logo
Do It For Gilda

Do It For Gilda

The Atlantic15-02-2025
Before John Belushi, before Bill Murray or Chevy Chase or Dan Aykroyd—before any of them, there was Gilda.
Gilda Radner was the first performer Lorne Michaels hired for the cast of Saturday Night Live when it launched, in 1975. She was, at the time, one of the stars of The National Lampoon Radio Hour, the only woman in a cast of men destined to be famous. 'I knew that she could do almost anything, and that she was enormously likeable,' Michaels once said of the decision. 'So I started with her.'
Television audiences immediately fell in love with Radner. How could they not? She was magnetic. She sparkled with a kind of anything's-possible energy, and stole every scene she was in. She made everything hilarious, and more daring. That was Radner—the tiny woman with the gigantic hair having more fun than everybody around her.
Radner's charm was so off the charts that practically every character of hers wound up with a beloved catchphrase. There was the bespectacled nerd Lisa Loopner ('So funny I forgot to laugh!'); the poof-haired newscaster Roseanne Roseannadanna ('It just goes to show, it's always something.'); and the little old lady Emily Litella ('Never mind.'). A typical Litella rant on 'Weekend Update' went like this: 'What's all this fuss I keep hearing about violins on television! Why don't parents want their children to see violins on television! … I say there should be more violins on television!' Chevy Chase eventually leans over and corrects her: Violence, not violins. Litella, sheepish: 'Never mind.' Radner based Litella on her own childhood nanny. And the portrayal, like everything she did, was shot through with love.
Radner also appeared in the now-classic ' Extremely Stupid ' sketch, which became one of the earliest examples of actors breaking—that is, breaking character and cracking up on live television—in SNL history after the guest host, Candice Bergen, flubbed a line. Radner used the moment to great comedic effect, turning directly to the camera to exaggerate the impeccable delivery of her own lines, while Bergen dissolved into laughter beside her.
Almost every comic who came after Radner—and certainly the ones who wound up on Saturday Night Live —counts her as a formative influence. You can see Radner in the ragdoll chaos of Molly Shannon's character Mary Katherine Gallagher; in the total commitment to the bit of Adam Sandler's singsong gibberish; in the weird imagination of Kristen Wiig's universe of absurd characters (the mischievous Gilly and the tiny-handed Dooneese both come to mind); and in the master-class physical comedy of Melissa McCarthy.
Radner herself was always drawn to classic physical comedy—among her idols were Charlie Chaplin, Lucille Ball, anyone who was, in her words, 'willing to risk it.' So it made sense that Radner parodied Ball—and the legendary chocolate-factory episode of I Love Lucy —in a sketch, alongside Aykroyd, that had her juggling nuclear warheads coming down a conveyor belt. Then there was Radner's wordless dance routine with Steve Martin—in which the pair toggles between all-out slapstick and total earnestness—that remains a higher form of comedy, even 50 years later. Radner's particular charisma came from this blend of bigheartedness and fearlessness. She always went for it. 'There was just an abandon she had that was unmatched,' Martin has said. She'd keep going until she got the laugh, however far that took her. And she could make fun without being mean-spirited. (See: her impressions of Barbara Walters as ' Baba Wawa ' and Patti Smith as ' Candy Slice.')
In 1979, Radner gave the commencement speech—fully in character as Roseanne Roseannadanna—to the graduating class at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, part of which wound up on her comedy album Gilda Radner: Live From New York, released that same year. And while the delivery is pure Roseannadanna, listening to it today is also a reminder of the trail Radner herself blazed, along with SNL cast members Jane Curtin and Laraine Newman, as women in comedy in the 1970s. 'Imagine, if you will, an idealistic young Roseanne Roseannadanna, fresh out of the Columbia School of Broadcasting, looking for a job in journalism,' Radner-as-Roseannadanna says. 'I filled out applications, I went out for interviews, and they allll told me the same thing: You're overqualified, you're underqualified, don't call us, we'll call you, it's a jungle out there, a woman's place is in the home, have a nice day, drop dead, goodbye. But I didn't give up.' Radner didn't give up either. But her sense of purpose wasn't about proving a point or being a feminist, but something even more straightforward. If she wanted something, she went for it. Why wouldn't she?
Radner was famously boy-crazy. (She used to joke that she couldn't bring herself to watch Ghostbusters because it starred all of her ex-boyfriends.) She had on-again, off-again romances with Martin Short and Bill Murray (and that was after she'd dated Murray's brother), among others. In her own telling of her eventual marriage to the great Gene Wilder, the two wound up together only because she pursued him so relentlessly. She knew from the minute she saw him that she wanted to be with him forever. He did not share this view, not initially. An interviewer once asked Wilder if it had been love at first sight. 'No, not at all,' Wilder said. 'If anything, the opposite. I said, How do I get rid of this girl? '
He would come around. 'If I had to compare her to something I would say to a firefly, in the summer, at night,' Wilder recalled. 'When you see a sudden flash of light, it's flying by, and then it stops. And then light. And stops. She was like that.' What Wilder meant, in part, was that Radner could have the highest of highs but also the lowest of lows. In moments of lightness, the whole world was illuminated, and everything in sight seemed to bend in her direction. But other times she was anxious and sad. She grieved the death of her father, who died of cancer when she was a teenager, her whole life. She described herself as highly neurotic. She had had eating disorders more or less since she was 10 years old. And she suffered in other ways, too. She never got to be a mother, which she'd desperately wanted. And while she brought untold joy to millions of people, her short life ended tragically. At one point, toward the end, she looked back on the early SNL years and marveled. 'We thought we were immortal, at least for five years,' she wrote in her memoir. 'But that doesn't exist anymore.'
Wilder and Radner were married for only five years before she died, at 42, of ovarian cancer. And today, she is remembered as much for the unfairness of her young death—like Belushi before her and Chris Farley after her—as she is for her originality and spectacular talent. In a gentler world, all three of them would still be with us. Radner and Belushi would be in their 70s, Farley in his 60s. In a gentler world, Radner could have had all the babies she wished for, made all the movies she never got to, and would still be making people laugh. When I think about Radner now, what I think about most is the way she lived, and how that ought to be a lesson to the rest of us. She had a sense of total urgency, and a willingness to do the things that terrified her. Somehow, she made it look easy. 'I don't know why I'm doing it,' she once said in an interview, about why she'd chosen to take her act to Broadway, 'except that for some reason I've chosen to scare myself to death.'
That was Gilda Radner. Gilda, who as a child once overheard her mother saying, 'Gilda could sell ice cubes in winter,' and so set up a little stand outside to do just that. Gilda, who loved work so much that she'd get impatient on the way to NBC Studios and ask her taxi drivers to speed up already. Gilda, who fell in love easily and often, and wasn't afraid to be weird, or look ridiculous. Gilda, who could make anything funny. But her real legacy, it turns out, is something much more profound than her comedy. This is the lesson of Gilda Radner's too-short life: For God's sake, don't bother with fear. Just go for the thing you want, with your whole heart. Each of us gets only so much time on this planet, and none of us knows for how long. Life can be terrible this way, and sad, and it isn't fair at all. But it is funny, anyway. Really, really funny.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dana Carvey Calls His Biden Impression a ‘Delicate Thing'
Dana Carvey Calls His Biden Impression a ‘Delicate Thing'

