How ‘SNL’ nearly got canceled in Season 11: ‘The f–k up year’

How ‘SNL’ nearly got canceled in Season 11: ‘The f–k up year’

Live from New York, it almost got canceled. 

“Saturday Night Live” is a TV institution, currently in its landmark Season 50 – but the Peacock documentary “SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night” reveals how the show nearly died during its disastrous Season 11, which aired from 1985 to 1986. 

“That eleventh year was probably the biggest risk,” Tom Hanks, who was a host that season, said onscreen in the documentary (which premieres Jan. 16). 

Hanks is among the exclusive group of “SNL” hosts who have returned to the show 10 times or more. The “Forrest Gump” star’s inaugural “SNL” episode was Dec. 14, 1985, during the notorious Season 11.

“The division between what worked and what didn’t work – that was painfully obvious,” Hanks said of his first time hosting the show.

Nora Dunn, Robert Downey Jr. Tom Hanks, and Jon Lovitz in a sketch during “SNL” Season 11. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Tom Hanks during his host monologue on December 14, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Why was Season 11 sometimes called “the weird year?” 

After “SNL” mastermind Lorne Michaels created the show in 1975, he left in 1980 to pursue other opportunities – before returning five years later. Season 11 was his “clean slate,” when he got rid of the widely beloved Season 10 cast (which included Billy Crystal) and hired an entirely new young cast to mark his comeback.

Michaels filled the cast with several drama actors, including Randy Quaid, Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Michael Hall, and comedy actors such as Joan Cusack, Damon Wayans, Jon Lovitz, Danitra Vance, and first openly gay cast member Terry Sweeney. 

Michaels recalled wanting a “young” cast, but conceded that he perhaps went “too young.” 

“As a teenager, honestly I was very nervous,” said Hall. Only 17 at the time, the “Breakfast Club” star was the youngest cast member in the show’s history. 

“[I was] very excited, but I don’t know if I felt like I knew how to fit in…It was like an out of body experience,” Hall said.

Dennis Miller, Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Michael Hall during “Weekend Update” on April 14, 1986 on “SNL” Season 11. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
“SNL” Season 11 cast members Nora Dunn, Danitra Vance, Robert Downey Jr., Terry Sweeney, Jon Lovitz (back row l-r) Randy Quaid, Anthony Michael Hall, Joan Cusack. NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Robert Downey Jr. in a sketch on February 15, 1986. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

At the time, Michaels thought he had “something to prove.” 

“I  tried to find the people that I thought were the most talented, and I was starting from scratch.”

The cast members may have shined individually, but they didn’t gel into a group – and performers such as Oscar winner Downey Jr. weren’t playing to their strengths by doing ensemble sketch comedy. 

The first episode (hosted by Madonna) got scathing reviews, and ratings dwindled. 

“I learned so much in that year about what I wasn’t,” said Downey Jr, reflecting on his short-lived “SNL” stint.

The “Iron Man” star added, “But there’s not a more exciting 90 minutes you can have, whether you are any good or not.” 

Robert Downey Jr., Joan Cusack, Jerry Hall, and Terry Sweeney during a sketch in Season 11. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Chevy Chase, Anthony Michael Hall and Nora Dunn during a Season 11 sketch. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Terry Sweeney, Randy Quaid and Madonna during a skit on November 9, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Carol Leifer, who was a writer that season, recalled that the stakes were high, since the cast was brand new and Michaels’ career would likely go in the toilet if he failed at his comeback.

“But I think it started to feel weird near the beginning” she noted. “It was not a cohesive kind of cast feel.” 

Author James Andrew Miller said that he believes Season 11 was one of the most important inflection points in the show’s history. 

“It occurred at the proverbial fork in the road. It was so bad that it could have been canceled.”

After each sketch that failed to get laughs from the live audience, there was a fraught air of nervousness. 

“I just knew the sense was that it wasn’t good, because it was like a funeral,” Sweeney recalled.

Wayans chimed in: “We all knew [it wasn’t going well].”

Damon Wayans and Anthony Michael Hall during “The Jones Brothers” skit on November 9, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Terry Sweeney as Nancy Reagan during the “Bad Seed” skit on March 15, 1986. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Dennis Miller and Damon Wayans during Weekend Update on December 7, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

John Lithgow, who hosted the Dec. 7, 1985 episode, said about his experience, “I remember having the feeling that everybody was trying out their own material. They were trying to make their own identity, rather than the identity of ‘SNL,’ I think that was the problem.” 

Michaels’ late manager, Bernie Brillstein, who was also an “SNL” producer and appears in the doc in posthumous footage, recalled that towards the end of the season, he got a phone call from NBC’s then-president of entertainment, Brandon Tartikoff. 

“They never call the manager with good news. Brandon told me that after 11 years, ‘SNL’ was over. There’s to be no ‘next year.’ I didn’t argue with him at that time. I’d like to say I did,” he said.

But, Brillstein recalled that after he told his then-wife, Deborah Ellen Koskoff, “she said, ‘how dare you let this happen. You can’t just let them do that, after 11 years and what Lorne has done!’” 

Brillstein quipped, “I’m not married to her anymore, but that’s the best thing she ever did. I called Brandon back and said, ‘You have to give Lorne another year.’”

Lorne Michaels attends the “All In: Comedy About Love By Simon Rich” Gala Performance at Hudson Theatre on December 16, 2024. Getty Images
Jon Lovitz in “SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night.” Peacock
Pee-Wee Herman and Joan Cusack as Ms. Patterson during a skit on November 23, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

After that phone call, Michaels axed most of the Season 11 cast by ending the season with a sketch showing them burning in a fire onscreen. He kept a few cast members such as Lovitz. 

“What have we done that’s so horrible? You can fire me, do you have to actually set fire to me?” Sweeney said.  

Michaels then built a new cast for Season 12 around experienced sketch comedy performers whose main “focus was to be funny,” he explained. 

Lorne Michaels at The Museum Gala on Dec. 5, 2024. Erik Pendzich/Shutterstock
Danitra Vance, Terry Sweeney, Damon Wayans, Tom Hanks, Jon Lovitz, Robert Downey Jr. during closing on December 14, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Terry Sweeney as Hildy, Jon Lovitz as Mr. Deaver, Joan Cusack as Mrs. Deaver, Robert Downey Jr. as Skip Deaver during “Hildy” sketch on December 21, 1985. NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Season 12 included Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman, and Kevin Nealon, who all became iconic cast members in “SNL” history, and the show bounced back. In Sept. 2024, Carvey even returned as President Joe Biden on the Season 50 premiere.

“There’d been a codification of the right way and the wrong way to do ‘Saturday Night Live,’ and I think it had to be blown up,” said Michaels. 

Leifer said, “Season 11 was like the f–k up year you needed to get back on track.” 

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