris Farley Show: A Biography in Three Acts’, written by Farley’s brother Tom Farley Jr. and Tanner Colby.
Josh Gad, best known for voicing Olaf in Disney’s ‘Frozen’ franchise and appearing in the live-action ‘Beauty and the Beast’ as LeFou. He’s produced several movies, but this would be his directorial debut.
Who is Paul Walter Hauser?
Paul Walter Hauser stars in ‘Black Bird,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.
Hauser is probably best known for films including ‘I, Tonya’ and ‘Richard Jewell’, and for TV series such as ‘Cobra Kai’ and the Apple TV+ miniseries ‘Black Bird’, which won him an Emmy and a Golden Globe.
Next up, he’ll be heard as one of the new voices in ‘Inside Out 2’, playing the emotion character Embarrassing.
Chris Farley in ‘Tommy Boy.’ Photo: Paramount Pictures.
Other Movies Similar to ‘Untitled Chris Farley Biopic’:
(Left) Lamorne Morris in ‘Fargo’ Season 5. Photo: FX. (Center) Dylan O’Brien in ‘American Assassin.’ Photo: Lionsgate. (Left) Cory Michael Smith in ‘Gotham.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Television.
Preview:
Jason Reitman is making a movie about ‘SNL’s origins.
Dylan O’Brien, Lamorne Morris and Cory Michael Smith are among the latest additions.
The actors will play ‘SNL’ comedy legends such as Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase.
While Jason Reitman and Gil Kenan have largely focused their energies on creating new ‘Ghostbusters’ movies (their latest, ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’, hits theaters in March), they’ve also quietly been at work on writing a new movie that will look at the fraught first night broadcast of ‘Saturday Night Live’.
With Kenan having taken directorial duties on ‘Frozen Empire’, that has freed Reitman up to develop and prepare to direct ‘SNL 1975’, which is set behind the scenes of the televisual comedy institution.
(L to R) Laraine Newman, John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris and Chevy Chase on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ Photo: NBC.
On October 11, 1975, a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television forever. ‘SNL 1975’ is the true story of what happened behind the scenes that night in the moments leading up to the first broadcast of NBC’s SNL. It depicts the chaos and magic of a revolution that almost wasn’t, counting down the minutes in real time to the infamous words, “Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night!”
The screenplay is based on an extensive series of interviews conducted by Reitman and Kenan with all the living cast, writers and crew.
(Left) Gabriel LaBelle in ‘The Fabelmans.’ Photo: Universal Pictures. (Left Center) Kim Matula in ‘Checkin it Twice.’ Photo: Hallmark Channel. (Right Center) Ella Hunt in ‘Anna and the Apocalypse.’ Photo: Vertigo Releasing. (Right) Cooper Hoffman in ‘Licorice Pizza.’ Photo: United Artists Releasing.
There are also those behind the scenes of ‘Saturday Night Live’, with Gabriel LaBelle playing Lorne Michaels, the legendary creator and producer of the show whose eye for talent has led to careers for a host of people, with Cooper Hoffman as Dick Ebersol, an ambitious NBC executive who helped shepherd the show to air.
Finally –– at least for now –– is Rachel Sennott, who will be Rosie Shuster, a Canadian comedy writer and actor who was married to Michaels at the time and worked on the show.
When will ‘SNL 1975’ be in theaters?
Sony is backing the new movie, but the studio has yet to confirm a release date, and Reitman is still in pre-production. ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’, meanwhile, will be in theaters on March 22nd.
(L to R) Jason Reitman and Ivan Reitman at Premiere of ‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife.’ Photo Courtesy of Reuters.
But Fey’s most beloved movie is probably 2004’s ‘Mean Girls,’ which she wrote and co-starred in as Ms. Norbury. The popular movie spawned a Broadway musical and the big screen adaption of said musical, 2024’s ‘Mean Girls,’ which was also written by Fey and features her return as Ms. Norbury, opens in theaters on January 12th.
In honor of the new musical remake, Moviefone is counting down the 15 best movies of Tina Fey’s career, including her latest.
