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Addison Rae Stars in New Trailer for 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story'
Music

Addison Rae Stars in New Trailer for ‘Monster: The Ed Gein Story’

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Addison Rae is on her way to scream queen status. As showcased in a new trailer for Ryan Murphy’s upcoming Monster: The Ed Gein Story posted Tuesday (Sept. 16), the TikTok sensation is set to appear in her latest horror project, playing the victim of a brutal murder.

The latest installment of Murphy’s true-crime anthology series, as the title suggests, will focus on serial killer Ed Gein, who was suspected of killing women and robbing graves in the 1950s. Rae reportedly plays one of his alleged victims, teenager Evelyn Hartley, with the trailer showing a disturbing scene in which she is tied to a chair wearing nothing but her underwear while the titular character (portrayed by Charlie Hunnam) forcibly shoves her head downward.

At one point, the camera zooms in on Rae’s face, and she looks properly terrified as Hunnam lurches toward her.

Premiering Oct. 3, The Ed Gein Story will mark the third edition of Murphy’s Netflix show. Previous subjects have been Jeffrey Dahmer and Lyle and Erik Menendez.

Rae has previously tested out her horror acting chops by starring in Eli Roth’s 2021 slasher film Thanksgiving. Before that, she made her acting debut in 2021’s He’s All That.

The social media star has also been growing her music career this year, unleashing debut album Addison in June. The LP reached No. 4 on the Billboard 200. In an August Billboard cover story, Rae told senior writer Kristin Robinson about embracing new adventures, from music to acting. “I really just never give up and never quit, no matter what,” she said. “Really, what it comes back to is that I’m fearless — I’m not afraid of much. It doesn’t really take me much to try something new and go all in, and here, I went all in.”

Check out Rae in the trailer for The Ed Gein Story above.



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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Divya Khossla Calls Out Kylie Jenner, Bollywood Stars Over Filler
Bollywood

Divya Khossla SLAMS Kylie Jenner, Bollywood Stars Over Fillers; Says, “My Mother Didn’t Even Let Me Bleach My Face”

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Many actors face pressure to maintain a youthful appearance, which leads to heavy social media criticism. While some, like Rajkummar Rao and Khushi Kapoor, have admitted to using such treatments, actress Divya Khossla has strongly voiced her disapproval of cosmetic enhancements.

Divya Khossla SLAMS Botox Trend

Divya said that many people who go through these treatments end up looking very similar. Speaking to News 18, she said, “You can tell which doctor someone has gone to just by looking at their face.”

Divya shared that she prefers natural beauty and credits her upbringing and mother for that belief. “I never felt the need to follow beauty trends. I’ve never used fillers or Botox. My mother didn’t even let me bleach my face,” she revealed.

She also criticized young celebrities like Kylie Jenner, saying that using cosmetic treatments at a young age can make people look older. “Kylie started very young and now looks older than her age. It’s better to let ourselves age naturally, we might even look better as we grow,” she said.

Divya added that she avoids editing her photos with AI and prefers keeping some imperfections. “I hate it when my pictures are overly touched up. Some edits don’t even look like me,” she admitted. Despite facing criticism about her round face, Divya says she’s confident in how she looks. “I don’t fit the usual beauty standards, and I’m okay with that. I’m not obsessed with mirrors or make-up. What really matters is inner beauty,” she concluded.

On the work front, Divya was latest seen in Ek Chatur Naar brings together Divya Khossla and Neil Nitin Mukesh for the first time in a story revolving around a woman who is sharp with her wit and tries to outsmart everyone around her. Promising a complete rollercoaster of laughter and drama, Ek Chatur Naar lands in theatres on 12th September.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Divya Khossla Talks About Living In A Slum For A Week For Ek Chatur Naar; Says, “Made Me Do Sweeping, Scrubbing And Cleaning”

Manisha Karki

Manisha has established a reputation for insightful and engaging storytelling with over six years of expertise in the industry. With a deep passion for cinema, she brings a unique perspective to her coverage, making it a trusted voice in the entertainment world.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Dancing With the Stars Secrets Revealed
Celebrity News

Dancing With the Stars Secrets Revealed

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

What’s the Process Like for Making the Costumes for Dancing With the Stars?

If you thought the quickstep was fast, just wait until you hear about the pace of the costume department.

“We meet with the set and lighting designers, dancers and talent and create a story [for each pair],” costume designer Daniela Gschwendtner told TV Insider back in 2017. “Then we sketch out ideas. We have five days, max, to make all the outfits. That’s half a day per costume, not including all the rhinestones. The fitting and trimming we do later. We have about 20 people in our department and then we have a separate tailor shop. It’s a big enterprise.”

In fact, costume designer Steven Norman Lee said pairs usually try on their costumes for the first time just hours before showtime. And while the department “might use a pair of pants again for the boys,” he continued, everything is generally made custom each week.

As Gschwendtner added, “We do reuse things for group numbers or promo shoots, but not for the competition. We don’t reuse things unless there’s a specific reason to do so. We try to keep everybody fresh and new in something different every week, so it stays interesting.”

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Busan Competition Film 'Spying Stars' Debuts First Trailer
TV & Streaming

Busan Competition Film ‘Spying Stars’ Debuts First Trailer

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

The first trailer for “Spying Stars,” the latest feature from acclaimed Sri Lankan filmmaker Vimukthi Jayasundara, has been unveiled ahead of its world premiere in competition at the 30th Busan International Film Festival.

The sci-fi drama, a France/India/Sri Lanka co-production, follows scientist Anandi as she visits Hanuman Island to perform last rites for her father. Set in a dystopian future plagued by “Illvibe” — a pandemic caused by machine dominance — Anandi finds herself quarantined in a remote hotel where a mysterious star begins following her. She eventually escapes and seeks refuge with a mother and her transgender daughter.

“I chose to construct ‘Illvibe,’ a disease of the future that finds its origins in technology and devices to narrate a film of loss and mourning, an existential common experience of all mankind of today and in future,” Jayasundara says in his director’s statement.

The film stars Indira Tiwari, Hidaayath Hazeer, Saumya Liyanage, Samanalee Fonseka, Shreepura Mithra, and Kaushalya Fernando. Eeshit Narain serves as director of photography, with music by Alokananda Dasgupta.

Jayasundara has established himself as a major voice in international cinema, notably winning the Caméra d’Or at Cannes for his debut feature “The Forsaken Land” (2004). His subsequent films including “Between Two Worlds” (2009) have screened at prestigious festivals including Cannes, Venice, Locarno, and Toronto.

“‘Spying Stars’ is a liberation film that is spiritual in nature,” the director explains. “It asks one question: in a time of pervasive voyeurism and technological control, how do we retain our humanity?”

The film is presented by House on Fire, Eleenora Images, and Film Council Production, with world sales handled by Bangkok-based Diversion. BIFF runs September 17-26.

Watch the trailer here:

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Dancing with the Stars' Derek Hough 'can't wait' to become a dad
Celebrity News

Dancing with the Stars’ Derek Hough ‘can’t wait’ to become a dad

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

15 September 2025

Derek Hough “can’t wait” to become a dad.

Derek Hough cannot wait to experience things as a dad

In July, the former Dancing with the Stars professional dancer and his wife, Hayley Erbert Hough, 30, announced they are welcoming their first child into the world, and he is excited about planning trips and activities with his little one.

Derek, 40, told People: “Going to Disneyland, or going on trips, and just seeing their wonderment, and their eyes, just wide open.

“I can’t wait to experience things for the first time with my beautiful child.”

The choreographer became a judge on the hit ABC Latin and ballroom dance show in 2020, and is now taking the hosting helm from Billy Bush on the US entertainment news show, Extra.

