Chapter One
Exordium: 1975-1976
Like all show business successes, Saturday Night Live had many fathers. Several
mothers too. There is still, so many years after the birth, disagreement over
who the real father is. The show had a gestation period of more than a year,
during which the concept took various forms, none identical to that of the show
we know today. Adjustments and refinements continued after the premiere.
Whatever the evolutionary variations in structure and format, however, Saturday
Night Live was from the beginning a lone pioneer staking out virgin territory
and finding its way in the night, its creative team determined to make it
television's antidote to television, to all the bad things- corrupt,
artificial, plastic, facile - that TV entertainment had become. CBS still ruled
the ratings in the mid-1970s, but executives at RCA, which owned NBC, had high
hopes for the network's aggressive and competitive new president, Herbert
Schlosser, a onetime Wall Street lawyer who took over in 1974. He was anxious to
make his mark on television history. And he would.
ROSIE SHUSTER, Writer:
Lorne Michaels arrived in my life before puberty, let's put it that way. I swear
to God. There was not a pubic hair in sight when he arrived on my doorstep. We
were living in Toronto in the same neighborhood. I was with my girlfriend. We
were jumping on boards, just letting go - we were just wild prepubescent kids,
and Lorne observed me from the sidelines. And I guess he was struck by my mojo,
or whatever, and he basically started following me around. We were inseparable
after that.
HOWARD SHORE, Music Director:
As kids, Lorne and I went to a coed summer camp in Canada. And that was really
the beginning of our friendship. I was thirteen and Lorne must have been about
fifteen. Rosie Shuster was there, too. We did shows you do at summer camp, like
Guys and Dolls, The Fantasticks, things like that. And on Saturday nights, we
did "The Fast Show," a show Lorne and I put together quickly - hence the title.
We did comedy, we did sketches, we had kind of a repertory company and some
musicians. If you think about it, it was truly the beginning of Saturday Night
Live, because it was a show we put on every Saturday night, and it was a live
show, and it was somewhat improvisational, with comedy and music. We always had
a bunch of people around us who were writers and actors even at that age. And
that kind of progressed from summer camp to other things that Lorne and I wrote
together.
ROSIE SHUSTER:
My dad really mentored Lorne in terms of comedy. Lorne had a partner and did
radio shows just like my dad had done, and then did CBC specials just like my
dad had done. I saw the whole thing unfold, and felt like Saturday Night Live
was so much a part of something that grew from my home. Something about the show
came from inside my family.
Lorne visited my dad inside his little showbiz pup tent where he shared his wild
enthusiasms. Lorne was a very avid, eager sponge for all of it; he heard all of
the names of everybody backstage at the Ed Sullivan Show, and all the ins and
outs of the movies. My dad grew up watching the Marx Brothers and Chaplin. He
was just spellbound by all of that, and he shared that love with me and with
Lorne.
LORNE MICHAELS, Executive Producer:
I grew up in Canada, where we had all three American networks and later a
Canadian network. So I was watching CBS and ABC when I was eight or nine, and
grew up on the same television that everybody else grew up with. I saw the same
kind of movies, but my grandparents owned a movie house and my mother worked in
it and my uncle had been a projectionist - the Playhouse on College Street. My
mother, who died in 2001, could still play music from the silent movies, from
the sheet music the movie companies sent around. My maternal grandmother, who
was an enormous influence on me, and my aunts and uncles and my mother of
course, all talked about movies and show business in whatever form, and books.
That was all a part of my growing up. I don't think I ever thought that's what
I'd be doing with my life, although when I was at my peak seriousness, at
twentytwo or twenty-three, I thought I'd be a movie director.
In 1972 I had presented this pilot to the CBC. They said they were thinking
about it, but the head of the CBC- whose name I am clearly blocking - said to me
one afternoon when I was talking passionately about why this show would be a
breakthrough show, he said, "If you're that funny, why are you here?" And I
thought, "Oh my God, it's that Canadian thing of 'If you're good, you go to
America.'"
