Gio Paul Baggio (talk | contribs) Tag: Source edit |
|||
(142 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Season |
{{Season |
||
|logo = [[logo-s46.png|300px]] |
|logo = [[logo-s46.png|300px]] |
||
− | |premier = October 3, 2020 |
+ | |premier = [[October 3, 2020]] |
− | |last = |
+ | |last = [[May 22, 2021]] |
− | |episodes = |
+ | |episodes = 20 |
|anchors = [[Colin Jost]]<br />[[Michael Che]] |
|anchors = [[Colin Jost]]<br />[[Michael Che]] |
||
|previousseason = [[Season 45]] |
|previousseason = [[Season 45]] |
||
|nextseason = [[Season 47]] |
|nextseason = [[Season 47]] |
||
}} |
}} |
||
− | The 46th season of [[Saturday Night Live]] |
+ | The '''46th season''' of ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' premiered on [[October 3, 2020]], hosted by former cast member [[Chris Rock]] with musical guest [[Megan Thee Stallion]] and concluded on [[May 22, 2021]], hosted by actress [[Anya Taylor-Joy]] with musical guest [[Lil Nas X]]. |
− | After the string of [[Saturday Night Live At Home]] episodes, the season premiere marked |
+ | After the string of three ''[[Saturday Night Live At Home]]'' episodes, the season premiere marked the return to [[Studio 8H]] since the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic. |
+ | The entire [[Season 45]] cast returned, the first time there were no cast departures since [[Season 41]], with [[Ego Nwodim]], who had been a featured player since [[Season 44|2018]], being promoted to repertory status, while [[Chloe Fineman]] and [[Bowen Yang]], both of whom had been hired in 2019 for the previous season, remained as featured players. |
||
− | [[Jim Carrey]] took over the cameo role of [[Joe Biden]]; [[Woody Harrelson]] and [[Jason Sudeikis]] had intermittently cameoed as Biden for previous episodes, and [[John Mulaney]] had protrayed him on the episode he hosted. His performance proved unpopular among fans, however, and he departed the role before the mid-season break. It was announced that six episodes would premiere in a row, a first. The fifth would fall on October 31, making it the first time that a new episode would premiere on Halloween since [[Season 18|1992]]. |
||
+ | On September 16, 2020, prior to the start of the season, ''SNL'' staff writer [[Andrew Dismukes]] (promoted from the writers' room and the fifth youngest cast member; and the fifth male cast member to be born in the 1990s), UCB alumn [[Lauren Holt]] (the first female cast member to be born in the 1990s and the sixth youngest female cast member; this would also be Holt's only season in the cast), and stand-up comedian [[Punkie Johnson]] (the second Black lesbian cast member, after [[Danitra Vance]] in the [[Season 11|1985-1986 season]] and she became the eighth African-American female cast member) are added to the cast as featured players. |
||
⚫ | Cast members [[Aidy Bryant]] and [[Cecily Strong]] were mostly absent from the season's early episodes, because COVID-related rescheduling caused their other projects (Bryant's ''Shrill'' and Strong's |
||
+ | The same day of Dismukes, Johnson, and Holt's additions to the cast, it was announced that [[Alec Baldwin]] and former cast member [[Maya Rudolph]] would reprise their respective roles as [[Donald Trump]] and [[Kamala Harris]], while actor and comedian [[Jim Carrey]] took over the impersonating role of [[Joe Biden]]. Biden had been portrayed by longtime former cast member [[Jason Sudeikis]] while he was vice president and by [[Woody Harrelson]], [[John Mulaney]], and Sudeikis in the previous season. His performance proved unpopular among fans, however, and he departed the role before the mid-season break. On [[December 19, 2020]], Carrey announced he would step down from playing Biden, stating it was the original intention that he would play Biden for only six weeks. Then-current cast member [[Alex Moffat]] succeeded Carrey as Biden for the December 19, 2020 episode, hosted by longtime former cast member [[Kristen Wiig]]. |
||
⚫ | On October 7th, 2020, it was announced that [[Morgan Wallen]]'s appearance as musical guest on the October |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | Cast members [[Aidy Bryant]] and [[Cecily Strong]] were mostly absent from the season's early episodes, because COVID-related rescheduling caused their other projects (Bryant's ''Shrill'' for the third and final season and Strong's ''Schmigadoon'') to conflict with SNL's dates. Strong returned to SNL for the [[December 5, 2020]] episode, hosted by actor [[Jason Bateman]], with musical guest [[Morgan Wallen]] and Bryant returned for the [[January 30, 2021]] episode, hosted by actor [[John Krasinski]], with musical guest [[Machine Gun Kelly]]. |
||
+ | |||
