Sunday, August 30, 2020

Season 2, episode 8;Host:Paul Simon, with George Harrison.


Aired November 20, 1976.

Cold opening:Paul Simon arrives.
Paul Simon, this week's host, arrives at 30 Rockefeller Center.  On his way inside, he runs into Chevy Chase, who is playing guitar and singing on the sidewalk for money.


He tells Simon that his career has been going great since he left Saturday Night and has no regrets.  Chase wishes Simon good luck and Paul invites Chevy to the after-party.

When Simon goes upstairs, he runs into Saturday Night producer Lorne Michaels and former Beatle George Harrison.  Simon tells Lorne he has "grave doubts" about his opening performance.  He worries that he'll look like a fool.


Meanwhile, George Harrison says he expected the $3000 Lorne promised to the Beatles in his offer last season, but Lorne reminds him that the $3000 payday was for all four Beatles and that he intends to pay George only $750.


When Harrison says that figure sounds "chintzy," Lorne says there's a $250 bonus for whoever says the show's opening line.  So Harrison looks into the camera and announces "Live, from New York, it's Saturday Night!"


Monologue:"Still Crazy After All These Years."
Written by Paul Simon and Lorne Michaels.[1]
Since Thanksgiving is five days away, Simon walks onstage wearing a turkey costume.  He then sings "Still Crazy After All These Years," the title track from his 1975 album.


"Still Crazy" peaked at #40 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and #4 on the Adult Contemporary chart in 1976.  Simon previously performed the song on episode 2 of SNL's first season.

After the first verse, Simon stops singing, says he feels ridiculous and walks offstage to change.  He runs into Lorne Michaels, who tells Paul the turkey suit looks great. Simon storms off to his dressing room, only to realize the turkey costume won't fit through the door.


Commercial:"Quarry"
Written by Michael O'Donoghue.
Quarry cereal is full of minerals...


...because it's made of rocks and pebbles.


Paul Simon:"50 Ways To Leave Your Lover"
The host performs "50 Ways To Leave Your Lover."  This song appeared on Still Crazy, reached #1 on the Billboard pop chart and also topped the Easy Listening chart.



Talk Show:"Baba Wawa At Large"
Baba Wawa (Gilda Radner) interviews outgoing Secretary Of State Henry Kissinger (John Belushi) about the high and low points off his tenure at the State Department.  She also asks why Kissinger still speaks with a German accent 40 years after his arrival in the U.S..



"The Twilite Zone":
Three aspiring young actresses (Radner, Jane Curtin, Laraine Newman) have all checked into the same room and been told a theatrical agent would meet them in the room for an audition.  What the actresses don't know is that they've just checked into...The Twilite Zone!


"The Twilite Zone" is narrated by Rod Serling (Dan Aykroyd).


"Weekend Update":
Jane Curtin's top headlines of the day include:
President-elect Jimmy Carter has been seen on the streets of Plains, GA begging for money to pay off his campaign debt.


It has been discovered that the Bermuda Triangle is actually part of a larger configuration now called the Bermuda Shorts.


Laraine Newman reports from Mineola, Long Island, where last week it was revealed that long-time resident, Boleslays Maikovskis was a Nazi war criminal who entered the United States illegally.


And "Weekend Update" science editor Garrett Morris reports on a new strain of gonorrhea that kills penicillin.


Paul Simon and George Harrison:"Here Comes The Sun" and "Homeward Bound."
Simon introduces his special guest George Harrison and they perform a duet of "Here Comes The Sun."  This song was written by Harrison and it appeared on the Beatles' album Abbey Road, which was released on September 26, 1969.


Harrison remains onstage and joins Simon in performing "Homeward Bound."  Simon wrote the song and recorded it when he was part of Simon & Garfunkel.  "Homeward Bound" was released as a single on January 9, 1966 and reached #5 on Billboard's Hot 100 and it later appeared on Simon & Garfunkel's 1966 album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme.