SANDY WERNICK, Agent:
When I met Lorne, he was in Canada, producing and starring in The Hart and Lorne
Hour with his partner, Hart Pomerantz. I remember when I met him that I didn't
think he was that good. The other guy was the funny one, you know, which is
typical in our industry. But I remember being impressed with the meeting. I had
never met anybody who had a gift of gab like Lorne. He would just mesmerize me
with what he was talking about. If you talked about comedy, all of a sudden he
would just light up and turn on. I remember introducing him to Bernie because I
knew that would be a marriage.
BERNIE BRILLSTEIN, Manager:
I met him when he was working on Laugh-In with his partner, who wound up going
back to Canada. We were doing the Burns and Schreiber summer show with Jack
Burns and Avery Schreiber, and there was a spot for a writer. Sandy Wernick from
ICM told me Lorne was available. I said to bring him in to fill the last slot.
And I fell in love with him. He wanted to know about old show business, and he
had done a short film, The Hockey Puck Crisis, which was great: Hockey pucks
grew on trees, and there was a blizzard that destroyed the crop, so they
couldn't play hockey in Canada that year. Being a hockey fan and a comedy fan, I
thought it was hysterical.
LORNE MICHAELS:
Bernie's a larger-than-life character. He was also an antidote, because I was
deadly serious about everything I was doing in those days. Bernie had the
gambler's love of the sheer larceny of it, whether it was Hee Haw or whatever,
it didn't seem to matter. He knew the good stuff from the bad stuff, but it
didn't stop him from dealing with either - whereas I thought if I was involved
with anything bad, it would destroy my life.
ROSIE SHUSTER:
I had done television shows with Lorne in Toronto and in Los Angeles. On one of
Lily Tomlin's specials we did "Arresting Fat People in Beverly Hills" together.
Bernie Brillstein played one of the fat people. Vertical stripes, you know, only
vertical stripes. It got nominated for an Emmy.
LILY TOMLIN, Host:
Lorne was used to being a star back in Canada. We were quite close at that time.
When Lorne worked with me on my specials, he would spend too much time editing
and be too fanatical about everything. Jane Wagner would say, "You're going too
far and you're spending too much money and the show needs to be rougher." Lorne
and I would get into the editing room and get too perfectionistic, you know. I
must say I think some illegal substances had something to do with it.
ROBERT KLEIN, Host:
I remember before there was any Saturday Night Live, an actually humble Lorne
Michaels used to come to the office of my manager, Jack Rollins. Lorne was a kid
from Canada married to Rosie Shuster, who was the daughter of Frank Shuster of
Wayne and Shuster, the duo that used to be extremely unfunny on the Sullivan
show years ago. Lorne was looking for some work, and Jack was very helpful to
him.
TOM SCHILLER, Writer:
My father, Bob Schiller, was working on this show called The Beautiful Phyllis
Diller Show in 1968, and he said there was a junior writer on the show that he'd
love me to meet. And I said, "Why?" And he said, "Well, he knows all of the best
restaurants in L.A." So one day Lorne comes over wearing a Hawaiian shirt. He
seemed like a nice enough guy - a little nebbish, you know. What struck me
though was that after my dad introduced me, Lorne lit up a joint right there in
the house. I was scaredbut I was impressed too, that he had the boldness
to do that. We sort of became friends and I started hanging out with him at the
Chateau Marmont.
DICK EBERSOL, NBC Executive:
In the spring of 1974, I was approached by NBC to come over there and
essentially run their sports department. At that time, I was Roone Arledge's
assistant at ABC. I said no. I think they were like in shock; how could somebody
who was twenty-seven turn that down? But I felt they didn't take sports
seriously, that they wouldn't put real resources into it, and besides, I didn't
want to compete against the best person who'd ever done it before or since:
Roone.
My saying no apparently impressed Herbert Schlosser, the president of NBC. So,
lo and behold, in the summer of 1974, Schlosser invited me to his place on Fire
Island - along with Marvin Antonowsky, one of his programming executives - and
essentially laid out the whole thing: how Johnny Carson had given them fair
warning that he did not want weekend repeats of The Tonight Show to exist after
the summer of 1975. They had begun to order up some specials. One had Burt
Reynolds sort of hosting. It was talky and had some comedy bits. Herb said he
was very much interested in finding some regular stuff for that time period. I
was intrigued, even though I had no background whatsoever in late night. I'd
been a sports kid since I dropped out of Yale to work for Roone in 1967.