Celebrated sleuth Hercule Poirot (Kenneth Branagh), now retired and living in self-imposed exile in Venice, reluctantly attends a Halloween séance at a decaying, haunted palazzo. When one of the guests is murdered, the detective is thrust into a sinister world of shadows and secrets.
Bumbling supervillain Megamind (Will Ferrell) finally defeats his nemesis, the superhero Metro Man (Brad Pitt). But without a hero, he loses all purpose and must find new meaning to his life.
The Muppets in 2014’s ‘Muppets Most Wanted.’ Photo courtesy of Disney.
While on a grand world tour, The Muppets find themselves wrapped into an European jewel-heist caper headed by a Kermit the Frog look-alike and his dastardly sidekick.
Straitlaced Princeton University admissions officer, Portia Nathan (Fey) is caught off-guard when she makes a recruiting visit to an alternative high school overseen by her former college classmate, the freewheeling John Pressman (Paul Rudd). Pressman has surmised that Jeremiah (Nat Wolff), his gifted yet very unconventional student, might well be the son that Portia secretly gave up for adoption many years ago.
Phil (Steve Carrell) and Claire Foster (Fey) fear that their mild-mannered relationship may be falling into a stale rut. During their weekly date night, their dinner reservation leads to their being mistaken for a couple of thieves—and now a number of unsavoury characters want Phil and Claire killed.
A successful, single businesswoman (Fey) who dreams of having a baby discovers she is infertile and hires a working class woman (Amy Poehler) to be her unlikely surrogate.
When their father passes away, four grown (Fey, Jason Bateman, Corey Stoll and Adam Driver), world-weary siblings return to their childhood home and are requested — with an admonition — to stay there together for a week, along with their free-speaking mother (Jane Fonda) and a collection of spouses, exes and might-have-beens. As the brothers and sisters re-examine their shared history and the status of each tattered relationship among those who know and love them best, they reconnect in hysterically funny and emotionally significant ways.
New student Cady Heron (Angourie Rice) is welcomed into the top of the social food chain by the elite group of popular girls called ‘The Plastics,’ ruled by the conniving queen bee Regina George (Reneé Rapp) and her minions Gretchen (Bebe Wood) and Karen (Avantika). However, when Cady makes the major misstep of falling for Regina’s ex-boyfriend Aaron Samuels, she finds herself prey in Regina’s crosshairs. As Cady sets to take down the group’s apex predator with the help of her outcast friends Janis and Damian, she must learn how to stay true to herself while navigating the most cutthroat jungle of all: high school.
Joe Gardner (Jamie Foxx) is a middle school teacher with a love for jazz music. After a successful audition at the Half Note Club, he suddenly gets into an accident that separates his soul from his body and is transported to the You Seminar, a center in which souls develop and gain passions before being transported to a newborn child. Joe must enlist help from the other souls-in-training, like 22 (Fey), a soul who has spent eons in the You Seminar, in order to get back to Earth.
In 2002, cable news producer Kim Barker (Fey) decides to shake up her routine by taking a daring new assignment in Kabul, Afghanistan. Dislodged from her comfortable American lifestyle, Barker finds herself in the middle of an out-of-control war zone. Luckily, she meets Tanya Vanderpoel (Margot Robbie), a fellow journalist who takes the shell-shocked reporter under her wing. Amid the militants, warlords and nighttime partying, Barker discovers the key to becoming a successful correspondent.
(L to R) Lindsay Lohan, Amanda Seyfried, Rachel McAdams and Lacey Chabert in 2004’s ‘Mean Girls.’ Photo: Paramount Pictures.
Cady Heron (Lindsay Lohan) is a hit with The Plastics, the A-list girl clique at her new school, until she makes the mistake of falling for Aaron Samuels (Jonathan Bennett), the ex-boyfriend of alpha Plastic Regina George (Rachel McAdams).
(L to R) Alison Brie and Chevy Chase in ‘Community.’ Photo courtesy of NBC.com.
Even at the height of his ‘Saturday Night Live’ fame and comedy movie star status, Chevy Chase had the reputation of being an outspoken, difficult person.
Yet his proven comic talent on the comedy show, and his cinema work meant that he came across as more of a tricky star dealing with the pressures of fame.