When the song is over, Simon says Harrison has brought two films (music videos) with him and introduces one of them.

Film:George Harrison-"Crackerbox Palace"
The song appeared on Harrison's album Thirty Three & 1/3, which was released on November 19, 1976.  "Crackerbox Palace" was issued as a single on January 24, 1977 and reached #17 on the Billboard pop chart.  This music video was directed by Harrison's friend and frequent SNL host Eric Idle.


"Billy Paul"
In this parody of the movie Billy Jack, Billy Paul (Simon) protects non-white teenagers from local bigots.


During "Billy Paul" Gilda Radner's character sings "Until It's Time For You To Go."  This song was written by Buffy Sainte Marie and it first appeared on her 1965 album Many A Mile.

When Billy Paul leads his friends in a march at the end of the sketch, the song "One Tin Soldier" by Coven can be heard playing over the studio's PA system.


"One Tin Soldier" was written by Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter and first recorded by the band Original Caste in 1969.  Coven's version appeared on the Billy Jack soundtrack and reached #26 on the Billboard Hot 100 before it was pulled from radio by the film's producer.  Coven re-recorded the song in 1973 and that version reached made number 79 on the Pop chart.

Paul Simon:"Something So Right"
This song appeared on Simon's 1973 album There Goes Rhymin' Simon, which was released on May 5, 1973.


"Tomorrow Show, with Tom Snyder"
Tom Snyder (Aykroyd) interviews Paul Simon.  It quickly becomes obvious that Snyder has no idea who Simon is.


Film:George Harrison-"This Song."
"This Song" appeared on Harrison's aforementioned album Thirty Three & 1/3.  It was released as a single on November 15 and peaked at #25 on the Hot 100.


"This Song" was written in response to the copyright infringement suit Harrison faced when it was alleged his song "My Sweet Lord" was too similar to the Chiffons' song "He's So Fine."

Paul Simon:"Bridge Over Troubled Water"
For his final song of the evening, Simon performs "Bridge Over Troubled Water," which was the title track of the final Simon & Garfunkel album.  It was released on January 20, 1970 and reached #1 on both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Adult Contemporary chart.


Goodnights:
Simon says goodnight, wishes everyone a Happy Thanksgiving and says "and my special apologies to (SNL writer) Michael O'Donoghue, he knows why."


Notes about this episode:

This episode opens with a Don Pardo voiceover that states "Portions of this program have been prerecorded."
I know that George Harrison's performance on the show was prerecorded.  During the prior week's closing credits, Pardo mentioned that the episode would feature "a special recorded appearance by George Harrison."  Supposedly there was a scheduling difficulty that prevented Harrison from appearing live.  The conversation between Lorne Michaels and Harrison was also prerecorded and I'm guessing Chevy Chase's cameo was also prerecorded.

Harrison and Simon performed more songs, but I guess they weren't considered to be good enough for TV.  This Youtube video features audio outtakes of them singing "Rock Island Line" and bits of other songs:


When Paul Simon walks in on Harrison's conversation with Lorne Michaels, he sings the "He's So Fine" and follows it up "My Sweet Lord."  This is another reference to the lawsuit that inspired Harrison's "Your Song."

Laraine Newman's report about Nazis living in Mineola, Long Island is based on real events.  In October of 1976, the U.S. Immigration and Nationalization Service made plans to deport several U.S. residents for being Nazi war criminals.[2]  Among these criminals was Boleslays Maikovskis, who is mentioned by name in Newman's piece.  Maikovskis remained in the United States until 1987 when he fled to Germany where he died in 1996.  Both the Soviet Union and Latvia tried Maikovskis in-absentia and sentence him to death for war crimes.  He was eventually put on trial in Germany, but the case was closed when it was determined Maikovskis was too old for the trial to continue. [3]

During Chevy Chase's brief appearance as a street performer in the opening, he sings bits of these three songs:


"This Land Is Your Land" was written by Woody Guthrie in 1940, recorded by Guthrie in '44 and has been performed by countless artists.