I told Roone I was leaving the same morning Nixon resigned. I had a whole deal
to come over to NBC as head of weekend late-night programming. I had one year to
come up with a show to go into that time period, and if the show was creatively
sound, I had Herb's word it would get at least six months on the air.
I thought I'd negotiated every possible thing to protect myself, but I had
neglected to ask for a secretary. So when I arrived at NBC, the biggest
bureaucracy of the western world, I didn't get a secretary for three months. I
was answering my own phones and my office was a mess.
HERBERT SCHLOSSER, NBC President:
I had played a role in hiring Ebersol. I can remember when I interviewed him, it
was out on Fire Island on a weekend, and he was wearing a pair of pants where
one leg was one color and the other leg was another color. Which I guess is what
you wore in Connecticut. Johnny Carson was the biggest star NBC had,
unchallengeable in his time period. It wasn't like Leno and Letterman fighting
each other now. Johnny was very, very important to the network, and we were
getting emanations that he was not pleased about the weekend repeats of his
show. They'd been on for ten years, and we ourselves weren't that thrilled, but
it had been an easy thing for us to do- just put 'em on. So I thought we should
try something new.
FRED SILVERMAN, NBC President:
When Herb looks back on his days at NBC, he's the only guy that had worse days
than I did. He really doesn't have much of a positive nature to look back at. So
I can see where he would remember the beginnings of the show so well. Saturday
Night Live was a big deal for him. It was Herb's biggest endeavor.
DICK EBERSOL:
I spent September and October of 1974 roaming the West Coast, Canada, Chicago,
and New York, looking for comics and comedy producers. I came to the conclusion
rather quickly that the only way this show would work would be if the young
embraced itif it was a show for a younger audience. Johnny was the most
brilliant person in the world but his show wasn't for teenagers.
One piece of talent I thought would give us credibility was Richard Pryor. We
had these meetings with Richard, and they went fairly well. He finally agreed to
a deal. After that, Lily Tomlin agreed to fall in. So did George Carlin. Someone
was trying to sell me Steve Martin and Linda Ronstadt as a twosome.
While all this was going on, Sandy Wernick at ICM, who had Lorne as a client,
set up a meeting for us in L.A. I didn't know Lorne but discovered he had
substantial credits in specials and that he'd been involved in Laugh-In. Lorne
pitched an idea based on Kentucky Fried Theater. I decided right away that it
wasn't for me. I just didn't really dig it. But Lorne and I hit it off.
Meantime, I'm buying up a lot of talent.
Just after Christmas of 1974 I get a phone call from a managerlawyer in Atlanta,
now dead, who says that he represents Richard Pryor and has convinced Richard
that television is a disaster and whatever career he has, he'll never be able to
do what he does well on over-the-air television. He could not be himself. So the
deal was off. I came back right after the first of January and told Schlosser
that Pryor was out. Some day subsequent to that he wrote me a memo and said, "Why
don't you bring the show back to New York and even think about doing it in old
Studio 8H?" So that part was his idea: "Use 8H." Then I got hold of Lorne, the
closest contemporary to me I'd met in this whole process. He did not have an
idea at this point. We goof now about the number of people who've talked about
how "the idea" was "sold to NBC." No idea was sold to NBC. I adore Bernie
Brillstein, but anything in his book about selling an idea, it never happened.
Get the lie detectors out; ask Lorne. It's all bullshit. What did happen was
that Lorne just took my breath away in the way he talked about things, how he
wanted to have the first television show to speak the language of the time. He
wanted the show to be the first show in the history of television to talk -
absent expletives - the same language being talked on college campuses and
streets and everywhere else. And I was very taken with that, among other things.
So I told NBC there were two people I wanted to do the show, which would be a
live comedy show from New York: I wanted this guy Lorne Michaels to produce it,
and I wanted a guy named Don Ohlmeyer to direct it.
Continue...
Excerpted from Live From New York
by Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller
Copyright © 2002 by Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Copyright © 2002
Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller
All right reserved.