"Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special" | |
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Saturday Night Live episode | |
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Episode no. | Season 50 |
Directed by | Liz Patrick |
Narrated by | Darrell Hammond |
Original air date | February 16, 2025 |
Running time | 209 minutes (with commercials) |
"Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special" (also billed as "SNL50: The Anniversary Special") is a three-hour television special to commemorate the 50th anniversary season of Saturday Night Live . It aired on February 16, 2025, on NBC and Peacock and, like the 40th Anniversary Special, was preceded by two hour-long live red carpet specials: one was hosted by Amelia Dimoldenberg for SNL's social media such as YouTube; [1] [2] [3] [4] Willie Geist, Leslie Jones, and Matt Rogers hosted the pre-show on NBC. The special was watched by nearly 15 million viewers. [5] [6]
The special followed the format of a typical Saturday Night Live episode, extended to 3½ hours instead of the usual 1½, and included a cold open, a monologue, sketches, a short film, commercial parodies, and musical performances. [7] [8]
Sketch | Notes |
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Opening Monologue | Steve Martin hosted featuring cameos from John Mulaney and Martin Short, with David Letterman in the audience. |
The Lawrence Welk Show & The Maharelle Sisters | Fred Armisen as Lawrence Welk, Will Ferrell as Robert Goulet, Kristen Wiig as Dooneese, Ana Gasteyer as Margaret, Kim Kardashian as Holly, and Scarlett Johansson as Janice. Kenan Thompson briefly appears as Florian Trent, a body contortionist. |
Black Jeopardy! | Kenan Thompson reprises his role as Black Jeopardy! host Darnell Hayes with Leslie Jones as Shanice, Tracy Morgan as Darius, Eddie Murphy as Tracy Morgan, Chris Rock as a Special Guest Clue, and Tom Hanks reprising his role as Doug. |
Physical Comedy clip montage | Emma Stone and Molly Shannon as Sally O'Malley presented a montage dedicated to physical comedy on SNL. |
Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey | Handey's voice reminisces about 50 years of SNL, but values his salary above anything. |
Domingo: Vow Renewal | Martin Short and Molly Shannon as parents of the bride, Chloe Fineman and Andrew Dismukes as the couple, Sabrina Carpenter, Heidi Gardner, Sarah Sherman, and Ego Nwodim as bridesmaids, Andy Samberg, Bowen Yang, Beck Bennett, Kyle Mooney as the Groomsmen, Marcello Hernandez as Domingo, Pedro Pascal as Renaldo, and Bad Bunny as Santiago. |
Q&A Segment | Tina Fey and Amy Poehler answer questions from audience members Quinta Brunson, Tim Meadows, Ryan Reynolds, Nate Bargatze, Donna Richards (host dresser), Jon Lovitz, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Adam Driver, Cher, Keith Richards, Zach Galifianakis, Jon Hamm, Bad Bunny, Seth Meyers, Al Sharpton, Ray Romano, Jason Momoa, Fred Armisen, and Peyton Manning. |
SNL Digital Short | Bowen Yang, Andy Samberg, Sarah Sherman, Chris Parnell, Ana Gasteyer, Molly Shannon, Will Forte, Taran Killam, Kenan Thompson, Beck Bennett and Kyle Mooney appear in a musical pre-taped digital short about anxiety at SNL. |
Weekend Update | Colin Jost and Michael Che host Weekend Update. Che pays tribute to both Norm Macdonald and O.J. Simpson. [a] Cecily Strong plays The Girl You Wish You Hadn't Started a Conversation with at a Party alongside Bobby Moynihan as Drunk Uncle. Seth Meyers introduces "Lorne's Best Friends from Growing Up" (Vanessa Bayer, Fred Armisen). Bill Murray ranks his favorite Weekend Update anchors. |
"Close Encounters" sketch | Aidy Bryant and Jon Hamm play officials investigating an alien abduction. Kate McKinnon reprises her role as Colleen Rafferty with Pedro Pascal and Woody Harrelson playing other abductees and Meryl Streep playing Colleen Sr., Rafferty's mother. |
"The Stagehand" pre-taped sketch | Laraine Newman reminiscences being around Studio 8H and meets Chad (Pete Davidson). Cameo from Mikey Day. |
"Moving to New York" musical sketch | Musical sketch featuring John Mulaney as Big Nick, Pete Davidson, David Spade, Adam Driver, Maya Rudolph, Emil Wakim, Alex Moffat, Paul Shaffer, G. E. Smith, Nathan Lane, Chloe Fineman, Jason Sudeikis, Will Forte, Kristen Wiig, Beck Bennett, Kyle Mooney, Scarlett Johansson, Paul Rudd, James Austin Johnson, Kenan Thompson, Cecily Strong, Nick Jonas, Taran Killam, and Ana Gasteyer with Kate McKinnon reprising her role as Rudy Giuliani, Lin-Manuel Miranda reprising his role as Alexander Hamilton, Sarah Sherman as Michael Bloomberg, and Devon Walker as Eric Adams. Audience members Jenna Ortega and Kevin Costner also take part, perhaps unintentionally, sitting between two of the singers. |