Despite his work, Derek’s top priority remains being present for his wife.

He added: “Being present is, for me, the most important thing.

“So yes, I’m busy. Yes, I’m going to be doing Dancing with the Stars, Extra. I’m launching a new convention, all these different projects, a documentary.

“But being present with my wife, during this time, and then, now, being a father in a couple months, that’s my number one, always.

“That will always take priority, no matter how busy I get.”

Derek relishes early starts during Hayley’s pregnancy because he gets to do special things for her.

He explained: “This has been a new shift, where I’m… up at 5:30, 6:00 a.m., getting up, doing something in the morning.

“So it was really important for me to start my week off, where every morning, I do something for my wife before she even gets out of bed.

“Cook her breakfast, feed the animals, leave a note somewhere – do something just in service of her before I leave.”

Derek and Hayley – who tied the knot in Monterey County, California, in 2023 – revealed in a joint Instagram video that she is pregnant.

In the video, the pair share a hug before Hayley holds up some sonogram photos for the camera.

They captioned the post: “We can’t believe the biggest thing to happen to us could be so small.”

The couple met after she was cast as one of the dancers for his and sister Julianne Hough’s Move Live Tour in 2014.

They started dating the following year, and Derek proposed in 2022.

And Derek previously said how Hayley is going to be an “amazing” mom.

He told Us Weekly: “I know she’s just going to be an amazing mother and amazing wife, and she’s so thoughtful, so caring, so loving.

“Just seeing the way she is with our animals, I mean, if she’s even a quarter of the way she is with our animals, how she is with our kids, I just can’t wait to see her be a mom.”




September 15, 2025 0 comments
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2025 Emmys Red Carpet: All The Best Looks From TV's Biggest Stars
Fashion

2025 Emmys Red Carpet: All The Best Looks From TV’s Biggest Stars

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s the 2025 Emmys red carpet, where television’s biggest stars get to flex their sartorial chops and make their stylists earn their fees for something fancier than a late night talk show appearance! Here are all of tonight’s nominees.

In the film world, actors are constantly embodying different characters and hitting up festivals and premieres. There are plenty of opportunities for method dressing or showing off their personalities. But in television, more often than not, an actor spends day after day, episode after episode, dressed like a “real person.” Think of the aprons on The Bear, the cardigans on Abbott Elementary, or the scrubs on The Pitt. TV acting is a uniform job as much as it is a costume job, which is why it’s so exciting when events like the 2025 Emmys allow the casts of our favorite shows to get all dolled up. Here’s what everyone wore last year for comparison—remember Karen Pittman’s gloves?

From the Roman statue that is Carrie Coon to the hottest couple in town, Adam Brody and Leighton Meester, this red carpet is full of our faves. So let’s take a look at what the stars are wearing with our picks for the best dressed at the 2025 Emmys.


September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Carmen Maura Stars in Moroccan Domestic Drama
TV & Streaming

Carmen Maura Stars in Moroccan Domestic Drama

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

“Calle Malaga” opens with title cards explaining to the audience the history of Tangier’s Spanish population: How, as Spain fell to fascism under Francisco Franco’s rule in the 1930s people fled to the Northwest Moroccan city, and a community of Spanish speakers blossomed and grew over the decades. It’s an overly didactic touch that conveys little beyond what Carmen Maura’s performance as Maria, an elderly woman living alone in Tangier, already tells the audience.

Making her way through the streets of her neighborhood, shopping for groceries and warmly greeting her neighbors, Maura makes it obvious that Maria adores her quiet, content life in this city where she grew up. And, when Maria’s daughter Clara (Marta Etura) arrives to drop a bombshell — that she needs to sell the family home, and Maria must either come with her to Madrid or live the remainder of her life in a nursing community — the way Maura’s face flashes from devastation and horror to anger and steel makes it all too clear how hard she’ll fight to maintain this life.

Driver's Ed

The third feature of director Maryam Touzani, “Calle Malaga” strikes chords similar to her acclaimed sophomore feature “The Blue Caftan” in its exploration of the romantic, domestic life of someone well past middle-age. Touzani based the character of Maria in part on her own Spanish grandmother, and she gives Maura — a great actress best known to American audiences for her work in Pedro Almodóvar movies like “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown” and “Volver” — a wonderful part to embody. Maria is a wonderfully textured character, at turns flinty and cold and vivacious and funny, and Maura is adept at embodying all sides to this woman. However, the movie around her proves a lot less interesting than it’s main character. Frequently safe and only skimming the surface of the complicated emotions its premise raises, “Calle Malaga” is likable but never quite interesting.

Warmly shot with sun-draped lenses by Virginie Surdej and soundtracked by an overbearingly sentimental score by Freya Arde, “Calle Malaga” introduces the threat on Maria’s house as a tragedy before quickly pivoting to a more cheery, sentimental story, one in which the woman finds community and even love through the hardship. Crafty and resistant, Maria agrees to go to the retirement center and let Clara put the house on the market and return to her family in Madrid. With her daughter off her back, she fakes a trip to see her to leave the center and heads back to squat in her unoccupied former home, eventually teaming up with a young neighbor to host football-viewing parties in the space as a way to scrounge up money. It also helps her buy back her old furniture from handsome antiques dealer Abslam (Ahmed Boulane), with whom she sparks a tentative romance.

The romantic subplot proves the most charming thread “Calle Malaga” has to offer, thanks to Maura and Boulane’s performances. There’s a wistful sense of longing between them even before things turn explicitly romantic, and for a relatively tame and breezy film it does get genuinely hot in its depiction of their relationship. In other areas, however, the script from Touzani and her husband and producer Nabil Ayouch falters in the way it fills out the people surrounding Maria. Her best friend Josefena (María Alfonsa Rosso), a nun who has taken a vow of silence, is more a device through which Maria can spew her feelings and inner thoughts than a fully-formed person. Occasionally their interactions work to funny effect, like when she extolls Abslam’s performance in bed to her silent friend, but the film stumbles when it tries to build real emotional stakes around their bond.

Faring even worse is Clara, thinly rendered as an ungrateful child and an obstacle for her mother. Although she’s introduced with very valid reasons for selling the apartment — she just went through a divorce, she’s struggling financially, she needs the money to buy a new home for her kids — “Calle Malaga” has little interest in giving her real interiority or taking her concerns seriously. Her strained relationship with her mother has little nuance, and the unsatisfying, abrupt ending that leaves the two still at odds proves curiously sour for an otherwise gentle movie.

Lack of nuance plagues “Calle Malaga” in general, and it’s particularly apparent in how thin the neighborhood Maria loves so dearly actually is on screen. The cobblestone step streets are pleasing on the eye, but the people who inhabit this community and rally to help Maria don’t have much character to speak of. There’s little sense of what her life in this city, as a Spanish woman around mostly Moroccans, looks like. Despite the film’s introductory text, most of “Calle Malaga” could happen in any city in the world. Without Maura’s performance, there’d be no specificity to speak of.

Grade: C+

“Calle Malaga” premiered at the Venice Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Cast Members and Stars React
TV & Streaming

Cast Members and Stars React

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Following the news that Ego Nwodim was leaving Saturday Night Live, the reactions started to pour in.

Nwodim, who joined SNL in 2018, announced on social media on Friday that she was exiting the sketch comedy series after seven seasons.

“The hardest part of a great party is knowing when to say goodnight. But after seven unforgettable seasons, I have decided to leave SNL,” she captioned an Instagram post. “I am immensely grateful to Lorne for the opportunity, to my castmates, the writers, and the crew for their brilliance, support and friendship. Week after week on that stage taught me more than I could have ever imagined, and I will carry those memories (and that laughter) with me always. Now invite me to your weddings please!!!”