+ | It was announced that six episodes would premiere in a row, a first. The fifth would fall on [[October 31, 2020]], making it the first time that a new episode would premiere on Halloween since [[Season 18|1992]]. |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | On October 7th, 2020, it was announced that [[Morgan Wallen]]'s appearance as musical guest on the [[October 10, 2020]] episode, the second episode, hosted by stand-up comedian, actor, filmmaker and podcaster [[Bill Burr]] was dropped due to many videos surfacing of Wallen partying without a mask and not social distancing; [[Jack White]] was rushed in as a replacement. Wallen was instead rescheduled for the [[December 5, 2020]] episode. |
||
+ | |||
+ | This was the final season for longtime cast member [[Beck Bennett]], who had been on the show since [[Season 39|2013]], a total of 8 seasons. He would departed from the show at the end of the season, after eight years. It was also Holt's only season on the show, as she would let go after the finale. |
||
+ | |||
+ | This is also the first season to have had 20 episodes in it, since [[Season 32]], though this season had only 20 episodes, due to COVID concerns. |
||
+ | |||
+ | This season debuted a new opening montage with new title cards, replacing the previous videos and block lettering with script over still photos. |
||
__TOC__ |
__TOC__ |
||
{{-}} |
{{-}} |
||
− | |||
==Cast== |
==Cast== |
||
===Changes=== |
===Changes=== |
||
− | {|style="margin:auto; width:50%;" |
+ | {| style="margin:auto; width:50%;" |
|- |
|- |
||
− | !style="text-align: |
+ | ! style="text-align:left;"| '''Promoted''' |
− | !style="text-align: |
+ | ! style="text-align:left;"| '''New''' |
|- |
|- |
||
− | |style="vertical-align:top;| |
+ | | style="vertical-align:top;"| |
*[[Ego Nwodim]] |
*[[Ego Nwodim]] |
||
− | |style="vertical-align:top;"| |
+ | | style="vertical-align:top;"| |
*[[Andrew Dismukes]] |
*[[Andrew Dismukes]] |
||
*[[Punkie Johnson]] |
*[[Punkie Johnson]] |
||
*[[Lauren Holt]] |
*[[Lauren Holt]] |
||
|} |
|} |
||
+ | |||
− | ===Repertory=== |
+ | ===Repertory Players=== |
<center> |
<center> |
||
[[File:bennett-s46.png|176px|link=Beck Bennett]] |
[[File:bennett-s46.png|176px|link=Beck Bennett]] |
||
Line 58: | Line 70: | ||
</center> |
</center> |
||
− | ===Featured=== |
+ | ===Featured Players=== |
<center> |
<center> |
||
[[File:dismukes-s46.png|100px|link=Andrew Dismukes]] |
[[File:dismukes-s46.png|100px|link=Andrew Dismukes]] |
||
Line 68: | Line 80: | ||
==Episodes== |
==Episodes== |
||
− | {| class="wikitable |
+ | {| class="wikitable" |
|- |
|- |
||
− | ! width="5%" |Episode<br />Number !! width="5%" |Season<br />Number |
+ | ! width="5%" |Episode<br />Number !! width="5%" |Season<br />Number!! width="25%" |Date!! width="30%" | Host(s)!!Musical Guest(s) |
|- |
|- |
||
− | |890||1||[[October 3, 2020]]||[[Chris Rock]]||[[Megan Thee Stallion]] |
+ | |890||1||[[October 3, 2020]]||[[Chris Rock]]||[[Megan Thee Stallion]] |
|- |
|- |
||
− | |891||2||[[October 10, 2020]]||[[Bill Burr]]||[[Jack White]] |
+ | |891||2||[[October 10, 2020]]||[[Bill Burr]]||[[Jack White]] |
|- |
|- |
||
|892||3||[[October 17, 2020]]||[[Issa Rae]]||[[Justin Bieber]] |
|892||3||[[October 17, 2020]]||[[Issa Rae]]||[[Justin Bieber]] |
||
Line 90: | Line 102: | ||
|898||9||[[December 19, 2020]]||[[Kristen Wiig]]||[[Dua Lipa]] |
|898||9||[[December 19, 2020]]||[[Kristen Wiig]]||[[Dua Lipa]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |899||10||[[January 30, 2021]]||[[John Krasinski]]||[[Machine Gun Kelly]] |
+ | |899||10||[[January 30, 2021]]||[[John Krasinski]]|| [[Machine Gun Kelly]] |
|- |
|- |
||
− | |900||11||[[February 6, 2021]]||[[Dan Levy]]||[[Phoebe |
+ | |900||11||[[February 6, 2021]]||[[Dan Levy]]||[[Phoebe Bridgers]] |
|- |
|- |
||
− | |901||12||[[February 13, 2021]]||[[Regina King]]||[[Nathaniel |
+ | |901||12||[[February 13, 2021]]||[[Regina King]]||[[Nathaniel Rateliff]] |
+ | |- |
||
+ | |902||13||[[February 20, 2021]]||[[Regé-Jean Page]]||[[Bad Bunny]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |903||14||[[February 27, 2021]]||colspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[Nick Jonas]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |904||15||[[March 27, 2021]]||[[Maya Rudolph]]||[[Jack Harlow]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |905||16||[[April 3, 2021]]||[[Daniel Kaluuya]]||[[St. Vincent]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |906||17||[[April 10, 2021]]||[[Carey Mulligan]]||[[Kid Cudi]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |907||18||[[May 8, 2021]]||[[Elon Musk]]||[[Miley Cyrus]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |908||19||[[May 15, 2021]]||[[Keegan-Michael Key]]||[[Olivia Rodrigo]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |909||20 ||[[May 22, 2021]]||[[Anya Taylor-Joy]]||[[Lil Nas X]] |
||
|} |
|} |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Deaths== |