"Do You Know The Way To San Jose" was composed by Burt Bacharach and Hal David and recorded by Dionne Warwick in 1968.  Warwick's recording of the song reached #10 on the Hot 100.

"Just Like A Woman" was written by Bob Dylan and appeared on his 1966 album Blonde On Blonde.  It was released as a single and peaked at #33.

I mentioned that Paul Simon apologizes to Michael O'Donoghue at the end of the show.  During goodnights and closing credits, Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi are wearing costumes, Aykroyd has an ax and Belushi is carrying a guitar, as seen in this screencap:


 I'm guessing a sketch written by O'Donoghue was cut and perhaps their costumes and props were part of that sketch.

Classic Moment:
Paul Simon in the turkey costume-This has been used in various SNL Thanksgiving-themed compilations and it's still a sight to behold.  Kudos to Simon for making fun of his "serious" image and to Saturday Night's costuming department.


What Stands Out:
George Harrison and Paul Simon's duets-This was a once-in-a-lifetime event and they perform beautiful, acoustic versions of "Here Comes The Sun" and "Homeward Bound."  I'm a big Beatles fan and "Here Comes The Sun" has long been one of my favorite songs.  Harrison didn't perform on television very often during his "solo" years, so I'm glad this performance is preserved on DVD.


What Doesn't Work:
"Bridge Over Troubled Water"-There's nothing wrong with the performance, in fact it's an excellent solo acoustic performance of a song that featured lots of production and orchestration in the album version.  I've said before that I don't care for quiet ballads as show-closers.  I would've rather seen a sketch or one of Harrison's music videos.  I guess Lorne Michaels and I just have different opinions about how to end episodes.


Not enough sketches...and where's the cast?-The show opens with Simon and Chevy Chase (who had already quit the show), then Simon bumps into Michaels and Harrison.  After that, Simon appears onstage in the turkey suit.   The filmed commercial parody "Quarry" features Jane Curtin, then Simon performs a song.  No one from the cast appears "live" onstage until the 13-minute mark, when the Baba Wawa/Kissinger sketch begins.  This episode features five musical performances and two music videos.  I enjoyed most of the music, but I would've liked to have seen at least one more sketch.


J.A. Morris' rating:
I have mixed feelings about this episode.  The Harrison/Simon duets are great and the turkey costume is very memorable, but this episode needed a little more comedy.  Like Simon's appearance in Season 1, this feels more like a Paul Simon variety special with the Not Ready For Prime Players as special guests than an episode of SNL.









3 stars.
Footnotes:
[1] Saturday Night Live, edited by Anne Beatts and John Head, p.4.
[2] "U.S. Files to Deport 3 Accused of Nazi War Crimes," By Ralph Blumenthal, New York Times, 14 October 1976:18
[3] "After Four-Year Trial, Bad Heart Wins Alleged Nazi War Criminal Freedom," by Frank Bajak, Associated Press, 18 February 1994.

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Season 2 Episode 7; Host:Dick Cavett, with Ry Cooder

Aired November 13, 1976. 

Cold opening:"Gilda Radner Speaks out For Chroma-Trak"
In a commercial for Chroma-Trak televisions, Gilda Radner tells viewers the colors of clothes she's wearing to demonstrate the Chroma-Trak's picture quality.  For example, Gilda says her scarf is yellow, but it appears to be green.


We then pan out to reveal that a man (Garrett Morris) is watching her on his TV and the colors she says she's wearing aren't what he sees.  When he tries to adjust the color, his screen gets distorted and he starts smacking the television.


This hitting eventually causes Gilda to fall down.  She then gets up and announces "Live, from New York, it's Saturday Night!"


Monologue:"Not Elliott Gould"
Host Dick Cavett apologizes to viewers who were expecting Elliott Gould, who had to cancel with short notice.  Cavett then answers prewritten questions from the audience.