Commercial parody clip montage | Alec Baldwin introduces a montage of commercial parodies. |
"Bronx Beat with Betty & Jodi" Sketch | Amy Poehler and Maya Rudolph as Betty and Jodi with Miles Teller and Mike Myers who reprises his role as Linda Richman. |
In Memoriam to cancelled sketches | Tom Hanks presents an In Memoriam to cancelled characters, stereotypes, jokes in poor taste, or "sketches that have aged horribly." |
"Debbie Downer" sketch | Jimmy Fallon, Ayo Edebiri, Drew Barrymore, and Robert De Niro with Rachel Dratch reprising her role as Debbie Downer working as a bartender. |
"Scared Straight" sketch | Sketch featuring Eddie Murphy, Kenan Thompson reprising his role as Lorenzo McIntosh, Will Ferrell, Jason Sudeikis reprising his role as Officer Sikorski, Mikey Day, Michael Longfellow, and Marcello Hernandez. |
"Don't Look Back in Anger" short | Garrett Morris introduced the Schiller's Reel short, "Don't Look Back in Anger" starring John Belushi. |
SNL goodnights | Martin Short salutes the original cast and thanks Lorne Michaels on-stage as they began the famous SNL goodnights. |
Presenter | Musicians | Notes |
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The cold open | Paul Simon and Sabrina Carpenter | "Homeward Bound", previously performed by Simon and George Harrison on the November 20, 1976 episode |
Aubrey Plaza | Miley Cyrus and Brittany Howard | "Nothing Compares 2 U", previously performed by Sinead O'Connor on the October 3, 1992 episode |
Jack Nicholson | Adam Sandler | "50 Years", a tribute song to SNL written by Sandler |
Dave Chappelle | Lil Wayne and The Roots | Medley of "Uproar", "Lollipop", "6 Foot 7 Foot", "Mrs. Officer", and "A Milli" |
Martin Short | Paul McCartney | "Golden Slumbers"/"Carry That Weight"/"The End" |
The initial headliners for the 50th anniversary special were announced on February 6, 2025, 10 days before the broadcast. [9] [10] [11] Several more headliners were spoiled, in a picture The New York Times used, during an interview with executive producer Lorne Michaels. [12] On February 14, it was confirmed that cast alumni Dan Aykroyd and Bill Hader would not be present at the event; Aykroyd was unable to attend, while Hader declined the invitation due to a schedule conflict. [13] Aykroyd later gave his blessing to the special, stating in a social media post that he "smile(d) from start to finish" watching from home. [14] Other alumni who were absent included Dana Carvey (who was suffering from a severe case of influenza), Colin Quinn (who had an engagement booked in North Carolina that night), Dennis Miller and Dick Ebersol. [15]
Several past writers for the show returned to become "staff writers" for the special, including Tina Fey, Seth Meyers, Paula Pell, Emily Spivey, and John Mulaney. [16]
Also in attendance were numerous actors, musicians, comedians, media figures, and celebrities, many of whom had appeared on or hosted SNL in the past, with some seen prominently during some sketches. Confirmed as attending were:
Before the main event, NBC aired three other specials: SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night , a four-part documentary debuting on Peacock on January 16; Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music , airing on NBC on January 27; and SNL50: The Homecoming Concert, on February 14 live on Peacock. [17] [18] NBC also aired the first episode of the show the night before the anniversary special. [19] The main special was preceded by a one-hour "red carpet special" featuring interviews with celebrities and past and current cast members (including many participating in that night's show). [4]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 71% of 17 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.3/10. [20] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the episode a score of 66 out of 100, based on 8 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. [21]
Joe Berkowitz of Vulture wrote, "SNL50 had three jobs: capture the significance of the milestone, pay respect to those who made it possible, and be funny. It handily managed all three, often at once." [22]