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Saturday Night Live season 9

Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saturday Night Live season 9
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The ninth season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between October 8, 1983, and May 12, 1984.

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Hosts

Future cast member Billy Crystal hosted twice this season: once with musical guest Al Jarreau[1] and again on the season finale with Ed Koch, Edwin Newman, Betty Thomas and former cast member Don Novello, with the Cars as musical guest.[2]

Cast

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Jim Belushi was added to the cast, making his debut on the third episode of the season.[3][4]

Eddie Murphy's movie schedule got too busy during this season that, in a historic act for the show, he pre-taped a batch of sketches in September of 1983 that were aired throughout the season as if they were live so that he could skip those live shows. Murphy only performed live in eight of the season's 19 episodes, but he appears in new pre-taped sketches that aired in eight episodes he wasn't present for throughout the season. Midway through the season in February, Murphy left the show, but he remained in the opening credits on and off through April for episodes in which his remaining pre-tapes aired. [5][6]

Brad Hall, who had been anchoring Weekend Update (then called Saturday Night News) since the previous season, left the position in January of 1984.[7] For the rest of the season and into the next, both cast members and SNL guest-hosts would take turns at the anchor chair. Hall himself left SNL at the end of the season.[7]

Cast roster

Repertory players

bold denotes Weekend Update anchor

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Writers

This season's writers were Jim Belushi, Andy Breckman, Robin Duke, Adam Green, Mary Gross, Nate Herman, Tim Kazurinsky, Kevin Kelton, Andy Kurtzman, Michael McCarthy, Eddie Murphy, Pamela Norris, Margaret Oberman, Joe Piscopo, Andrew Smith, Bob Tischler, Eliot Wald and Herb Sargent (who returned for the last few episodes of the season).[8] The head writers were Bob Tischler and Andrew Smith. Smith then departed after the season finale, after 2½ years since 1982 (this was his only season as head writer).[9]

Besides, Murphy, Piscopo, and Duke, this was also the final season for writer Pam Norris, who left the show after four seasons since 1980.[9] Not counting Murphy or Piscopo, Norris was the last writer from the Jean Doumanian-era season to leave the show.

Episodes

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Notes

  1. Murphy's last episode he appeared in live was the February 25, 1984 episode, but he is still featured in the opening credits after that when he appears in pre-taped sketches through the April 14th episode, when his last pre-tape airs.

References

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