These days, however, he’s more seen as an angry old man, spouting off about past work and claiming that he was better than the likes of ‘Community’, on which he starred as part of the ensemble for 85 episodes between 2010 and 2013.
Speaking to ‘WTF’ podcast host Marc Maron on a recent episode of the show, Chase laid into the show.
Chevy Chase in ‘Community.’ Photo courtesy of NBC.com.
For four seasons on the show, Chase played Pierce Hawthorne, a former moist towelette tycoon who was at one time the C.E.O of Hawthorne Wipes. He enrolled in Greendale Community College to expand his horizons.
Chase shared the screen with the likes of Donald Glover, Joel McHale and Danny Pudi, and was frequently criticized for his rude behavior, including making racial comments during a heated disagreement with series creator Dan Harmon over his character. He eventually departed the show at the end of the fourth season.
On the subject of the show, Chase said this:
“I honestly felt the show wasn’t funny enough for me, ultimately. I felt a little bit constrained. Everybody had their bits, and I thought they were all good. It just wasn’t hard-hitting enough for me.”
And about his character?
“I didn’t mind the character. I just felt that it was… I felt happier being alone. I just didn’t want to be surrounded by that table, every day, with those people. It was too much.”
Asked how he felt when his former ‘Community’ collaborators made negative comments about his on-set behavior, Chase doubled down:
“I guess you’d have to ask them. I don’t give a crap! I am who I am. And I like where — who I am. I don’t care. And it’s part of me that I don’t care. And I’ve thought about that a lot. And I don’t know what to tell you, man. I just don’t care.”
Previous Chase comments
Cast of ‘Community.’ Photo courtesy of NBC.com.
This is far from the first time that the outspoken Chase has gone on the offensive.
“First of all, between you and me and a lamppost, jeez, I don’t want to put down Lorne (Michaels, ‘SNL’ boss) or the cast. But I’ll just say, maybe off the record, I’m amazed that Lorne has gone so low. I had to watch a little of it, and I just couldn’t f*****g believe it. That means a whole generation of s**theads laughs at the worst f*****g humor in the world.”
For a man who claims he doesn’t want to speak badly of anyone, he certainly spends a lot of time doing just that…
Richard Belzer as John Munch on NBC’s ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.’
Many actors dislike the idea of becoming known for one role that ends up dominating their career, but Richard Belzer happily leaned into the idea of portraying cynical, deadpan Detective John Munch, who originated on TV cop drama ‘Homicide: Life on the Street’. It’s the part for which he will forever be remembered now that Belzer has died at the age of 78.
Who was Richard Belzer?
Richard Jay Belzer was born on Aug. 4, 1944, in Bridgeport, Connecticut. His early life was colored by his abusive mother and a lot of tragedy in his life––his mother died of breast cancer and his father first attempted suicide (Belzer found and saved him) and then killed himself a year later. Belzer’s brother also died years later by suicide after the death of his own wife.
Belzer showed an early penchant for comedy, getting in trouble as a class clown, and was expelled from Massachusetts’ Dean Junior College for organizing on-campus protests. A series of odd jobs followed, including census taker, dock worker and jewelry salesman. After that, he pursued a career as a journalist and worked for The Bridgeport Post newspaper.
Yet the tragedy in his family pushed him back towards exploring his comedic side, and he ended up part of anarchic, satirical comedy troupe Channel one, which spoofed TV conventions. The theatrical show, ‘The Groove Tube’ would go on to spawn a movie, which also featured the debut of Chevy Chase.
Success there led Belzer to become a regular on the stand-up circuit and he also landed a job as the warm-up comedian for the first season of ‘Saturday Night Live’.
Richard Belzer as John Munch on NBC’s ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.’
What happened between Richard Belzer and Hulk Hogan?
One more infamous gig was hosting short-lived Lifetime talk show ‘Hot Properties’ where an encounter with guest Hulk Hogan in 1985 left Belzer unconscious and bleeding on the floor after Hogan put him in a front chin lock and dropped him.