Soon after the news broke, messages came through the comments from several former and current SNL stars as well as other celebrities.

Cecily Strong, who left the show in 2022 after 11 seasons, commented: “Just texted you but I also want to say it loud and proud here: it was an honor and total joy to get to work with you. One of the best to ever do it.”

Chloe Fineman, who is coming back for season 51, wrote, “One of the best to ever do it my friend. GOAT.” Also returning is Bowen Yang, who took to his Instagram Story to share a photo of Nwodim, writing: “the best.”

Other notable stars who shared reactions included Jack Black, who commented on Nwodim’s post, “Mic drop,” Together star Alison Brie wrote, “Congrats on an incredible run!!,” while Amber Ruffin wrote, “Congratulations! As long as I can still watch you perform, I’m good!”

The announcement came after NBC seemingly confirmed who was returning for season 51, and Nwodim was included. In addition to Nwodim, Heidi Gardner, Michael Longfellow, Emil Wakim, Devon Walker and John Higgins are not returning for the upcoming season.

Longfellow shared a picture of himself and Nwodim on his Instagram Story, and Walker posted a video of Nwodim and him from the Kinds of Kindness red carpet premiere in New York last summer.

SNL‘s 51st season will debut Oct. 4.

September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Sam Nivola Stars in a Generic Teen Movie Throwback
TV & Streaming

Sam Nivola Stars in a Generic Teen Movie Throwback

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

In the new comedy “Driver’s Ed,” Sam Nivola (of “White Lotus” incest fame) plays a lovesick high school senior, Jeremy, who has a passion for movies. He made a short film that won some kind of prize, and he frequently pulls out a little video camera to capture a moment that strikes him as cinematic.

If you told me that “Driver’s Ed” was itself made by Jeremy, I’d believe you; it has all the distracted, hurried texture of typical teenage creative output, batting at big emotions it doesn’t quite understand and zigging haphazardly in various directions as it makes its way to the most obvious of conclusions. Were I his film teacher, I’d give Jeremy a solid B on the assignment but suggest maybe he consider majoring in accounting. 

Easy's Waltz

Jeremy didn’t make the film, though. Bobby Farrelly did, he of “Dumb and Dumber” and “There’s Something About Mary” fame. Farrelly is 67, and Thomas Moffett, who wrote the film, is 47. So I’m not sure what their excuse is. “Driver’s Ed” is almost shockingly generic, a boilerplate teen road-trip movie whose only distinct personality trait is having no personality at all. 

Were it not for the iPhones and a “lit” here and a “no cap” there, “Driver’s Ed” could have been made in the early 2000s, those waning days of the last great teen cinema epoch. It has all the requisite components: a nerdy-cute boy protagonist, a wise-beyond-her-years dream girl, a funny stoner friend. Its sensitivities are more evolved than those of, say, “American Pie,” but “Driver’s Ed” would otherwise fit cozily alongside any of the movies that “American Pie” inspired. 

There are glimmers of originality in Moffett’s script, flashes of idiosyncratic detail that suggest something richer, more personal that could have been had Farrelly not sanded down every edge he could. Farrelly takes broad swings at comedy, but few of his jokes land. Whatever magic he used to have has gone; his instincts have faded, his timing is off. 

The film concerns Jeremy’s madcap adventure to Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where his bitterly missed girlfriend, Samantha (Lilah Pate), is a freshman at UNC. Jeremy is pretty sure he’s going to lose Samantha to the temptations of college life if he doesn’t do something big. So he steals a driving instruction car and steals off into the Carolina backcountry, with three mismatched fellow students in tow. What ensues is meant to be a comically odyssean journey in pursuit of blind passion. In reality, a few minor things happen and then the movie ends exactly as we expect it to. 

At least the company is welcome. Nivola is a charming, natural actor. He breathes something like real life into Moffett’s bland characterization. He has able support from Aidan Laprete as an affable slacker, Mohana Krishnan as a Type A overachiever, and TikTok star Sophie Telegadis, doing very convincing Samaire Armstrong-on-“The O.C.” drag. The kids have a lively, winsome rapport and manage to register some specificity in the face of Farrelly and Moffett’s myriad tired clichés. 

The adults don’t fare quite so well. Molly Shannon does her noble best with a Bad Principal role, while Kumail Nanjiani strains for anything resembling humor as a loser substitute teacher. I’m sure both saw some value in working for one of the Farrelly brothers, even in 2025, but they maybe should have held out for something better.

“Driver’s Ed” is kindhearted and well-intentioned enough that one can’t outright hate it. But Farrelly seriously tries that good will as the movie lurches along. Its 98 minutes feel like twice that. The expected tangents and vignettes of a road movie—in this case a meet-cute with a dog owner, a run in with a petty thief who has the whitest veneers I’ve ever seen, a quick trip in the back of a refrigerated truck full of fur coats (yeah I don’t get it either)—are to a one fatally dull and wholly unnecessary. “Driver’s Ed” has all the arbitrary comedy of a bad improv set, seeming to figure that randomness itself is funny. There are a few laughs to be found in the film, little moments of wit or weirdness, but the film is otherwise a mirthless drag rescued only by its bright leads. Maybe let them make the movie next time.

Grade: C

“Driver’s Ed” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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SNL One-and-Done Cast Members Split
TV & Streaming

‘Saturday Night Live’ Stars Who Lasted Only One Season

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Over the course of Saturday Night Live‘s history, many memorable castmembers have graced the Studio 8H stage (172 of them, to be exact). But of all the various comedians to be featured on the long-running sketch comedy series, roughly 35 percent have only appeared on the show for a single season. 

By technical terms, that means there have been around 60 one-and-done Saturday Night Live performers, and that list includes a plethora of Hollywood’s beloved writers, actors and comedians. Some previous ensemble members have faded into the background, while others have stood out among the crop, going on to win an Oscar, Grammy and plenty of Emmys and Tonys (meaning the full slate of alumni with one season under their belt, together, have an EGOT).

Some of them were fired. Some of them were better suited on the series as writers. A few of their careers went on to blow up in Hollywood. So without further adieu, her are all of the SNL castmembers who (for one reason or another) only lasted one season.

  • Aristotle Athari (2021-2022)

    Aristotle Athari attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music Hall on February 14, 2025 in New York City
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    Aristotle Athari was part of SNL’s 47th installment. After his time on the comedy series, he went on to make appearances in Hacks (in two season three episodes and a singular season four episode) and most recently acted in MEGAN 2.0. 

  • Peter Aykroyd (1979-1980)

    Saturday Night Live - Season 5, Peter AykroydSaturday Night Live - Season 5, Peter Aykroyd
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images

    Peter Aykroyd graced the cast of SNL during season five, where he also served as a writer. The brother of original castmember Dan Aykroyd, Peter died in 2021, and his death was announced during the Nov. 20 episode of the same year. 

  • Morwenna Banks (1994-1995)

    Writer Morwenna Banks attends the Montblanc & The Cinema Society screening of Roadside AttractionsWriter Morwenna Banks attends the Montblanc & The Cinema Society screening of Roadside Attractions
    Image Credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

    Morwenna Banks served on a mere four episodes of season 20 of SNL. She went on to write and act in a number of projects, and she notably voices the role of Mommy Pig in the animated children’s show Peppa Pig. 

  • Beth Cahill (1991-1992)

    Beht Cahill as Pam, Melanie Hutsell as Di, Siobhan Fallon as Meg during the 'Delta Delta Delta' skit on SNLBeht Cahill as Pam, Melanie Hutsell as Di, Siobhan Fallon as Meg during the 'Delta Delta Delta' skit on SNL
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    Beth Call graced SNL during its 17th season. When reflecting on her time as a featured player in conversation with Grantland, Call called the gig “a high-pressure job” that’s full of “stiff competition.” 

