- Source: Saturday Night Live season 27
The twenty-seventh season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between September 29, 2001 and May 18, 2002.
Eighteen days before the season started, the September 11 terrorist attacks took place in New York. The season premiere (hosted by Reese Witherspoon) went on as scheduled, with a special cold open featuring Rudy Giuliani, the Mayor of New York City at the time, along with firefighters from the FDNY and police officers from the NYPD, declaring that despite the terrorist attack, New York City will run as normal and Saturday Night Live will go on as planned (with Lorne Michaels asking Giuliani "Can we be funny?" and Giuliani replying "Why start now?").
Three weeks into the season the show faced another scare when anthrax was found in the GE Building (from where the show is broadcast). The scare caused most of the cast and crew, as well as that week's guest host Drew Barrymore, to evacuate the building.
Cast
Before the start of the season, longtime cast member Molly Shannon, who had been on the show for seven seasons since 1995, departed midway through the previous season on her own terms, and featured player Jerry Minor and longtime cast member Chris Parnell were both let go from the show after the finale. However, Parnell was hired back to the show midseason in the episode hosted by Jonny Moseley, becoming the second cast member to be hired back to the show after being fired, the first person being Jim Belushi in 1983.
Four new cast members were hired to the show this season: stand-up comic Dean Edwards, Chicago improviser Seth Meyers, Amy Poehler of the Upright Citizens Brigade comedy troupe, and stand-up comic/impressionist Jeff Richards, who was previously a cast member on the rival sketch show MADtv. Rachel Dratch, Tina Fey, and Maya Rudolph were all upgraded to repertory status at the beginning of the season, and Poehler was promoted to repertory status mid-season.
Will Ferrell was absent from a number of episodes because he was filming Old School. This would also be the final season for both Ferrell and Ana Gasteyer. After Gasteyer went on maternity leave at the end of the season, she decided not to return to the show.
= Cast roster
=bold denotes "Weekend Update" anchor
Writers
Emily Spivey, Doug Abeles, and Charlie Grandy join the writing staff with this episode.
This was also the final episode for longtime writers Hugh Fink (who had been a writer since 1995) and Matt Piedmont (who had written at the show since 1996, and is called out by departing-cast member Will Ferrell via a cue card for what was their last episode). Fink wrote for the show for seven years, while Piedmont was there for six.
Episodes
Special
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Saturday Night Live
- Saturday Night (film 2024)
- Maya Rudolph
- Colin Jost
- Chloe Fineman
- Kate McKinnon
- Sarah Sherman
- James Austin Johnson
- Devon Walker
- Chris Redd
- Saturday Night Live season 27
- Saturday Night Live season 50
- Saturday Night Live season 48
- Saturday Night Live season 49
- List of Saturday Night Live episodes (season 31–present)
- Saturday Night Live season 38
- Saturday Night Live season 44
- List of Saturday Night Live cast members
- Saturday Night Live season 41
- Saturday Night Live season 47