Over the years, I have received sympathy for missing the
opportunity to work on the original incarnation of Saturday Night Live. There
are a lot of reasons I turned the job down, some of them revealing the less
admirable attributes of my character, the retrospectively most foolish of those reasons being that I did not think the series
was going to last.
Those reasons aside – both foolish and embarrassing – there was another reason for saying “No” to Lorne Michaels’ invitation to move to New York and join, and, it was insinuated, even head up, the writing staff of Saturday Night Live.
And I did not realize it until recently, when I was being
interviewed on a podcast and I heard myself enunciate it, confirming my
long-standing belief that I do not know what I think until I hear what I say.
The best reason for my not writing on Saturday Night Live:
I was temperamentally unsuited for the job.
This insight occurred to me when I was explaining to my
podcast interviewer Brian something most people probably already know, which is
that, on Saturday Night Live, the
sketches are all written in one day.
They pitch ideas on Monday.
The ideas that are approved are written, in a marathon session between
Monday night and Tuesday night.
Rehearsals begin on Wednesday, so, except for minor polishes and
adjustments, that Monday-Tuesday period is basically it for the writing.
Why was I ill-suited for that unavoidably breakneck-speed writing
process? Do you remember yesterday’s
post?
I parse syllables.
That is all you need to know.
For the first time – during that podcast – I realized how
excruciatingly frustrating it would have been for me, watching a performance
one of my sketches, and suddenly aware of a writing change that would make what
I was looking at immeasurably better.
There I am, witnessing an imperfect version of my work unfolding
in front of me, and I can’t do anything about
it!
This morning, on one of my now “Thursday Walks”, my mind unencumbered because nothing happens on my Thursday walks, I imagined,
with alarming clarity, the following scenario:
It is 1975. I am on
the writing staff of Saturday Night Live. The cast is performing the show’s pre-“Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night”
sketch written by yours truly, for the first and only time.
The sketch’s premise?
It is five minutes before “Armageddon.” An asteroid is hurtling towards Earth, its
colliding impact certain to blow the planet to smithereens.
An engineer – played by Dan Aykroyd – has over the years,
been sneaking spaceship parts home and constructing an “Escape Vehicle” in his
garage, as he explains it, “Just in case.”
And here we are – “Mr. Prescient.” The world is coming to an end, and he is the
only person who’s prepared for it.
It is now time to make their move. Aykroyd assembles his household – his wife
(played by Jane Curtin), their two teenaged children (played by John Belushi
and Gilda Radner), their voluptuous Swedish au
pair (played by a voluptuous Swedish “extra”) and an unobtrusive lodger, renting
an apartment in their basement.
The confident patriarch is about to push the button and fly
the family to safety. He pushes the button. There is a recognizable “Click.” No flames emerging from the bottom of the
spacecraft, and no “Lift-off.”
The father is perplexed by this mysterious “failure to
launch.” He makes furious adjustments,
each met by a progressively nerve-rattling,
“Click.”
The wife sardonically – “Nice try, Einstein” – berates her
husband’s futility. In his defense, he
explains, “I’m a “Mechanical
Engineer. I constructed the tail.”
Explaining that she is “handy around the house”, the wife volunteers
to try, her suggestion garnering misogynistic retorts from her flying failure
of a husband. Supported by a “Well I
could hardly do worse” rationale, the
wife assumes the “Command Position”, and she gives it a shot.
“Click.”
The teenaged boy is afforded his turn to start the spaceship.
(“He reads a lot of Kurt Vonnegut.”)
“Click.”
Followed by the teenaged daughter, because “What have we got
to lose?”
No “Click.”
They are now officially going backwards.
It is thirty seconds to “Kablooey!”
The confessions being to pour out – emotional unburdenings
before their inevitable demise.
The husband admits to an affair with the voluptuous Swedish au pair.
The wife confesses to an affair with the husband’s brother, pointing
triumphantly to their son and revealing,
“Jeremy is not yours!”
The son (Belushi) blurts, “Oh yeah? Well that’s nothing!” His older sister calls
out, “Jeremy!” and he immediately goes silent.
Surreptitiously, they reach out for each other’s hand, exchanging a
revelatory squeeze.
“None of that matter anymore,” laments the father, “because
we cannot get this fakakta spaceship
off the ground.”
Out of the shadows, the till-then silent lodger, his face deeply
buried in a book, speaks up.
“I can do it.”
The camera closes in on the lodger, revealing the face of that
week’s SNL “Guest Host” –
“Mercury Seven” astronaut John Glenn.
Who, of course, does exactly what is necessary, saving
everyone from destruction.
As the sketch is unfolding prior to the “Surprise Reveal”, I
am standing behind the cameras beside Lorne, who watches the proceedings on the
monitor. Suddenly, it hits me.
“Oh, my God! It’s not
‘I can do it.” It’s “I think I can do it”!
Lorne immediately “Shushes” me, as I had blurted my illumination
while the show was being performed.
“I need him to change that line!” I exclaim, my voice now under
control, in volume, if not in intensity.
Without thinking about it, I make a distinct move towards
the stage, intending, in my moment of unscheduled insanity, to interrupt the
performance, and whisper the improved
version of the line into John Glenn’s ear so he can do it right, and not close to right but not right enough.
Lorne immediately grabs me, preventing me from stepping in
front of the cameras, simultaneously whisper-shouting,
“What are you doing?”
“I thought of a better version of the line!”
To which he replies, encapsulating the reason I could never
have worked on Saturday Night Live,
“You idiot! It’s too late!”
Dissolve Forward, and I am at the SNL after-party, nursing a Heineken,
mumbling, “‘I think I can do it.’ Why didn’t I think of that before?”
I fantasize an emboldened “alternate Earl”, at the strategic moment, eluding Lorne’s control,
walking directly onto the stage, and, to the surprise of both the audience and the actors, first, sincerely
apologizing, and then explaining my intrusion, insisting that the line about to
be delivered be replaced by the better
version of the line before allowing them to continue with the performance.
That might actually have been funny, a “Breaking the ‘Fourth
Wall’” interruption by an obsessed comedy writer, determined at all costs to
get everything “exactly right.”
A “Memorable Television Moment”, perhaps. The problem was, what would I have done the following week,
When the same situation happened again?
No comments:
Post a Comment