“Saturday Night Live” season 1 cast: Where are they now?
Catch up with the original Not Ready for Primetime Players of "SNL," including Dan Aykroyd, Chevy Chase, Jane Curtin, and more.
Saturday Night Live premiered on Oct. 11, 1975, turning several members of its original cast of unknowns into comedy superstars, and making TV history that has endured 50 seasons and counting.
The now legendary NBC sketch comedy show began as a replacement for reruns of The Tonight Show that then-host Johnny Carson no longer wanted to air on the weekends. Called NBC's Saturday Night at the time to avoid confusion with the short-lived Saturday Night Live With Howard Cosell on ABC, the show was the brainchild of Canadian producer Lorne Michaels.
The season 1 cast, known as the Not Ready for Prime Time Players, consisted of Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Chevy Chase, Jane Curtin, Garrett Morris, Laraine Newman, and Gilda Radner, plus head writer Michael O'Donoghue, only a cast member for three episodes, and George Coe, who was only officially on the cast for the premiere. The seven major cast members were inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in 2017, including posthumous honors for Belushi and Radnor.
Related: How to watch the first-ever Saturday Night Live episode after you see Saturday Night biopic
SNL, which holds the record for most Emmy nominations (341) of any television show in history, is currently in its 50th season, which Michaels at the helm. A three-hour primetime special celebrating the show's 50-season legacy with take place on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2025, on NBC. A biographical movie, Saturday Night, about the 90 minutes leading up to the season 1 premiere, directed by Jason Reitman, is playing in select cities now, ahead of its wide release on Oct. 11, the anniversary of the show's very first episode.
Read on to learn more about SNL's season 1 cast and what they went on to do after their time on the show.
Related: Saturday Night fact check: The true stories behind movie's wildest tales of SNL premiere
Dan Aykroyd
Dan Aykroyd was the youngest member of the original SNL cast, turning 23 just months before the premiere. He spent four seasons at SNL, where he gained fame for impersonations of celebrities such as Julia Child and President Jimmy Carter, and memorable characters like corrupt toy maker Irwin Mainway, "Coneheads" patriarch Beldar, the "Super Bass-O-Matic" pitchman, "Wild and Crazy Guy" Yortuk Festrunk alongside frequent host Steve Martin, and of course Elwood opposite Belushi's Jake of "The Blues Brothers."
Aykroyd earned five Emmy nominations during his tenure, winning for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series in 1977. He left the show in 1979 to find success on the big screen. In 1980, Aykroyd and Belushi fronted the first SNL sketch-turned-movie, The Blues Brothers. In addition to his most popular role as Ray Stantz in the Ghostbusters franchise, he's starred in Trading Places, Dragnet, The Great Outdoors, Driving Miss Daisy (earning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination), My Girl, Chaplin, Sneakers, and led two more SNL spinoffs, Coneheads and Blues Brothers 2000.
Aykroyd returned to SNL for guest appearances several times over the years, including as host of the season 28 finale in 2003.
Related: The cast of Ghostbusters: Where are they now?
John Belushi
John Belushi spent four seasons at SNL, and made a big impact. He was the other half of the Blues Brothers; the belligerent katana-wielding Samurai Futaba; the "cheeseburger cheeseburger"-repeating Greek owner of the Olympia Cafe; and a regular contributor of furious opinion pieces on "Weekend Update." He also did hit impressions of Henry Kissinger, Ludwig van Beethoven, and Captain James T. Kirk. Belushi was also part of the group honored with the Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series Emmy in 1977, and was scored nominations for her performance on the show.
Belushi became a film star while still on Saturday Night Live, leading National Lampoon's Animal House in 1978. The following year, he left the sketch show alongside Aykroyd, his close friend and frequent collaborator. He went on to star in Blues Brothers, 1941, and 1981's Neighbors.
The beloved comedian's career was cut short when he died of a drug overdose on March 5, 1982, at age 33. He received a posthumous star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2004.
Chevy Chase
Chevy Chase's stint on SNL was short lived, but he made a huge impact. The charming comedian was the first to utter, "Live from New York, it's Saturday night!" on the season 1 premiere, and as the show's original "Weekend Update" anchor. With the news segment's regular sign-off, "I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not," he was also the only cast member to identify himself on every episode, quickly making him the most recognizable of the show's cast. The comedian with a penchant for pratfalls also did a popular impression of a clumsy President Gerald Ford and played the Landshark.
Chase was the first original cast member to exit the show, leaving just six episodes into season 2. Though he later expressed regret at leaving so early, Chase had a tremendously successful film career in the decade following his departure. His films include Foul Play, Caddyshack, Fletch, Fletch Lives, Spies Like Us, Three Amigos, and the National Lampoon's Vacation franchise, including holiday staple, National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. After a decline in the success in the '90s, Chase found a career resurgence in 2009 with popular sitcom, Community, but mutually parted ways with the show after reportedly using a racist slur on set.
The actor returned to SNL numerous times after leaving, becoming the first former cast member to join the show's elite Five-Timers Club for frequent hosts. Chase also built a reputation for being notoriously difficult to work with, to which the actor has said he doesn't "give a crap." Despite both admitted and rumored altercations during his return appearances on SNL, Chase continued to make being invited back to the show, including for the 40th anniversary special in 2015.
Jane Curtin
Jane Curtin starred on SNL for five seasons, often playing the straight woman to the zany characters around her. Following Chase's departure during season 2, Curtain took over the "Weekend Update" desk, first anchoring solo, then paired with Aykroyd from 1977–78, and co-anchoring with Bill Murray from 1978-80. She also played a number of mothers, including Coneheads matriarch Prymaat and Radner's mom in "The Nerds" sketches.