+ | *[[Norm Macdonald]] (September 14, 2021) |
||
+ | |||
+ | ==Opening montage== |
||
+ | <gallery> |
||
+ | File:S46|The new opening montage was introduced. Like the previous one, it was in black and white and showed the cast both at NBC Studios and around 30 Rockefeller Plaza, with their names appearing in variously colored cursive lettering. Some of the cast members were also shown wearing masks due to the COVID-19 pandemic. |
||
+ | </gallery> |
||
+ | |||
+ | ==References== |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
Latest revision as of 07:10, 5 December 2023
The 46th season of Saturday Night Live premiered on October 3, 2020, hosted by former cast member Chris Rock with musical guest Megan Thee Stallion and concluded on May 22, 2021, hosted by actress Anya Taylor-Joy with musical guest Lil Nas X.
After the string of three Saturday Night Live At Home episodes, the season premiere marked the return to Studio 8H since the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic.
The entire Season 45 cast returned, the first time there were no cast departures since Season 41, with Ego Nwodim, who had been a featured player since 2018, being promoted to repertory status, while Chloe Fineman and Bowen Yang, both of whom had been hired in 2019 for the previous season, remained as featured players.
On September 16, 2020, prior to the start of the season, SNL staff writer Andrew Dismukes (promoted from the writers' room and the fifth youngest cast member; and the fifth male cast member to be born in the 1990s), UCB alumn Lauren Holt (the first female cast member to be born in the 1990s and the sixth youngest female cast member; this would also be Holt's only season in the cast), and stand-up comedian Punkie Johnson (the second Black lesbian cast member, after Danitra Vance in the 1985-1986 season and she became the eighth African-American female cast member) are added to the cast as featured players.
The same day of Dismukes, Johnson, and Holt's additions to the cast, it was announced that Alec Baldwin and former cast member Maya Rudolph would reprise their respective roles as Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, while actor and comedian Jim Carrey took over the impersonating role of Joe Biden. Biden had been portrayed by longtime former cast member Jason Sudeikis while he was vice president and by Woody Harrelson, John Mulaney, and Sudeikis in the previous season. His performance proved unpopular among fans, however, and he departed the role before the mid-season break. On December 19, 2020, Carrey announced he would step down from playing Biden, stating it was the original intention that he would play Biden for only six weeks. Then-current cast member Alex Moffat succeeded Carrey as Biden for the December 19, 2020 episode, hosted by longtime former cast member Kristen Wiig.
Cast members Aidy Bryant and Cecily Strong were mostly absent from the season's early episodes, because COVID-related rescheduling caused their other projects (Bryant's Shrill for the third and final season and Strong's Schmigadoon) to conflict with SNL's dates. Strong returned to SNL for the December 5, 2020 episode, hosted by actor Jason Bateman, with musical guest Morgan Wallen and Bryant returned for the January 30, 2021 episode, hosted by actor John Krasinski, with musical guest Machine Gun Kelly.
It was announced that six episodes would premiere in a row, a first. The fifth would fall on October 31, 2020, making it the first time that a new episode would premiere on Halloween since 1992.
On October 7th, 2020, it was announced that Morgan Wallen's appearance as musical guest on the October 10, 2020 episode, the second episode, hosted by stand-up comedian, actor, filmmaker and podcaster Bill Burr was dropped due to many videos surfacing of Wallen partying without a mask and not social distancing; Jack White was rushed in as a replacement. Wallen was instead rescheduled for the December 5, 2020 episode.
This was the final season for longtime cast member Beck Bennett, who had been on the show since 2013, a total of 8 seasons. He would departed from the show at the end of the season, after eight years. It was also Holt's only season on the show, as she would let go after the finale.
This is also the first season to have had 20 episodes in it, since Season 32, though this season had only 20 episodes, due to COVID concerns.
This season debuted a new opening montage with new title cards, replacing the previous videos and block lettering with script over still photos.
Cast[]
Changes[]
Promoted | New |
---|---|
Repertory Players[]
Featured Players[]
Episodes[]
Deaths[]
- Norm Macdonald (September 14, 2021)
Opening montage[]
References[]
Preceded by: Season 45 |
Season 46 (2020— 2021) |
Followed by: Season 47 |
Seasons | |
---|---|