New York Times

time6 hours ago

  • New York Times

Dana Carvey Calls His Biden Impression a ‘Delicate Thing'

Dana Carvey, the comedian and actor, said that impersonating former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. during the just completed 50th season of 'Saturday Night Live' was a challenge because he said he believed Biden 'was compromised mentally.' Carvey made the comment on a recent episode of his and David Spade's podcast 'Fly on the Wall' while discussing his portrayal of Biden, a Democrat, during his re-election bid in 2024. 'It was a delicate thing in the comedy world,' Carvey added. 'There were a lot of people that did not want to do anything that would kind of ding him in, like, an awkward way.' Carvey, a former 'S.N.L.' cast member known for his many impersonations, including his portrayal of George H.W. Bush in the 1980s and 1990s, said that in order to make his version of Biden funny, it had to be recognizable, which is why Carvey mastered the former president's squint and chuckle, as well as his lapsing into non sequiturs like insisting on 'being serious right now,' even if what he last said was not a joke. In one episode that aired in late September, Carvey as Biden joined Kamala Harris, played by Maya Rudolph, at a rally after she won the Democratic nomination. He slowly walked to the podium and tossed out a number of Biden's signature phrases ('by the way,' 'guess what?') before being rushed offstage, only to wander back. In another skit from November, after Donald J. Trump, the Republican nominee, won the election, Carvey's Biden advises him to watch how he talks as president but stammers over his own words in doing so. It took two years for Carvey to master his impression of Biden, he said, and that the first six months of Biden's presidency did not provide much material until he heard the president whisper and yell. 'Biden eventually was my favorite because he had like 10 hooks,' Carvey said. 'I loved it. It was in entering and exiting, but it was a real challenge to make it acceptable.' Biden's age and mental state became flash points during the 2024 presidential election cycle. Conversations about it reached a fever pitch shortly after the first presidential debate in June, in which Biden meandered and mumbled through his answers. Weeks later and under intense pressure from members of his party, Biden dropped out of the race. Since then, there has been a litany of discussions and even books that examine the former president's decline while in the White House. In May, Biden was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer.