    “It’s a fun job, but it’s a real job, with office politics and everything!” she added. “But for the most part, it was great. People told me that Lorne liked me, and he was always very nice to me. I liked working for Lorne; I’m forever grateful to him for taking a chance on me.” 

  • George Coe (1975)

    George Coe and Bruce Willis in 'Blind Date'George Coe and Bruce Willis in 'Blind Date'
    Image Credit: ©TriStar Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection

    George Coe is from SNL‘s original 1975 season, notably a member of the infamous batch of Not Ready for Prime Time Players. After starring in the debut episode, he went on to make additional brief cameos in the show. 

    Coe went on to have a sprawling acting career, being featured in projects including Kramer vs. Kramer, The Stepford Wives and Archer. He was additionally nominated for an Oscar in 1969 for his short film, The Dove. Coe died in 2015 following a long illness. 

  • Billy Crystal (1984-1985)

    Billy CrystalBilly Crystal
    Image Credit: JC Olivera/WWD/Getty Images; Alan Singer/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images

    Billy Crystal was intended to appear on the first episode of SNL in 1975, though he was infamously cut from the cast. Nonetheless, he returned roughly a decade later as an official member of the cast in 1984. While his time with the sketch comedy series was short, Crystal’s career went on an upward trajectory after he left SNL in 1985.  

    Crystal’s discography is too long to list, though some of his standouts include his role of Harry Burns in When Harry Met Sally (1989), City Slickers (1991) and Monsters, Inc. (2001), where he voiced Mike Wazowski. He’s received three Grammy noms (the same number of times he’s hosted said ceremony), six Emmys, won a Tony and holds the title for the second-most times a person has hosted the Oscars, having led the awards show nine separate times. 

    Crystal is just one example on the lengthy list of one-and-done SNL castmembers who have proved that only gracing a single season of the program doesn’t define one’s career.  

  • Joan Cusack (1985-1986)

    Joan Cusack attends the "The End Of The Tour" Premiere during the 2015 Sundance Film FestivalJoan Cusack attends the "The End Of The Tour" Premiere during the 2015 Sundance Film Festival
    Image Credit: Sonia Recchia/Getty Images for Sundance

    After a one-season run on SNL in the mid-1980s, Joan Cusack kicked off a prominent career as an actress. She was nominated for her first Academy Award in 1988 tied to her role in Working Girl, and she earned her second Oscar nom in 1997 for In & Out. Cusack has also lent her voice to the Toy Story franchise as Jessie. 

    The actress earned her single Emmy in 2015 for her work as Sheila Jackson in Shameless. Before taking the title, Cusack was notably nominated for five consecutive years at the Emmys, beginning in 2011. 

  • Tom Davis (1979-1980)

    Seth Meyers, Tom Davis and Paul ShafferSeth Meyers, Tom Davis and Paul Shaffer
    Image Credit: Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images

    Tom Davis was one of the original writers of SNL. He worked on the show alongside his professional partner Al Franken, and Lorne Michaels notably scouted them to write for his sketch comedy show after he saw the duo performing stand-up in Los Angeles. SNL’s fifth season was his only run as a featured player. 

    Davis and Franken earned four Emmys together, with three of those stemming from their writing for the series in 1976, 1977 and 1989. His final Emmy came from The Paul Simon Special in 1977. Davis died in 2012 of metastatic tonsil cancer. 

    “Tom was one of the writers who created SNL,” Michaels said in a statement following his death. “He was there from the beginning. No one saw things the way that Tom did. He was funny, he was original and he was always there to help no matter the hour. And I always trusted his laugh. I can still kinda hear it.”

  • Denny Dillon (1980-1981)

    Denny Dillon attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music Hall on February 14, 2025Denny Dillon attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music Hall on February 14, 2025
    Image Credit: Dipasupil/Getty Images

    Denny Dillon was a castmember during the notorious sixth season of the show, also known as SNL ‘80. She was the first lesbian to be featured on the cast. In a 2020 profile with Vulture, she confirmed that “anyone who was working with me probably knew” she was gay, though she “just wasn’t ever out publicly.” 

    “I’ve been out for a long time. Me telling you I’m out, I just wasn’t ever out publicly. I’ve been gay a long, long time. But it wasn’t safe to be out in Hollywood for a long time, in the ’90s,” Dillon explained. “It wasn’t safe. I’m not sure if [Jean Doumanian or Dick Ebersol] would’ve known; it was a different time.”

  • Jim Downey (1980)

    Jim Downey as George Bush during "The 80's Vote: Almost Halfway Over" skit on May 24,1980Jim Downey as George Bush during "The 80's Vote: Almost Halfway Over" skit on May 24,1980
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    While Jim Downey’s experience in front of the camera was short-lived at Studio 8H, his time behind it was quite extensive. Downey served as a writer on the show from 1977-80, 1984-98 and 2000-05, and was a head writer for a decade from 1985-95, making him the longest-serving writer in the show’s history.

    He also worked as a producer for “Weekend Update” from 1995-97. But it was in 1980 when he became a castmember. A famous sketch he’s seen in is “Mr. Madison,” where he delivers the line, “No one in this room is now dumber.” He also appears in Billy Madison, starring SNL alum Adam Sandler, as the principal, and delivers the harsh yet memorable line: “I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.”

  • Robert Downey Jr. (1985-1986)

    Robert Downey Jr with Oscar and on SNLRobert Downey Jr with Oscar and on SNL
    Image Credit: Arturo Holmes/Getty Images; Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal/Getty Images

    In 1985, after a five-year hiatus, Michaels returned and, instead of sketch comics, hired a crew of young actors, including Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Michael Hall and Joan Cusack. For all his talent, sketch comedy was just not in Downey’s wheelhouse. The dud of the year resulted in nearly the entire cast being let go, Downey among them. He was, of course, meant for bigger things on the big screen.

    Downey since went on to lead the Marvel Cinematic Universe, beginning with 2008’s Iron Man. After earning an Oscar nod for best actor in 1993, he won his first Academy Award in 2024 in the supporting actor category for his work in Oppenheimer. He’ll make his long-awaited MCU return (after Iron Man/Tony Stark died in Endgame) in Avengers: Doomsday, where Downey will take on a new role in the superhero series as Doctor Doom.

  • Christine Ebersole (1981-1982)

    Christine Ebersole attends the 2017 Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on June 11, 2017 in New York City.Christine Ebersole attends the 2017 Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on June 11, 2017 in New York City.
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions

    Christine Ebersole’s first (and only) season on SNL was the same as Dick Ebersol’s — a total coincidence, as are the similarities of their surnames. Ebersole, like Ebersol, was thrown right into the fire, serving as Brian Doyle-Murray’s “Weekend Update” co-anchor. These were, ah, not SNL’s heydays. They were also not Ebersole’s — her best work was saved for a different kind of live stage show, earning Tony Awards for 42nd Street and Grey Gardens.

  • Chris Elliott (1994-1995)

    Chris Elliott attends the "Clara's Ghost" Premiere during the 2018 Sundance Film Festival at Park City Library on January 19, 2018Chris Elliott attends the "Clara's Ghost" Premiere during the 2018 Sundance Film Festival at Park City Library on January 19, 2018
    Image Credit: Ernesto Distefano/Getty Images

    After a successful audition in the mid-1980s, the man behind some of David Letterman’s best Late Night bits and the cult sitcom Get a Life initially turned down an offer to join SNL. He may have wished he had trusted that instinct, as his 1994–95 run was notoriously difficult. Coming off the cancellation of Get a Life and the box office flop of Cabin Boy, Elliott badly needed a win, but instead found the SNL environment stifling: “It’s a really unhealthy process. You’re doing comedy but you’re competing with your fellow castmembers for airtime.”

