SNL has a history of culling cast members, clamming up

Saturday Night Live's Taran Killam
Saturday Night Live's Taran Killam

Saturday Night Live is steeped in lore -- and that includes how cast members get removed from the show.

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Saturday Night Live's Jay Pharoah

While Hollywood isn't always so direct when it comes to firing, SNL's process can be particularly mysterious. A number of former cast members have said they were canned from the biggest break of their careers and left with little to no explanation.

Two veteran cast members, Taran Killam and Jay Pharoah, as well as a featured player, Jon Rudnitsky, won't be returning this fall for the show's 42nd season. The departures of Pharoah and Killam mean the show is losing its main President Barack Obama impersonator and one of its Donald Trumps.

The news came as a big surprise to Killam, he told Uproxx, adding he doesn't "know fully" the reasons behind it: "I honestly don't know what happened on the other side."

"You sign for seven years, so I had one more year. I had sort of had it in my head I would make this [next] year my last year, but then heard they weren't going to pick up my contract," Killam said. "I was never given a reason why, really. I can assume until the cows come home."

Killam is also directing a movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger with "two months of post-production that would have bled into the SNL production schedule," he said.

Not knowing the reason -- and not being told directly -- are common experiences for cast members.

Jenny Slate's 2009 debut included the now-infamous moment when she dropped an expletive on live television. But she was reassured of her place on the show by executive producer Lorne Michaels, and stayed on for the rest of the season. When the season wrapped, she remembered "thinking I had a rough year," and was soon overcome with the feeling of her impending firing, Slate recounted to Marc Maron on his podcast "WTF" in 2014.

"I waited all summer to get fired," Slate said. Then one day as she exited a therapy session and checked her phone, she saw the news on Deadline Hollywood.

Slate called her agent, saying, "I just read I got fired but nobody called me," she recalled to Maron. The agent hadn't been told, either, but made calls to confirm the development.

"I started crying. I feel like somebody just put me in a hole," Slate added. "I feel so embarrassed. And then it was just a huge sense of relief."

Sarah Silverman, who worked as a writer and a featured player during the 1993-1994 season, was fired via fax (it was the early '90s, to be fair). The whole cast was undergoing a shake-up, and she has said, "by the way, I wrote not a single funny sketch, so that might have something to do with it."

Cast members with short stints like Slate and Silverman might have seen it coming. But for those who have longer runs on the show -- and have presumably already proved their worth -- the news can come as a surprise. The reasons can be tied to the show's budget, part of a broader "cleaning house" to change the tone of the show or disagreements with upper management's vision.

Norm MacDonald, for instance, joined SNL in 1993. As host of "Weekend Update," he earned the ire of NBC executive Don Ohlmeyer, who cited falling ratings in firing MacDonald midway through the 1997-1998 season.

Chris Farley died in December 1997, and when MacDonald returned for the first episode back after Christmas, "no one would come right out and tell me what was going on," MacDonald recounted in the book Live From New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live, by James Andrew Miller and Washington Post critic Tom Shales. "Lorne has a hard time telling you bad stuff."

When MacDonald pressed as to whether he was doing the "Update" segment that week, he was told "we don't think you are."

So MacDonald called up Ohlmeyer, surprising the executive, according to MacDonald. Ohlmeyer explained the segment wasn't as funny as it could be.

Even major stars with movie hits have been let go. Adam Sandler had two years left on his contract before he was let go in 1995, as recounted in Live From New York.

"See, I don't even know if I was fired. I don't know how it was handled," Sandler said. "I just remember feeling like, 'Did I quit, or did I get fired? I have no idea.' But all of a sudden I wasn't on the show anymore." (Farley was also fired, with a year left on his contract.)

Style on 08/16/2016

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