'The Cat in the Hat' trailer: Bill Hader, Quinta Brunson, Bowen Yang star in animated Dr. Seuss movie
'The Cat in the Hat' trailer: Bill Hader, Quinta Brunson, Bowen Yang star in animated Dr. Seuss movie

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'The Cat in the Hat' trailer: Bill Hader, Quinta Brunson, Bowen Yang star in animated Dr. Seuss movie

The beloved Dr. Seuss story The Cat in the Hat is being reimagined in an upcoming 2026 animated movie, courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures Animation. With characters voiced by talents including Bill Hader as The Cat in the Hat, along with Quinta Brunson, Bowen Yang, Paula Pell, Matt Berry, Xochitl Gomez, Tiago Martinez, Giancarlo Esposito, America Ferrera and Tituss Burgess, it's a new take on the story about the chaotic, fan favourite feline. "We're really kind of like doubling down on that commitment to original stories as well as really innovative takes on some of our beloved characters and worlds," Bill Damaschke, president of Warner Bros. Pictures Animation said ahead of a virtual presentation of The Cat in the Hat trailer to reporters earlier this month. "And for The Cat in the Hat to be our first film just seems like the perfect project, because it's actually all of those things at the same time." "It's a completely original take on a character that I think a lot of people have a connection to, but as kind of handled and brought to life by our filmmakers and by the very singular actor, it just comes out bigger, better, more amazing and more whimsical." In the film, set to be released Feb. 27, 2026, the Cat takes on his "toughest assignment" through the Institute for the Institution of Imagination and Inspiration, LLC (I.I.I.I.), as a pair of siblings are struggling with a move to a new town. But if the chaotic Cat can't prove himself successful in cheering up the siblings, he could lose his magical hat. "The Cat in the Hat is a very beloved character, and he's classic and iconic, and everyone has a relationship to him, because he's really this sort of wish fulfillment character," co-director and writer Erica Rivinoja said. "We call him this agent of chaos, and it's just sort of what every kid loves and wants is to just have this day of craziness and chaos." "And we really tried to bring in what people love about the original book, which is, a cat shows up, everybody goes crazy and has fun." "And then we kind of use the book as more of a jumping point for us, in the sense that the book became a question for us, which is, is this Cat really just out there to have a good time for himself and making a mess? Is there more to it?" co-director and writer Alessandro Carloni added. "We looked at the book and realized at the end of the book, the kid seems to be a little more confident with himself. Could it be that the Cat is actually the greatest child [psychologist]?" Speaking about taking on the role of voicing The Cat in the Hat, Hader (who played a version of the character on Saturday Night Live) described it as an experience that felt "free" while he was doing it. "It's actually so exhausting afterwards, because you're essentially just screaming for four hours, and then you're saying the same lines over and over again, and they just start to lose meaning," he said. Hader stressed how great the script was for the film, in addition to the film layering the comedy in a way where there are elements for kids and adults to enjoy. "I think a lot of people can think that, oh it's for children, so you have to talk down and make it not sophisticated and smart, but we wanted to make it really, really fun for literally the whole family," Rivinoja said. "There's some sneaky stuff in there for adults. There's really funny physical humour for everyone, because everyone loves it. There's a lot of very classy fart jokes in it." Back in 2003, Canadian Mike Myers took on the role of The Cat in in the hate for the live-action adaptation. The Cat in the Hat will be released in theatres on Feb. 27, 2026

‘The Cat in the Hat': Everything to know about the ‘Seussiverse'-launching animated feature
‘The Cat in the Hat': Everything to know about the ‘Seussiverse'-launching animated feature

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘The Cat in the Hat': Everything to know about the ‘Seussiverse'-launching animated feature