    In the long run, though, leaving was for the best. Elliott thrived in his own eccentric projects (Eagleheart) and scene-stealing appearances in mainstream hits (There’s Something About Mary, Schitt’s Creek, The Good Wife, Community), channeling his oddball genius far more effectively outside of Studio 8H.

  • Siobhan Fallon Hogan (1991-1992)

    Siobhan Fallon Hogan attends SNL50: The Anniversary SpecialSiobhan Fallon Hogan attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Siobhan Fallon, now Siobhan Fallon Hogan, has had a nice career after her one-and-done SNL season. Though Hogan has mostly worked as a character actress, she has made the most of those opportunities, which include standout roles in Forrest Gump and on Seinfeld. Though Hogan (then Fallon) didn’t stick around long enough to benefit from that early-90s SNL rebuild, her career as a writer and an actress is nothing to stick your nose up at.

  • Janeane Garofalo (1994-1995)

    Image Credit: Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images

    Garofalo didn’t even make it a full season at SNL, because holy cow, she hated it. Garofalo says she was badly mistreated by her fellow castmembers and writers. Calling SNL “the most miserable experience of [her] life” and finding many of the sketches to be juvenile, Garofalo said there was a “visceral feeling of bad karma when you [walked] into the writers room.” So yeah, she preferred working with Ben Stiller, another one-and-done SNL player (just five years earlier). Garofalo went on to have a great career on other TV shows, as well as in more than 50 feature films.

  • Shane Gillis (2019; Honorable Mention)

    Shane Gillis on 'SNL'Shane Gillis on 'SNL'
    Image Credit: Will Heath/NBC

    An honorable mention among singular season SNL castmembers, Gillis was quickly fired after joining the cast in 2019 when a video resurfaced of him using a racial slur. In total, he was an official cast member for less than a week, though he has since returned as host in 2024.

  • Gilbert Gottfried (1980-1981)

    Gilbert Gottfried attends SNL 40th Anniversary CelebrationGilbert Gottfried attends SNL 40th Anniversary Celebration
    Image Credit: Larry Busacca/Getty Images

    Gilbert Gottfried on Saturday Night Live was wildly different than the Gilbert Gottfried we know from Beverly Hills Cop, Aladdin and the Problem Child movies — perhaps that’s why he was so briefly a part of the show. You see, Gottfried’s trademark squint and shrill voice are not natural. They’re part of the act, but not part of the act he brought to SNL in just its sixth season.

    Right now, you’re probably imagining Gottfried screeching “AFLAC!” Gottfried was the infamous voice of the famous insurance duck, until he tweeted out a series of jokes about the deadly 2011 tsunami in Japan — his act had, uh, evolved quite a bit by then. The notoriously dirty and dangerous comic was the subject of 2017 documentary, Gilbert, which is where many fans were first able to separate the man from the character. He died five years later from recurrent ventricular tachycardia caused by myotonic dystrophy type II, a rare genetic muscular disease that can lead to heart complications.

  • Christopher Guest (1984-1985)

    Image Credit: Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic

    The SNL tenure of Christopher Guest — the comedic mind behind Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show and other brilliant mockumentary classics — was limited to the notorious 1984-85 season. Both for him and for the show, it was a transitional year: Dick Ebersol had departed, Michaels had yet to return and the eclectic cast included Billy Crystal, Martin Short and Harry Shearer.

    Hired as both a performer and a writer, Guest brought his dry, understated style to sketches that leaned toward satire. His forte was subtle character work: oddball intellectuals, offbeat commentators and dry “straight men” opposite broader performers. His cerebral humor sometimes clashed with SNL’s rapid-fire format, but collaborations with Crystal and a handful of sharp parody news pieces stood out.

    Guest’s year at Rockefeller Center coincided with his true breakthrough — he had already co-written and starred in This Is Spinal Tap (1984), the film that launched the modern mockumentary. In hindsight, SNL was a brief detour on the way to the improvisational ensemble comedies that defined his career. He has one Primetime Emmy and Grammy under his belt.

  • Anthony Michael Hall (1985-1986)

    Anthony Michael Hall and Lucia Hall attend SNL50: The Anniversary SpecialAnthony Michael Hall and Lucia Hall attend SNL50: The Anniversary Special
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    An icon of the 1980s Brat Pack and John Hughes’ teen films (The Breakfast Club, Weird Science), Anthony Michael Hall joined SNL in 1985 at just 17, still the youngest male castmember in the show’s history. His lone season coincided with Michaels’ return and an influx of new faces, but Hall was overshadowed by heavyweights like Jon Lovitz, Nora Dunn and Dennis Miller.

    Often cast in the same awkward-teen roles that had made him famous in Hollywood, he struggled to land impressions (his Ron Reagan Jr. fell flat) and never quite found his footing. After leaving Studio 8H, Hall pivoted away from teen roles, slowly rebuilding his career with small TV and film parts before scoring later successes, including the lead role in the sci-fi series The Dead Zone (2002-07) and a memorable supporting part in The Dark Knight (2008).

  • Rich Hall (1984-1985)

    Rich Hall during the 'Saturday Night News' skitRich Hall during the 'Saturday Night News' skit
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank

    Rich Hall is not one of those one-timers on our list who you almost certainly know from other projects. His comedy career was relatively frontloaded, winning a writing Emmy for David Letterman’s original daytime show and then writing for and performing on Fridays, the Saturday Night Live competitor best known for counting Larry David (Curb Your Enthusiasm, Seinfeld) among its cast. Hall, a stand-up comic who sometimes performed as country music singer Otis Lee Crenshaw, had some successes here and there — and by “there” we mostly mean in the U.K.

  • Lauren Holt (2020-2021)

    Lauren Holt at Radio City Music HallLauren Holt at Radio City Music Hall
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Peacock via Getty Images

    During the 2020-21 season, better known as the COVID season of the sketch comedy series, Lauren Holt was a featured player in its cast. One of her most memorable sketches was when she appeared as relationship expert Mackenzie Taylor-Joy in a Valentine’s edition of “Weekend Update” and a Bachelor spoof, which starred Adele. That same season, castmember Beck Bennett also left the show after eight seasons. Since departing, she’s gained acting credits in Barbie, You’re Cordially Invited and Curb Your Enthusiasm, and lent her voice for the animated films Aqua Teen Forever: Plantasm and Pastacolypse.

  • Yvonne Hudson (1980-1981)

    David Carradine as Caine, Yvonne Hudson as Ms. Robley, Denny Dillon as Counselor during the 'Welfare Counseling' skit on December 20, 1980  SNLDavid Carradine as Caine, Yvonne Hudson as Ms. Robley, Denny Dillon as Counselor during the 'Welfare Counseling' skit on December 20, 1980  SNL
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank

    A hire from the Jean Doumanian era of SNL, Hudson’s short tenure is notable for making her the first Black woman in the cast. She was a featured player in her season, not a full-fledged castmember, and only given small, supporting roles that failed to let her shine. She was fired after 12 episodes after the season debuted to bad reviews and sinking ratings. 

  • Laura Kightlinger (1994-1995)

    Laura Kightlinger at the Venice Family Clinic Silver Circle Gala 2017Laura Kightlinger at the Venice Family Clinic Silver Circle Gala 2017
    Image Credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for Venice Family Clinic

    Laura Kightlinger was a featured player on SNL during season 20, and while she didn’t continue on with the series, she went on to appear in several other TV and film projects. She served as a consulting producer and writer on 2 Broke Girls, and served in those same roles on the Emmy Award-winning comedy Will & Grace.