The questions include:
Q:"Who do you think has more charisma between Ford and Carter?
Cavett's answer:"Anybody between Ford and Carter!"

Commercial:"Puppy Uppers and Doggy Downers"
Written by Rosie Shuster.
When Sparky acts listless...


...he needs Puppy Uppers to feel pepped up.


However, if Sparky gets too excited up, it's time for Doggy Downers.

"John Dean:Blond Ambition"
Former White House Counsel John Dean (Cavett) recalls the time his former boss Pres. Richard Nixon (Dan Aykroyd) tried to pin the blame for his Watergate crimes on Dean.


During this sketch, Nixon sings part of the song "High Hopes."  The song was first performed by Frank Sinatra in the 1959 film A Hole In The Head and it received the Academy Award for Best Original Song.  Sinatra later re-recorded the song in 1961 with a children's chorus, that version reached #30 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart.


Ry Cooder:"Tattler"
Musical guest Ry Cooder performs "Tattler," which was written by Cooder, Washington Phillips and Russ Titelman and appeared on Cooder's 1974 album Paradise and Lunch.



Next week:
Gilda Radner announces that next week's host will be Paul Simon and his special guest will be former Beatle George Harrison.  



"Weekend Update":
With Chevy Chase's departure, Jane Curtin is now the permanent "Weekend Update" anchor.  Top news stories of the day include:
"The Post Office announced today, that in honor of the Bicentennial, it is going to reissue a stamp commemorating prostitution in the United States.  It’s a ten-cent stamp, but if you want to lick it, it’s a quarter."



In the aftermath of Pres. Gerald Ford's electoral defeat, students decapitated Ford and paraded his head around Washington, DC as a warning to Jimmy Carter.



Laraine Newman reports live from New Mexico at the funeral of Wildfire Safety icon Smokey The Bear.  Smokey's request to be cremated has disastrous results for the forest.  



In a related story, Curtin reports that Smokey’s job as fire prevention symbol will be taken over by NBC film critic Gene Shalit.



Commercial:"The Marines are looking for a few good men"
Written by Lorne Michaels.
A Marine (Morris) walks down the street and stops every man he meets before finding just the man he's looking for.


Crossroads:
Reverend Dantley (Cavett) hosts a show that examines the crossroads people often reach in life where they must choose the right path.  Dantley looks in on a family dinner conversation where the son wants to drop out of college and get a construction job in order to help pay the family's bills.  



His father disapproves of this plan and makes his feelings very clear.



"Mobile Shrink":
Dr. Robert Liebman (Chevy Chase) gives up his profitable office practice and goes out into the streets and workplaces to fight depression, neuroses, and feelings of inadequacy, no matter where or when they strike.  He provides therapy to patients while they're at work.  



Talk show:"How Things Work"
Guest Merle Tadburney (Cavett) explains how pressure groups work.  



Film by Gary Weis:"Paramount Novelty Store"
Repeat from Season 1, Episode 11.  

"A History Of Bees In America"
Harry Bee (Belushi) tells his grandson Neil (Neil Levy) about all the discrimination bees had to endure from "wasps" who ran America.



Ry Cooder:"He'll Have To Go"
Cooder sings "He'll Have To Go," which was written by Joe Allison and Audrey Allison.  Cooder's recording of the song appeared on his 1976 album Chicken Skin Music.  



The song found its greatest success with Jim Reeves' version, which reached #1 on Billboard's Country chart and #2 on the Hot 100.  

Mr. Mike's Least-Loved Bedtime Tales-"The Blind Chicken"
Mr. Mike (Michael O'Donoghue) tells the story of a blind chicken who lived in a lagoon and led a happy life...until he encountered an alligator.  



Franken and Davis:"Audience Laughter Survey"
Written by Al Franken and Tom Davis.
Semantic Psychologists Dr. Thomas James Davis (Tom Davis) and Dr. Alan S. Franken (Al Franken) conduct a scientific survey that analyzes why certain words make people laugh.  Franken and Davis measure the audience's response to humorous words with a device called the Laugh-O-Graph.



