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CAVALCADE OF COMEDY

Time

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February 24, 2025

As Saturday Night Live celebrates its 50th season, alumni look back on the people, moments, and humor that shaped their time at an American institution

CAVALCADE OF COMEDY

1970s

GARRETT MORRIS At SNL from 1975–1980

imageI HAD BEEN IN SHOW BUSINESS FOR about 17 years before Saturday Night Live came along. I was an actor on and off Broadway. I wrote a couple plays, and I did a lot of musicals. SNL was my first television job-a job paying me more than I had ever been paid before, and I was finally paying my rent.

I'm an introvert, so I would usually just do the show and go back to my apartment. This was a mistake, because what you're supposed to do is go to the bar, hang out with the group, and develop relationships. There were some drugs-I was a cocaine fiend, but a teetotaler when it came to alcohol.

But back on set, being the one Black guy, I was just concerned about whether I'd be used at all. It was not an unusual experience to be the one Black person in a cast of mostly white people. I had to fight to get people to write for me. Lorne Michaels came up with the premise of a sketch featuring guys on death row performing as the "Death Row Follies." All he had was a premise. We had to go to our dressing room and come up with something.

I remembered this scene from Art Linkletter, a very popular talk-show host in the 1950s, where a white lady from down South sang, "I'm gonna get me a shotgun and shoot all the n-----s I see." I realized if I replaced n----with whitey, I would have the perfect song for a Black man on death row. So that's how I came up with that sketch.

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