Curtin, who was nominated for two Emmys during her time on SNL, left the sketch show in 1980. She went on to much success on TV, including two Emmy wins for the sitcom Kate & Allie, and later starred on hit series 3rd Rock From the Sun. She's also appeared in SNL film, Coneheads, I Love You, Man, The Heat, and Can You Ever Forgive Me? Curtin will next be seen in Netflix mystery series, The Residence.
The actress returned for Saturday Night Live's 40th anniversary special in 2015, taking a seat at the "Weekend Update" desk alongside Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. Curtin has said that she did not enjoy a recent rewatch of her time on SNL, insisting, "Not one thing was funny. There was not one utterance of a laugh or a giggle."
Related: Original SNL cast member Jane Curtin thought anyone watching the show 'must be really stupid'
Garrett Morris
Garrett Morris was the oldest Not Ready for Primetime Player at 38 when the show began, and also the show's first and only Black cast member until Eddie Murphy in 1980. He came to the show as a Julliard-trained theater actor, playwright, singer, and civil rights activist. On SNL, Morris played the recurring characters, Chico Escuela, a Dominican baseball player for the New York Mets; Merkon, leader of the Coneheads; Cliff, the streetwise friend to Aykroyd and Martin's "Wild and Crazy Guys;" Grant Robinson, Jr in "The Nerds" sketches; and the shouting interpreter for the "News for the Hard of Hearing."
He left in 1980 after five seasons. After SNL, Morris was cast on sitcoms like The Jeffersons, Roc, Martin, Two Broke Girls, and The Jamie Foxx Show, and the limited series, Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C. J. Walker. He also appeared in the films, Cooley High, Car Wash, How High, The Longshots, and cameoed in 2015's Ant-Man, in a nod to playing the tiny superhero on SNL. The octogenarian remains a working actor, recently appearing on shows like Station 19, This Is Us, Black Lady Sketch Show, Grand Crew, and How I Met Your Father.
Morris returned to SNL for a season 28 cameo in an "Astronaut Jones" sketch in 2002.
Laraine Newman
Laraine Newman spent five seasons on SNL where she did impressions of Katharine Hepburn and Barbara Streisand, and characters like "Coneheads" daughter, Connie Conehead; stereotypical Valley girl Sherry; and Christie Christina, the ditzy cohost to Aykroyd's sleazy public access host E. Buzz Miller.
Newman left the show in 1980 when Michaels departed, along with the rest of the remaining cast and nearly all of the writers. (Michaels returned in 1985.) She returned for the 40th anniversary special in 2015, where she reprised her Sherry character for a "Californians" sketch.
After SNL, Newman appeared in movies like Stardust Memories, Problem Child 2, The Flintstones, and SNL film, Coneheads, taking on the role of Connie's aunt instead, as well as shows like 7th Heaven and Ghosts. She's also worked steadily as a voice actress, including in numerous Pixar movies. Her children are both also in the comedy business, Hannah Einbinder plays Ava on the Max hit Hacks and Spike Einbinder has appeared in critical darlings, Fantasmas and Los Espookys.
Gilda Radner
Gilda Radner spent five seasons captivating fans on SNL with characters like Emily Litella, a rambling elderly "Weekend Update" character; Roseanne Roseannadanna, the news segment's brash consumer affairs reporter; Lisa Loopner of "The Nerds" alongside "pizza face" Bill Murray; and Baba Wawa, a parody of journalist Barbara Walters. Radner won an Emmy for her work on the show.
After leaving SNL in the mass exodus of 1980, Radner made several movies with Gene Wilder, including Hanky Panky, The Woman in Red, and Haunted Honeymoon. The pair became inseparable and married in 1984.
In 1986, the comedian was diagnosed with stage IV ovarian cancer and underwent chemotherapy and radiation therapy treatment, which took a physical and emotional toll. After a brief period of remission, her cancer returned in 1988. Radner detailed her painful journey with cancer in her 1989 memoir, It's Always Something. She died on May 20, 1989. Radner had been slated to host SNL in 1988, but the episode was canceled due to writers' strike.
After her death, Wilder and others founded Gilda's Club, an organization for people with cancer and their families, in her honor. She received a posthumous star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2003.
Related: The best Saturday Night Live cast members, ranked
Michael O'Donoghue
Michael O'Donoghue was SNL's first head writer and the first performer to deliver a line on the show, in the season 1 cold open, "Wolverines," playing an English-language teacher to Belushi. Known for his dark humor and prickly persona, he only appeared as a credited cast member on the show's first three episodes, but remained a writer on and off through 1986, reportedly being fired three different times along the way.
O'Donoghue died of a cerebral hemorrhage at age 54 on Nov. 8, 1994.
George Coe
Although he briefly appeared in several episodes of SNL, George Coe was only a credited cast member on the season 1 premiere.
After SNL, Coe starred in Kramer vs. Kramer, Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, The Mighty Ducks, and Funny People. He was nominated for an Oscar for his 1968 short, The Dove, a parody of Ingmar Bergman's films. Coe lent his voice to Woodhouse, the put-upon butler, on the animated sitcom Archer, and appeared in such shows as Murder, She Wrote, The Golden Girls, Bones, Judging Amy, The King of Queens, Nip/Tuck, Grey's Anatomy, Columbo, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Gilmore Girls, and The West Wing.
Coe died after a long illness on July 18, 2015, and age 86.
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