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Saturday Night Live season 37

Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saturday Night Live season 37
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The thirty-seventh season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between September 24, 2011, and May 19, 2012.[1]

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Cast

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The season began with minimal changes to the cast, as everyone from the prior year returned. The only major change was Nasim Pedrad being upgraded to repertory status.

Vanessa Bayer, Paul Brittain, Taran Killam, and Jay Pharoah all remained as featured players.[2] Brittain, who had joined the show for season 36 alongside Bayer, Killam, and Pharoah, exited abruptly halfway through this season, making his final appearance on January 14, 2012.[3] Following Brittain's departure, impressionist and writer Kate McKinnon, previously a cast member on The Big Gay Sketch Show, joined the cast midseason, as a featured player, making her debut on April 7, 2012, following a March 28, 2012, report of her being hired.[4][5] McKinnon is SNL's first openly gay cast member hired since Terry Sweeney in 1985,[6] and the show's first openly gay female cast member (Denny Dillon from the 1980–81 season was SNL's first lesbian cast member but Dillon's sexuality was not public knowledge until much later).[7]

This was the final season for longtime cast members Kristen Wiig and Andy Samberg, who had both been on for seven seasons since 2005,[8][9] as well as for Abby Elliott, who had been a cast member for four seasons since 2008.[10] Elliott was let go from the show following the finale, while Wiig and Samberg both left on their own terms.

Cast roster

bold denotes Weekend Update anchor

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Writers

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This season saw several new writers. CollegeHumor writer Sarah Schneider was added to the writing staff, after serving as a guest writer for the last five episodes of season 36.[11] Also added were Chris Kelly, who previously wrote for Funny or Die and The Onion News Network; Zach Kanin, who worked on the Harvard Lampoon; and Peter Schultz, a performer from the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater, who was hired to write for Weekend Update.[12][13]

Additionally, starting with this season, writers Erik Kenward (who has been with the show since 2001) and John Mulaney (who previously joined the writing staff in 2008) are named as producers of the show.[14] Mulaney was previously a writing supervisor for the past two seasons, and Bryan Tucker and Colin Jost continue on as the two writing supervisors, this season.

This was also the last season for writer/producer Mulaney, after four years with the show.[15]

The season saw the deaths of three former SNL writers. Nelson Lyon died at the age of 73 due to liver cancer; Lyon wrote for the show during its seventh season.[16] Mark O'Donnell, who also wrote during the show's seventh season, died of a heart attack at the age of 58 outside his apartment in New York.[17] Tom Davis, who was one of the original SNL writers and appeared in multiple sketches over the years died after a three-year battle with throat and neck cancer.

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Episodes

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References

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