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Saturday Night Live season 22

Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saturday Night Live season 22
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The twenty-second season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between September 28, 1996, and May 17, 1997.

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This season is notable for the host selection. Seven of the 20 hosts were former cast members. They included Dana Carvey, Robert Downey Jr. (the second of three season 11 cast members to come back and host the show joining Damon Wayans [who hosted during the show's 20th season] and, later in season 23, Jon Lovitz), Phil Hartman, Chris Rock, Martin Short (who hosted before with Steve Martin and Chevy Chase on the show's 12th season, and the only cast member out of the seven to not have worked under Lorne Michaels, as Short was a Dick Ebersol cast member), Chase and Mike Myers. This would mark Chase's final time hosting before getting banned[1] (returning much later for numerous guest appearances).

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Cast

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Many changes happened before the start of the season. David Koechner and Nancy Walls were both let go after one season, and longtime cast member David Spade, who had been with the cast for six seasons since 1990, left the show on his own terms.[2]

Comedian and singer Ana Gasteyer of The Groundlings and stand-up comedian Tracy Morgan were hired to replace Koechner and Walls,[3] being promoted to repertory status when hired.

Chris Kattan was promoted to repertory status, while Colin Quinn and Fred Wolf remained as featured players.

This was the final season for Mark McKinney, who had been on the show for three seasons since 1995.[4] Wolf also left his position as featured player and co-head writer after the season's first three episodes.[5]

Cast roster

bold denotes Weekend Update anchor

Quinn was credited for 10 of the season's 20 episodes and Wolf was only credited for the third episode of the season and left afterwards. This is also the final season in which featured players are only credited in certain episodes. Starting with season 24, featured players are credited for every single episode of the season, whether they appear or not.

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Writers

Adam McKay, who had joined the writing staff at the start of the previous season, became head writer alongside Tim Herlihy.[6] While Steve Higgins (who was also promoted to producer) and Fred Wolf remained on the writing staff. Robert Carlock and Stephen Colbert[7] joined the writing staff for this season.

Additionally, former writer Robert Smigel (who previously wrote for the show from 1985 to 1993) returned to the writing staff to produce the "TV Funhouse" cartoons.[8]

Wolf (who joined the writing staff in 1993) left the show after the Bill Pulman-hosted episode after about three calendar years.[9]

This was Norm Hiscock's final season as a writer. Hiscock (joining the writing staff in 1994) departed from the series after three seasons.[10] Hiscock was one of the few writers who survived the writer/cast overhaul after season 20 in 1995.

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Episodes

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References

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