Belzer sued Hogan, Mr. T (who was also in the show), Vince McMahon and the World Wrestling Federation for $5 million and received a reported $400,0000 in a 1990 settlement, which he said he used for a down payment on a house in France.
Yet it was TV where Belzer really found his calling. Cast as John Munch in ‘Homicide’, he played the character for its entire run of seven seasons and then enquired about bringing him over to ‘Law & Order’. Producer Dick Wolf instead slotted the character into that show’s spin-off, ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’.
Munch became a beloved TV character, and showed in 10 different series across five networks, including ‘The X-Files’, ‘The Beat’, ‘The Wire’, spoofing him gently on ‘Arrested Development’, ‘30 Rock’ and ‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’.
“I never asked anyone to be on their show. So it’s doubly flattering to me to see me depicted in a script and that I’m so recognizable and lovable as the sarcastic detective and smart-ass,” Belzer told The Comic’s Comic in 2008. “Much to my delight, because he is a great character for me to play, it’s fun for me. So I’m not upset about being typecast at all.”
Belzer, who died at his home in Bozouls in southwest France, also kept things dryly funny to the end, according to friend Bill Scheft. “He had lots of health issues, and his last words were, ‘F**k you, motherf**ker.’”
(L to R) Yaphet Kotto as Lieutenant Al Giardello, Melissa Leo as Detective/Sergeant Kay Howard, Clark Johnson as Detective Meldrick Lewis, Reed Diamond as Detective Mike Kellerman, Andre Braugher as Detective Frank Pembleton, Kyle Secor as Detective Tim Bayliss, Richard Belzer as Detective John Munch, Michelle Forbes as Dr. Julianna Cox, and Max Perlich as J.H. Brodie in NBC’s ‘Homicide: Life on the Street.’
The first woman to co-anchor a network evening newscast and the creator of ‘The View,’ Barbara Walters has died at the age of 93.
A television fixture since the early ‘60s, when she began writing and producing NBC’s ‘Today,’ Walters became the first woman to front a network morning news show, when she became co-host of ‘Today’ in 1974. Two years later, she was paid one million dollars per year to co-host ‘ABC Evening News’ alongside Harry Reasoner. Though her tenure on the show was brief, Walters launched the first of her ‘The Barbara Walters Specials’ that same year, interviewing such politicians and celebrities as Jimmy Carter, Barbra Streisand, and Muhammad Ali.
From 1979 to 2004, Walters produced and co-hosted ABC’s newsmagazine ‘20/20.’ Known for her interviews with high-profile figures who rarely gave them – and a distinctive vocal style that was memorably parodied on ‘Saturday Night Live’ by Gilda Radner – Walters interviewed every sitting U.S. President, as well as world figures like Fidel Castro, Anwar Sadat, and Vladimir Putin. Her countless celebrity interviews were featured in her annual ABC special ‘Barbara Walters’ 10 Most Fascinating People.’
Gilda Radner as Barbara Walters on ‘Saturday Night Live.’
Today’s TV audiences may know Walters best as the creator, producer, and co-host of ‘The View,’ on which she appeared from 1997 until her retirement in 2014. After retiring, Walters continued to appear on ‘20/20’ and hosted the documentary series ‘Investigation Discovery.’
According to Deadline, Walters “is survived by a daughter, Jacqueline ‘Jackie’ Danforth, with her second husband Lee Guber, a producer with whom she was married in 1963 and divorced in 1976. Walters’ first marriage, to Robert Henry Katz in 1955, was annulled two years later. Walters also was married twice to real estate developer and producer Merv Adelson, divorcing for the second time in 1992.”
Two tribute specials honoring Walters are now available to watch on Hulu: ABC’s ‘Our Barbara: A Special Edition of 2020’ and ABC News Live’s ‘The View Honors Barbara Walters.’
The groundbreaking 1992 comedy ‘Wayne’s World,’ which was based on the popular Saturday Night Live sketch and released a Limited-Edition Blu-ray Steelbook on February 1st, celebrates its 30th anniversary this month.
Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Penelope Spheeris about the 30th anniversary of ‘Wayne’s World.’ She discussed how her previous work prepared her to direct the movie, working with Mike Myers and Dana Carvey, the iconic “Bohemian Rhapsody” scene, Alice Cooper’s special request, casting the late great Meat Loaf, and more.
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You can read the full interview below or watch a video of the interview above.
Moviefone: As a filmmaker, what is it like for you to see that ‘Wayne’s World’ is still as beloved and relevant today as it was when it was first released 30 years ago?
Penelope Spheeris: It’s actually kind of indescribable how it feels. I wish I had good words to describe how I feel that 30 years later people care about the movie and love the movie as much as they do. I feel really, really lucky for that. And really grateful that I was there at the right time, in the right place and with the right people. But honestly, I don’t like to wallow in the glory of anything, but it’s just astonishing that people still care about this movie.
MF: You can you take us back 30 years and talk about how you became the director of ‘Wayne’s World?’
PS: My agent sent me the script and said, “They’re looking for a director for this Saturday Night Live skit, and it’s over at Paramount”. I was like, “You mean I might be able to get my foot in the studio door? That would be cool.” So, I read the script and then I had to go to five different meetings. Then I had to meet with Mike, and then I had to jump through a hoop and balance a beach ball on my nose, and crawl on my belly like a reptile.
I had to do all those things. A lot of times it was like, “Man, this is like a lot of cross examination to get the gig.” A couple of times I remember walking off the lot thinking, “You know what? I don’t care. I can’t handle this”. Then I kept going back and I’m sure glad I did.
MF: Considering your history working with comedians like Richard Pryor and Albert Brooks, and your work directing the ‘Decline of Western Civilization’ documentaries, it seems like you were uniquely qualified to direct ‘Wayne’s World,’ because you already had experience with both comedy and rock ‘n roll.
How did your past experience as a producer and documentary filmmaker prepare you to direct this movie?
PS: Well, that’s a brilliant observation. Even I haven’t thought of that. Thank you. I was prepared comically, and I was prepared musically. I guess it’s just some cosmic coming together of the right things at the right time. I had no idea that I was going to be involved with a movie that has lasted this long and people love so much. None of us thought, “Oh, well, we’re going to make this big hip movie and get rich and famous. And everybody will be dressing up their babies like Wayne and Garth for 30 years.” None of us thought that.
We just thought, “Geez, we could make this little movie, and maybe we’ll get it in a few theaters, and maybe I’ll get another gig in Hollywood.” So, I always tell people, young filmmakers, it’s like stop with the rich and famous already, just go do the work. That’s what we were doing back then.
MF: Since they created the characters on television, I would imagine Mike Myers and Dana Carvey came to set knowing exactly who Wayne and Garth are, which is something that doesn’t always happen with actors when you are making a movie.
What was that like for you directing them and getting the performances that you needed for the film?
PS: It was a total luck out, and good pleasure. I’ll be honest with you, because as a director, if you have two leads coming in with characters that they don’t know, you got a big job cut out for you, and you got to know those characters yourself. Mike and Dana already knew them.
So, I didn’t have to go crazy trying to say, “Stay in character, stay on track. That’s not what your character would say.” I didn’t have to do any of that, they knew exactly what they would do, and wear, and say. So that made it easier to be honest with you. I don’t look at it like, “Oh, I’m the director, you got to do what I say.” They knew, and I trusted them. I had to.
MF: The movie will forever be connected to the band Queen, and vice versa, because of the iconic “Bohemian Rhapsody” sequence. Can you talk about the process of shooting that scene?
PS: Well, I mean, when we shot it, and we didn’t think, “Oh, people are going to be looking at this and loving it for so many decades.” We didn’t think that. I knew that it would be a good title sequence, because I had shot a similar scene in the movie I did called ‘Dudes,’ where Flea and John Cryer were banging their heads in a Volkswagen driving across the desert.
So, I knew that that was a fun thing to be doing. But yeah, Mike had written “Bohemian Rhapsody” into the first draft. So, as much as people might want to give me credit for picking the song, I did not pick the song, it was Mike. I chose to shoot it the way I did, but he is the one that was smart enough to pick that song. What can I tell you, James Corden owes me a couple bucks!