  • David Koechner (1995-1996)

    David Koechner (L) attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York CityDavid Koechner (L) attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    David Koechner, most well known for his roles in The Office and the Anchorman films, was previously a castmember on SNL during the 1995-96 season. Additional notable names that season include Will Ferrell, Tim Meadows, Darrell Hammond, Jim Breuer, Norm MacDonald, Mark McKinney and Cheri Oteri. In 2019, Koechner went on Larry King and recalled how he disagreed with the show pushing “fake talk show parodies,” because he wanted to work on sketches instead. 

  • Matthew Laurance (1980-1981)

    Matthew Laurance as Ron during the 'Cat's Name' skit on March 7, 1981 on SNLMatthew Laurance as Ron during the 'Cat's Name' skit on March 7, 1981 on SNL
    Image Credit: NBC/NBCU Photo Bank

    Another member of SNL’s infamous sixth season, Matthew Laurance ran as a featured player for 13 episodes in total. He starred in the 1983 musical drama Eddie and the Cruisers, and subsequently reprised his role for the 1989 sequel. Laurance, too, acted in the beloved 1990s teen drama Beverly Hills, 90210 as Mel Silver, the father to Brian Austin Green’s David Silver. 

  • Gail Matthius (1980-1981)

    Gail Matthius attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music HallGail Matthius attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music Hall
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    After Jean Doumanian was fired from SNL in 1981, leading to a series of cast cuts, Gail Matthius was one of the only starting featured players from season six to remain through the end of the season. Of the “intense” time in the show’s history, she told Vulture, “I remember going one by one into Dick Ebersol’s office. It was like thumbs-up or thumbs-down. Charlie [Rocket] came out: He was gone. Gilly [Gottfried] came out: He was gone. It was pretty intense, like Sophie’s Choice.” 

    However, she didn’t stick around for season seven, though Matthius has since established a wide-ranging career in voice acting. She’s behind the voice of Tiny Toons’ “Shirley the Loon,” Martha in Bobby’s World and Molly Coddle in Bump in the Night.

  • Laurie Metcalf (1981; Honorable Mention)

    Laurie Metcalf, winner of the award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for “Edward Albee's Three Tall Women” poses in the 72nd Annual Tony Awards Media Room at 3 West Club on June 10, 2018 in New York City.Laurie Metcalf, winner of the award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for “Edward Albee's Three Tall Women” poses in the 72nd Annual Tony Awards Media Room at 3 West Club on June 10, 2018 in New York City.
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions

    The Emmy and Tony winner was a part of the SNL cast at one point — sort of. Metcalf had two brief appearances in the show, one in 1981 when she did a “man on the street” bit and another in 1988, where she was in the sketch “Laurie Has a Story” alongside Catherine O’Hara. The Lady Bird star reflected on the experience in a 2019 Vulture interview.

    “It seems like a dream because it was so long ago and it was a whirlwind five days I spent in New York,” Metcalf said. “They put me in a business suit and sent me out on the street with a little mini camera crew. I was so out of my element; I had no idea what I was doing. But I know that I did it because there is proof, there is footage. When I see that, I realize I was very naïve and brave about it in a way.”

  • John Milhiser (2013-2014)

    SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE -- "Lady Gaga" Episode 1647 -- Pictured: (l-r) Kenan Thompson, Lady Gaga as Ashley's mom, John Milhiser as Ashley's dad, Vanessa Bayer during the "Talent Pageant" skitSATURDAY NIGHT LIVE -- "Lady Gaga" Episode 1647 -- Pictured: (l-r) Kenan Thompson, Lady Gaga as Ashley's mom, John Milhiser as Ashley's dad, Vanessa Bayer during the "Talent Pageant" skit
    Image Credit: Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

    With one sole run on SNL in the 2013-14 season, John Milhiser’s time on the series is most remembered for his “4th Grade Talent Show” sketch featuring Lady Gaga. To commemorate the 50th season, the comedian wrote a lengthy tribute about the bit with Mother Monster on Instagram, where he further thanked Michaels for the opportunity. 

    “I love SNL and still religiously watch it,” he wrote. “Much love to Lorne Michaels for putting me on his show and for making many of us fall in love w/ sketch comedy.”

  • Jerry Minor (2000-2001)

    Jerry Minor attends The Strike Show to benefit the Motion Picture and Television Fund at the Steve Allen Theatre on December 12, 2007 in Hollywood, California.Jerry Minor attends The Strike Show to benefit the Motion Picture and Television Fund at the Steve Allen Theatre on December 12, 2007 in Hollywood, California.
    Image Credit: Matthew Simmons/Getty Images

    Jerry Minor hit the SNL stage during its Emmy-nominated 2001 installment. Looking back on his time as a featured player, he told Vulture, “My experience wasn’t as fun as it could have been,” while adding that he “should’ve relaxed more.”

    Minor has since appeared in a 2011 episode of How I Met Your Mother, two season eight episodes of The Office and joined the cast of Abbott Elementary as Mr. Morton in season two. 

  • Luke Null (2017-2018)

    Luke Null attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music HallLuke Null attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert at Radio City Music Hall
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    A charming performer who incorporated guitar and music into his comedy, Luke Null joined in season 43, along with Chris Redd and Heidi Gardner. He was a standout in Chicago’s improv scene, but didn’t impress Michaels, and was released from his contract after a single season. His most memorable sketch is probably the one in which he plays Kenny Longhorn, a country music-playing talk show host.

  • Mike O’Brien (2013-2014) 

    Mike O'Brien (L) and Cecily Strong attend the 2013 Adweek Hot List galaMike O'Brien (L) and Cecily Strong attend the 2013 Adweek Hot List gala
    Image Credit: Ben Gabbe/Getty Images

    Mike O’Brien appeared on camera during season 39, but he had a longer tenure as a writer on the series. After joining in 2009, he remained with SNL until 2015, and became a part of the cast in 2013-2014. Three years after his departure, O’Brien created NBC’s A.P. Bio, which ran for four seasons.  

  • Michael O’Donoghue (1975)

    Michael O'Donoghue on May 22, 1976 on SNLMichael O'Donoghue on May 22, 1976 on SNL
    Image Credit: NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    Michael O’Donoghue is credited as the first head SNL writer. Despite only making a few onscreen appearances, he remained with the program as a writer until he was fired in season three for a skit about then-NBC president Fred Silverman. Dick Ebersol later invited him back for season six, though he was fired before season seven ended. 

    O’Donoghue’s final season with SNL arrived in season 11 when Michaels invited him back, though he went on to be (once again) fired. He collected two Emmys for his writing on the show in 1976 and 1977. O’Donoghue died in 1994 of a cerebral hemorrhage. 

  • Emily Prager (1981)

    An odd footnote in a brilliant career, Emily Prager appeared in a single episode of SNL in 1981 and was then abruptly sacked. A writer and performer with a sharp wit and an ear for satire, Prager was denied a shot at establishing herself on air, and her sudden departure is often cited as one of the quickest cast turnovers in the show’s long history.

    Rather than fading away, though, Prager went on to carve out a career as a novelist, journalist and essayist, contributing to The New York Times and publishing acclaimed books like In the Missionary Position and Roger Fishbite. Her very short-lived SNL experience is a footnote her career and also the show; it underscores its unpredictability — and how some voices are better suited to other mediums.

  • Randy Quaid (1985-1986)

    Randy Quaid attends the premiere for Goyas Ghosts at Palacio de la Musica cinemaRandy Quaid attends the premiere for Goyas Ghosts at Palacio de la Musica cinema
    Image Credit: Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images

    Another casualty of the doomed ’85 season, the National Lampoon’s Vacation series breakout never quite found his groove on the sketch show. He is best remembered for his Ronald Reagan impression before he parted ways with the show. His career declined and he began behaving eccentrically, claiming later to be targeted by a shadowy group of “Hollywood star whackers.” He also found himself getting in trouble with the law.

