Saturday Night Live (season 10)


The tenth season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between October 6, 1984, and April 13, 1985. Only 17 episodes were produced due to a writers' strike and budget constraints.

Changes to format

This season also featured a new opening sequence produced by Charlex, depicting the SNL cast as giants in and around New York City landmarks. At the end of the season, Ebersol requested to completely revamp the show to include mostly prerecorded segments. Short, Guest, and Hall ultimately got tired of the show's demanding production schedule and showed little interest in returning for another season, leaving Crystal the only "A-cast" member available for season 11. Like Lorne Michaels at the end of season5, Ebersol made taking the show off the air for several months to re-cast and rebuild a condition of his return. Another idea was to institute a permanent rotation of hosts for "a hip The Ed Sullivan Show". After briefly canceling the show, NBC decided to continue production only if they could get Michaels to produce again. Ebersol, along with his writing staff and most of the cast, left the show after this season. Those who wished to stay, such as Crystal, were not rehired for the following season.

Cast

During the previous season, Eddie Murphy left the show mid season. Because of Murphy's departure Joe Piscopo also left the show because he did not want to do it without Murphy. Dick Ebersol fired Robin Duke, Brad Hall and Tim Kazurinsky. Ebersol then wanted to blow up the show by adding seasoned comedians instead of newcomers. He hired Billy Crystal, Christopher Guest, Rich Hall, Harry Shearer, Martin Short and New Zealander Pamela Stephenson. Christopher Guest became the anchor of Saturday Night News. All of the cast members left the show at the end of the season. According to IMDb, future cast member Jan Hooks and actress Kathy Najimy auditioned for a spot in the season as Duke's replacement, but both lost to Stephenson. Hooks then auditioned the following season and later joined the show in season 12.
In the middle of the season, Harry Shearer left the show due to "creative differences". Shearer told the AP, "I was creative, and they were different." Despite his departure, his image is still shown in the opening credits.

Cast roster

Repertory players
bold denotes Weekend Update anchor

Writers

Billy Crystal, Larry David, Christopher Guest, Rich Hall, Rob Riley, and Martin Short joined the writing staff. Jim Downey and Harry Shearer rejoined the staff after a four-year hiatus. Robin Duke, Adam Green, Tim Kazurinsky, Michael McCartney, Eddie Murphy, Pamela Norris, and Joe Piscopo left the staff.
This season's writers were Jim Belushi, Andy Breckman, Billy Crystal, Larry David, Jim Downey, Christopher Guest, Rich Hall, Nate Herman, Kevin Kelton, Andy Kurtzman, Margaret Oberman, Rob Riley, Herb Sargent, Martin Short, Harry Shearer, Andrew Smith, Bob Tischler and Eliot Wald. The head writer was Bob Tischler.

Episodes

Canceled episodes with booked guests

AirdateHostMusical GuestComments
March 9, 1985John Candy & Eugene LevyHall & OatesCandy and Levy were planned to host that week, but was cancelled due to a short writer's strike.
March 16, 1985Steve LandesbergTears for FearsOne of Ebersol's planned shows, but was cancelled due to a short writers' strike.
May 11, 1985Joe PiscopoDolly PartonOne of Ebersol's planned shows, but was cut due to budget cuts.
May 18, 1985David LettermanPrince & The RevolutionOne of Ebersol's planned shows, but was cut due to budget cuts.

Specials