Goodnight:
Cavett says they thought they were running long, but they now have a minute an a half to kill.  He fills time and says the Not Ready For Prime Time Players are one of the wittiest groups of people he's ever worked with.  



When that doesn't kill enough time, he makes some hand shadows.  



While the credits are rolling, announcer Don Pardo says "next Saturday night, our host will be Paul Simon, with a special recorded appearance by George Harrison. Wasn’t he one of The Beatles, or something? I don’t know, they were looooong before my time! I only go back to The Modernaires!
Pardo then sings a portion of the song "I'll Never Smile Again."   The Modernaires' recording of the song appeared on their 1962 album We Remember Tommy Dorsey Too.  "I'll Never Smile Again" found it's greatest success 1940, when Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra recorded it.  Frank Sinatra provided lead vocals for Dorsey and it reached #1 on the Billboard chart.  

Notes about this episode:
As Dick Cavett states in his monologue, Elliott Gould was originally scheduled to host this episode.  Cavett says Gould couldn't make it because "his doctor advised him that he could make a great deal more money on the Olivia Newton-John special."  I can't find the details about Gould's absence, but he did indeed appear in a Newton-John special that aired two days prior to this episode.

Gilda Radner's "Chroma-Trak" commercial in the cold opening is a parody of RCA's ColorTrak commercials that featured celebrities talking about the color of clothes they were wearing to promote the Colortrak's color adjusting abilities.  Here's a ColorTrak commercial that features Cicely Tyson:



"Blonde Ambition," which features Cavett playing John Dean, is a parody of the book Blind Ambition, the memoir of the real John Dean.  For those unfamiliar with Dean, he served as White House Counsel and was convicted for his role in Nixon's Watergate crimes.  



Dean was convicted of a felony, lost his law license, and served four months in jail after cooperating with prosecutors.  In recent years, Dean has emerged as a critic of the overreach of executive power and frequently appears on cable news shows.


John Dean testifying in the Watergate hearings in 1973.

The death of Smokey Bear is covered during "Weekend Update."  The real Smokey died four days before this episode aired.  The bear named after Smokey was rescued from a forest fire and lived at the National Zoo in Washington for 26 years where he served as a living symbol of fire prevention.  Here's a photo of the real Smokey shortly after he arrived in Washington, DC:


Smokey the bear being given a fire helmet by Washington Fire Departments’ deputy fire chief, M.H. Sutton in 1950. (Bettmann/CORBIS/Library of Congress)

Ann Risley appears as a patient in the "Mobile Shrink" film.  Risley was later an SNL cast member during its ill-fated Season 6.  



Jane Curtin's top story during "Weekend Update" is the postage stamp commemorating prostitution.  This is a call-back to an "Update" story from Episode 1, Season 1.  

In the Bee sketch, the Bees' grandson Neil is played by Neil Levy, who was SNL's talent coordinator and frequently appeared as an extra in sketches.  

What stands out:
"Blonde Ambition"-Dan Aykroyd is great as Nixon and Cavett plays a perfect foil for Nixon.  Gilda Radner and John Belushi are also excellent in the sketch as Nixon's secretary Rose Mary Woods and Henry Kissinger, respectively.  



"Puppy Uppers and Doggy Downers"-Another great commercial parody.  It's also kind of prescient, since a lot more dogs are on drugs (like prozac) today than in 1976.

Mr. Mike's Tale of "The Blind Chicken"-I'm surprised SNL put Mr. Mike in back-to-back episodes, but I thought this story was better than O'Donoghue's first "Bedtime Tale."  I like the way they lit him so that frames of his glasses look like devil horns.



J.A. Morris' rating:
This is a decent episode and Dick Cavett was a good host.  I enjoyed it, but this episode is a bit of a step-down from the previous two.  Worth watching for "Blonde Ambition" and "Puppy Uppers" if nothing else.  










3 stars.