  • Rob Riggle (2004-2005) 

    Rob Riggle attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York CityRob Riggle attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Before his time on SNL, Rob Riggle was a United States Marine. He was a castmember for the show’s 30th season, and went on to join The Daily Show in 2006 after his 2005 exit. He has one Emmy nomination. 

  • Ann Risley (1980-1981)  

    SNL season 6 cast: Denny Dillon, Charles Rocket, Ann Risley, Joe Piscopo, Gail Matthius, Gilbert GottfriedSNL season 6 cast: Denny Dillon, Charles Rocket, Ann Risley, Joe Piscopo, Gail Matthius, Gilbert Gottfried
    Image Credit: NBC/Everett Collection

    Ann Risley was a featured player on season six of SNL. She has since retired from her career as an actress and comedian, but landed roles in Honkey Tonk Freeway, Rich and Famous and Desert Bloom after her run on the sketch comedy show. 

  • Tim Robinson (2012-2013)

    Kevin Hart, Tim Robinson on SNLKevin Hart, Tim Robinson on SNL
    Image Credit: Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    Tim Robinson started out as a featured player for season 38, though he proved better suited as writer on the show. He lent his writing skills to SNL from 2013-16, and has continued to act in various projects over the years. He has three Emmys, all tied to his 2023 comedy special I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson.

  • Charles Rocket (1980-1981)  

    Charles Rocket on SNLCharles Rocket on SNL
    Image Credit: Fred Hermansky/NBC/NBCU Photo Ban

    Charles Rocket was a standout castmember during his single season on SNL. He hosted “Weekend Update” and “The Rocket Report,” but was fired simultaneously with Jean Doumanian and a wave of other castmembers after he said the F-bomb on-air.

    Rocket went on to act in Dumb and Dumber (1994), Dances With Wolves (1990) and Hocus Pocus (1993). He died of suicide in 2005.

  • Jon Rudnitsky (2015-2016)

    Ian Harding, Lindsay Lohan and Jon Rudnitsky in Netflix's 'Our Little Secret.'Ian Harding, Lindsay Lohan and Jon Rudnitsky in Netflix's 'Our Little Secret.'
    Image Credit: Bob Mahoney/Netflix

    A member of Los Angeles’ The Groundlings, Joe Rudnitsky joined SNL in its 2015-16 run. Despite a one-season limit, he’s continued to work in Hollywood. A year after his departure, he appeared in the Reese Witherspoon-led rom-com Home Again, Netflix’s 2018 Set It Up and the streamer’s 2024 Lindsay Lohan-starring holiday comedy Our Little Secret. 

  • Tom Schiller (1980)

    Tom Schiller attends SNL50: The Anniversary SpecialTom Schiller attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Son to I Love Lucy writer Bob Schiller, Tom Schiller was brought onto SNL as a featured player for one season, though he’s most remembered for serving as a writer on the series. He joined in season one, where he remained until season five in his sole featured player season. Schiller later returned to SNL in its 14th season and stayed for one more as a writer through season 15. 

    He further contributed to the legacy of the sketch comedy program as he directed many of the show’s accompanying short films, including projects that spotlighted castmembers Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase. Schiller has three Emmy wins under his belt, all for his writing on the series.

  • Paul Shaffer (1979-1980)

    David Letterman and Paul Shaffer attend SNL50: The Anniversary SpecialDavid Letterman and Paul Shaffer attend SNL50: The Anniversary Special
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Paul Shaffer’s segway to onscreen SNL work came in season five after he served as part of the SNL band from its debut season. So far, he’s the only member of the band to transition to being a featured player. Following his 1980 exit, Shaffer segued to being David Letterman’s musical director in 1982 on Late Night With David Letterman. 

    He remained there with Letterman until 1993, though he continued his professional working relationship with the iconic TV host for his full tenure on the Late Show (1993-2015). In 1987, Schaffer notably made his SNL return as host. He has four Emmy nods, with half of them linked to his work on Late Night.

  • Martin Short (1984-1985)

    Martin Short on SNL in 1984 and a modern photoMartin Short on SNL in 1984 and a modern photo
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images, Phillip Faraone/Getty Images

    ​​In 1984, Michaels was still a year away from returning when the show, in deep trouble, brought in a cast of seasoned comedy vets (besides Short there was Christopher Guest, Rich Hall and Harry Shearer) to shore up the ranks. Short was already well established as a breakout weirdo from SCTV, and he lent some of his existing and proven characters to SNL, most memorably Ed Grimley. That single Short season also provided Nathan Thurm, the defensive PR man from a 60 Minutes spoof, and his synchronized swimming brothers with Shearer.

    Short has had a dynamic career outside of SNL, composed of leading roles in projects like 1987’s Innerspace to the ongoing Hulu comedy Only Murders in the Building. He has two Emmys, two SAG Awards and one Tony under his belt.

  • Sarah Silverman (1993-1994)

    Sarah Silverman attends SNL50: The Anniversary SpecialSarah Silverman attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Before her acid-tongued and often raunchy comedy made America blush, Sarah Silverman had a blink-and-you-missed-it SNL stint in the 199-94 season. Hired as both writer and a featured player, the soon-to-be queen of comedy appeared in only a few sketches, while none of her original material made it onto the show. Since her departure she’s joked that she was “fired via fax,” but she also seems to get it: Her acerbic and personal style doesn’t really fit into a sketch-driven machine’s dynamic.

    A short stint that was largely forgotten by viewers, Silverman’s time at SNL still opened up some doors as her talent and appeal is undeniable. She quickly rebounded, finding her voice outside of her beloved stand-up routines on Mr. Show With Bob and David; she also doubled down on her stand-up career, which led to The Sarah Silverman Program and Emmy-winning specials. Silverman exited Studio 8H unfulfilled, but she went on to become one of the most distinctive comedians of her generation.

  • Jenny Slate (2009-2010)

    Jenny Slate on the red carpet and during her SNL daysJenny Slate on the red carpet and during her SNL days
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images, Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images

    Stand-up comic and actress Jenny Slate’s one-season run on SNL is remembered mostly for the F-bomb she dropped during her very first episode, in a sketch alongside Kristen Wiig. While hearing “fucking” on TV has since become almost normalized, back in 2009-10 — just a few years after “Nipplegate” — censors were still on high alert for live slip-ups. Slate went on to build a career of supporting and occasional leading roles in film, as well as unforgettable sitcom guest spots like her Parks and Recreation turn as Mona Lisa.

    Reflecting on her time at SNL, she’s among the few castmembers to say she hated the experience; it rattled her so badly that she struggled to return to stand-up, her first love: “I couldn’t do my stand-up joyfully. I was a ghost of myself.” Slate has said her firing wasn’t about the F-bomb, but simply that she wasn’t a fit. Fifteen years on, that turbulent year is ancient history, and she’s firmly established as an original voice of comedy.

  • Pamela Stephenson (1984-1985)

    Pamela Stephenson attend the 2011 Sony Radio Academy AwardsPamela Stephenson attend the 2011 Sony Radio Academy Awards
    Image Credit: Tim Whitby/Getty Images

    The New Zealand actress is remembered as the first SNL castmember to be born outside of North America. Before being cast on season 10, Pamela Stephenson had appeared in the British sketch comedy series Not the Nine O’Clock News in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and also played a role in 1983’s Superman III. 