MF: Is it true that the studio fought you on the song choice and didn’t want you to use ‘Bohemian Rhapsody?”
PS: No! Thank you for asking it because I’d like to set the record straight. The studio never challenged us on the use of the song. (Producer) Lorne Michaels never wanted to have Guns N’ Roses in the movie. I never wanted to have Guns N’ Roses in the movie, because they had just bailed out on me when I did the ‘The Metal Years.’
So, I definitely wouldn’t want to license their song if they crapped out on me at the last minute when I did ‘The Metal Years’. So, this whole thing about somebody wanting to use Guns N’ Roses is not true. I just want to put that on the table, and they could fight me to the death on that one because I know.
MF: But there was an issue with Alice Cooper only wanting to play a new song and not one of his classics in the movie, is that true?
PS: That’s very smart of you, and here’s the thing. Having worked with bands forever, most of them don’t want to do their old music, they want to promote their new music. I understand that, because they want to be themselves, and they want to do their new material. I couldn’t argue with Alice, because there was no time to argue. It was like, “Okay, we got to shoot this scene at the amphitheater, it’s booked, and it costs a lot of money. So, let’s get the band over there and set up the stage, and do it”.
I wasn’t in love with the song at the time. It’s a goofy title. But Alice is a prince, and we threw three pages of dialogue at him, on the day he came in. He didn’t even have a night to look at it. To this day even he says that he can’t believe he remembered all that dialogue. We had to write these signs, we had to write prompter signs. We had people writing on them, so he could remember the lines. But he did it, and he looked perfectly natural doing it.
MF: Finally, you cast Meat Loaf in the movie, who unfortunately just passed. What are your memories of working with Meat Loaf?
PS: It’s very tragic, of course, that Meat Loaf has gone, and very unexpected. He was way too young to go. He and I were very, very good friends during the 1980’s when we would party at the Rainbow Bar, The Roxy, and Whiskey a Go Go. I have very fond memories of hanging out with him. And if anybody doesn’t mind, I’ll take the credit for casting him in that sweet role.
The ‘Wayne’s World’ Limited-Edition Blu-ray Steelbook was released on February 1st.
Yesterday, “Saturday Night Live” revealed an exciting lineup for the beginning of its upcoming 45th season. But now, we have news that one of the show’s stars will not be there to participate in the fun.
Multiple outlets have confirmed that Leslie Jones will be leaving “SNL,” after five years with the long-running sketch comedy series. According to Deadline, Jones made the decision to depart herself, opting out of her seven-year contract to focus on a number of upcoming film projects (including a role in the “Coming to America” sequel) and a new stand-up special for Netflix.
The comedian earned two Supporting Actress Emmy nominations for her work on “SNL” (and is a current Emmy nominee for co-writing an original song for a digital short) which she joined in 2014 initially as a writer, before several buzzy appearances on Weekend Update bumped her up to cast member status. She went on to star in several films, including “The Angry Birds Movie 2,” “Top Five” with Chris Rock, and the 2016 “Ghostbusters” reboot, throughout her “SNL” tenure.
Jones’s costar in that latter flick, Kate McKinnon, is also one of her “SNL” cast mates, and was also on the bubble to return for next season, thanks to her bustling film career. But thankfully, the two-time Emmy winner has officially signed on to come back for season 45, though Deadline says that it remains to be seen whether she will be a full-time cast member or only appear sporadically. (Our fingers are crossed for lots of McKinnon in the coming months.)
According to The Hollywood Reporter, it’s not clear yet whether “SNL” will hire a replacement for Jones, though its cast is already quite large. The stars that will be returning this season are Beck Bennett, Aidy Bryant (whose future was uncertain after her Hulu series, “Shrill,” was renewed), Michael Che, Pete Davidson, Mikey Day, Colin Jost, McKinnon, Alex Moffat, Kyle Mooney, Cecily Strong, Kenan Thompson (who is seemingly always rumored to be leaving), and Melissa Villasenor; featured players Heidi Gardner, Ego Nwodim, and Chris Redd will also be back.
Season 45 of “Saturday Night Live” premieres on NBC on September 28.