Talk about cat-itude. Following in the pawsteps of Mike Myers and Martin Short, Bill Hader is the latest actor to embody Dr. Seuss's iconic chapeu-wearing feline in Warner Bros. Animation's upcoming animated version of The Cat in the Hat. Due in theaters on February 27, the release marks the return of the studio's previously dormant theatrical animation division, which teased a full slate of new feature-length cartoons at CinemaCon earlier this year. The CinemaCon crowd was also treated to early footage from the The Cat in the Hat, including some non-finished sequences. But all the digital ink and paint is dry on the first trailer for the film, which debuted today and promised plenty of Seussian imagery and tomfoolery. More from Gold Derby 'Thunderbolts' exclusive: Watch the extended limo chase sequence 'The Running Man': Everything to know about Edgar Wright's new take on Stephen King's dystopian classic as trailer drops Hader, for one, is happy to provide the voice for the Cat in the Hat's latest onscreen life. "I remember reading the book as a kid and then reading it to my own kids," he remarked during a pre-trailer release press event that Gold Derby attended. "[Being offered] the chance to play such an iconic character ... I was like, 'Yes!'" Here's what you can expect from The Cat in the Hat when he slinks into multiplexes in early 2026. If you're stuck indoors when the sun's not shining and it's too wet to play, consider yourselves catnip for the Cat in the Hat. His corporate job tasks with turning children's frowns upside down, the exuberant feline makes house calls whenever fun is lacking. The Cat's latest assignment? Enlivening the existence of a pair of siblings still mired in that loneliness phase of being new-in-town. But in the process of bringing great cheer, the Cat also gets in great trouble. After being implicated in a zoo-related act of malfeasance, he sets out to clear his name — and keep his company from clawing back his hat — with the help of his new pals, some familiar Seuss critters and two very special Things. Not all of that plot is in this first teaser, though, as co-directors Erica Rivinoja and Alessandro Carloni told reporters that they consciously wanted to put tone before story. "This is really introducing our version of the Cat in the Hat and getting into our more modern take on this," noted Rivinoja. "We're not giving away anything about the evolution of the narrative of our movie," echoed Carloni, promising that future trailers will provide more plot details. "We're so excited to actually get to explore fantastical, incredible worlds that we've never seen before." While Hader provides a voice from Saturday Night Live past, Bowen Yang is on hand to represent SNL present. Marvel's Xochitl Gomez, Girls5Eva's Paula Pell and British comic Matt Berry are also in the vocal mix, as is Abbott Elementary's Quinta Brunson as the Cat's best work friend: Sherry from Human Resources. "Getting Bill and Quinta in the room was putting two comedy icons together," raved Rivinoja. And Carloni confirmed that the cast really did occupy the same recording space on multiple occasions — something that's increasingly rare for studio animation. "We wanted to make sure that Bill and his character had someone to play against," he noted. It's worth noting that Hader has had previous hatted cat experience. He played a much, much more adult version of the character in a 2014 SNL sketch. "They didn't write that for me because they knew I loved the book," Hader joked of that earlier rendition. "I think the writers were going through an issue in their marriage and used the Cat in the Hat as a way of indirectly commenting on that!" According to the filmmakers — and backed up by the trailer — The Cat in the Hat will unfold in multiple realities, including our world and a land that's practically Seussian in every way. "In the rendering of surfaces and the shape of objects, we created the Cat's world as if it's the world of Dr. Seuss," Carloni promised. "But we also created a world that is more grounded and believable; not quite as photorealistic as our reality, but very relatable." "The unique thing about this movie is that you get to see multiple movies in one," Carloni continued. "We traverse different universes, and we put that onscreen." For the directors, that approach was the best way to pay homage to the richly imagined — and riotously funny — worlds that Dr. Seuss conjured on the page. "Dr. Seuss had sophisticated humor that worked on all levels, and we just really wanted to retain that in animation," Rivinoja said. Of course, kids can only take so much sophistication in their entertainment. "There are also a lot of very classy fart jokes," she admitted with a laugh. Do fox wear socks? At CinemaCon, Warner Bros. Animation head Bill Damaschke said that The Cat in the Hat is the Iron Man-style gateway to a whole "Seussiverse." The next installment is an adaptation of Oh, the Places You'll Go! that's co-directed by Wicked maestro Jon M. Chu with songs from Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. While a Cat in the Hat sequel hasn't been announced, the creative team already sounded purrfectly game for a reunion. "At the end of the day, we got paid to be silly all the time," Rivinoja said. "It's a pretty good job, I suppose." Best of Gold Derby Everything to know about 'The Batman 2': Returning cast, script finalized Tom Cruise movies: 17 greatest films ranked worst to best 'It was wonderful to be on that ride': Christian Slater talks his beloved roles, from cult classics ('Heathers,' 'True Romance') to TV hits ('Mr. Robot,' 'Dexter: Original Sin') Click here to read the full article.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store