  • Ben Stiller (1989)

    Kevin Nealon and Ben Stiller on SNL and on a red carpetKevin Nealon and Ben Stiller on SNL and on a red carpet
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images, Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

    Yes, this comedian and filmmaker, known for his roles in Zoolander, Meet the Parents, Night at the Museum, There’s Something About Mary and Tropic Thunder, as well as directing the Emmy-winning series Severance, was once a castmember on SNL. In 1989, Stiller was on the sketch comedy series for a total of four episodes and left the show after only five weeks.

    Earlier this year, he spoke to The New York Times’ podcast The Interview about why he left the show. “I knew that I couldn’t do well there because I wasn’t great at live performing,” Stiller said. “I got too nervous. I didn’t enjoy it, and I wanted to be making short films. So, like, in the moment, there were reasons why, and I had this opportunity to do this MTV show.” 

  • Terry Sweeney (1985-1986)

    Terry Sweeney on the red carpet, plus Chevy Chase as Gerald Ford, Terry Sweeney as Nancy Reagan, Randy Quaid as Ronald Reagan on SNLTerry Sweeney on the red carpet, plus Chevy Chase as Gerald Ford, Terry Sweeney as Nancy Reagan, Randy Quaid as Ronald Reagan on SNL
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images, Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank

    Terry Sweeney may have only been with SNL for one season, but his impact on the series is profound. Sweeney became the first openly gay man to be a featured player in 1985, after writing for the show years earlier. He performed in drag on the show, giving celebrity impersonations of women including Nancy Reagan, Joan Collins and Joan Rivers.

    However, it must not be forgotten that Sweeney’s inclusion in the sketch comedy show was in the middle of the AIDs epidemic. “The homophobic paranoia and hysteria around this disease had straight folks wondering if it was even safe to have a gay waiter bring you your food or touch your plate,” the actor told Out Magazine in 2022. 

    Despite the political landscape at the time, Sweeney came out while he was working as an SNL writer before becoming an official castmember. “I knew it could cost me my job and I would never have this chance again, but what was that in the face of all the agony that my fellow queer people were going through?” Sweeney added. “I thought it was an important time to be very public about coming out of the closet.”

  • Chloe Troast (2023-2024) 

    Chloe Troast during SNL's 2023 "I'm Just Pete" sketch.Chloe Troast during SNL's 2023 "I'm Just Pete" sketch.
    Image Credit: Rosalind O’Connor/NBC via Getty Images

    Chloe Troast was a featured player on SNL during its 49th season, and she was notably the only new addition to the cast in the 2023-24 installment. When announcing her departure on TikTok, she wrote, “This was not my choice, I wish I was there getting to be with my friends. It truly felt like a second home. Thank you to everyone. I love you all.”

  • Danitra Vance (1985-1986)

    Danitra Vance as Latoya Marie during the 'That Black Girl' skit on January 18, 1986  on SNLDanitra Vance as Latoya Marie during the 'That Black Girl' skit on January 18, 1986  on SNL
    Image Credit: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

    Danitra Vance joined SNL during its 11th season, where she made history as the first Black lesbian on the show’s cast (though she was not out at the time). After one year on the show, she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1990, and incorporated her diagnosis into her skit called “The Radical Girl’s Guide to Radical Mastectomy.” Vance died of cancer in 1994. She was 35. 

  • Dan Vitale (1985-1986)

    Dan Vitale was featured in only three episodes of the 11th season. When asked why his appearances were so scarce on SNL, he told Vulture, “I wound up spending most of that year in rehab.” Before his time on the beloved show, Vitale worked with Michaels on The New Show. He died in 2022. 

  • Nancy Walls (1995-1996)

    Steve Carell and Nancy Carell attend the 23rd Annual Mark Twain PrizeSteve Carell and Nancy Carell attend the 23rd Annual Mark Twain Prize
    Image Credit: Paul Morigi/Getty Images

    Nancy Walls had a short run on SNL, only emerging as a featured player during season 21. Just before she joined the cast in 1995, she wed Steve Carell. Since her SNL days, Walls has appeared in a few of Carell’s projects, including The Office and The 40-Year-Old Virgin. 

  • Emil Wakim (2024-2025)

    Emil Wakim (left) with anchor Colin Jost during Weekend Update on the April 12 episode.Emil Wakim (left) with anchor Colin Jost during Weekend Update on the April 12 episode.
    Image Credit: Will Heath/NBC

    Emil Wakim is the most recent one-and-done SNL performer, having joined in 2024 and exited this year in 2025. The announcement of his departure from the show came as part of a cast exodus ahead of season 51. “It was a gut punch of a call to get but i’m so grateful for my time there,” Wakim wrote in the caption of his Instagram post where he revealed the news. 

  • Michaela Watkins (2008-2009) 

    Michaela Watkins attends the Bentonville Film Festival AwardsMichaela Watkins attends the Bentonville Film Festival Awards
    Image Credit: Derek White/Getty Images for Bentonville Film Festival

    A member of the comedy troupe The Groundlings, Michaela Watkins spent a solo season on SNL during the 2008-09 installment. There, she impersonated Barbara Walters, Glenn Close and Joan Rivers. Watkins has continued to maintain a career in entertainment, acting in projects including Hacks and Tiny Beautiful Things. 

  • Damon Wayans (1985-1986) 

    Damon WayansDamon Wayans
    Image Credit: Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images

    SNL was an early career move for Damon Wayans, working on the show during season 11. After his run with the Michaels-created sketch comedy series, he went on to have a breakout role in fellow sketch comedy show In Living Color. Wayans worked on the latter series from 1990-94 and went on to create and star in Fox’s Damon (1998), star in My Wife and Kids (where he played Michael Kyle from 2000-05) and Lethal Weapon (2016-19). 

    He recently led CBS’ sitcom Poppa’s House alongside his son Damon Wayans Jr., though the show was canceled in 2025. Wayans has been nominated for four Emmys, all stemming from his work on In Living Color. 

  • Patrick Weathers (1980-1981)

    Patrick Weathers (R) attends SNL50: The Homecoming ConcertPatrick Weathers (R) attends SNL50: The Homecoming Concert
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    During season six, Patrick Weathers was a featured player. Before SNL, he embarked on a career as a musician, which he picked up after his tenure with the series. 

  • Noël Wells (2013-2014) 

    Noel Wells attends the Premiere Of Paramount Pictures And Vertical Entertainment's "Social Animals" at The Landmark on May 30, 2018Noel Wells attends the Premiere Of Paramount Pictures And Vertical Entertainment's "Social Animals" at The Landmark on May 30, 2018
    Image Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

    Noël Wells had a swift run with SNL on season 39, though she’s continued to work in various Hollywood projects. In 2017, she wrote, directed and starred in Netflix’s Mr. Roosevelt, voiced Ensign D’Vana Tendi in Star Trek: Lower Decks from 2020-24 and has done additional voice work for Craig of the Creek. 

  • Brooks Wheelan (2013-2014)

    Brooks Wheelan speaks onstage during Netflix Is A Joke Festival: I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson Live! at The Greek Theatre on May 11, 2024 in Los Angeles, CaliforniaBrooks Wheelan speaks onstage during Netflix Is A Joke Festival: I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson Live! at The Greek Theatre on May 11, 2024 in Los Angeles, California
    Image Credit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Netflix

    Brooks Wheelan wasn’t just an SNL castmember on season 39, but also a writer. Following that experience, he lent his voice to Big Hero 6: The Series and delivered his 2024 comedy special Alive in Alaska. 

  • Alan Zweibel (1990) 

    Robin Zweibel and Alan Zweibel attend SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City.Robin Zweibel and Alan Zweibel attend SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City.
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    Alan Zweibel was a castmember during season five, though he served as an SNL writer from 1975-80. Across his time with the show, he earned three Emmys, all for his writing. He created It’s Garry Shandling’s Show in 1986 and served as a consulting producer on Curb Your Enthusiasm‘s second and third installments. 

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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