К основному контенту

Phil Hartman Was The 'Glue' That Held Together The Cast Of Saturday Night Live

There's a reason why Phil Hartman's always at the top of the lists for best "Saturday Night Live" cast members. Yes, he was one of the funniest cast members of his time, but he also kept things rolling whenever he wasn't playing the funniest character in a sketch. "People like Phil make it safe for people to be crazier," Julia Sweeney, who played Hartman's character's wife in the famous "Van Down By the River" sketch, told Grantland in 2014. "They're the gravitas. It's not going to go completely off the rails if Phil's in the sketch."

"Matt Foley: Van Down By the River" is famous not just because of Chris Farley's performance, but because of the way almost every other character on the set can't help but break. The only one who manages to keep his composure the whole way through is Phil Hartman, who maintains an air of professionalism that stops the sketch from feeling a little too sloppy. "There is no Costello without Abbott," explained David Mandel, an "SNL" writer at the time, in the same Grantland feature. "They called him 'Glue' for different reasons, but one of them was you can't have that Matt Foley character if Phil Hartman isn't there to be the dad reacting off it."

As often as Hartman got to show off his comedic chops while playing Clinton or Reagan or a sketchy caveman lawyer or the senior editor of Sassy Magazine, he was perhaps at his most valuable as a grounded, serious character who helps the "SNL" sketch around them feel like it's still got one foot firmly planted in reality.

Who's The New Glue?

Ever since Phil Hartman's tenure, there's been plenty of speculation about who's now filling his role as the "glue" on "Saturday Night Live." Chris Parnell, a cast member from 1998 to 2006, had a similar reputation as someone who never broke in the sketch, and who almost always played the straight man. After Parnell, people often point to Bill Hader or Kenan Thompson; but while they're both undoubtedly great and fun to have in a sketch, both Hader and Thompson often bring some sort of quirky charm to the character that prevents them from being a regular, grounded presence. And while we can't really fault Hader for breaking as much as he did, this does disqualify him from being Hartman's successor.

The closest thing to a glue character in modern "SNL" is probably Mikey Day, an actor who's been on the show for seven seasons now but still hasn't really become a household name. Even though he's a constant presence on the show, playing in what seems like a solid 4 or 5 sketches a night, he hasn't become as well known as fellow cast members like Chloe Fineman or Bowen Yang, whose characters tend to be the sketch's main focus. Most of the time, Day plays the guy whose reactions are meant to reflect what a regular person would say if thrown into the same exact situation. And much like Hartman, Mikey Day rarely ever breaks.  

Day does get to play eccentric characters from time to time, such as Donald Trump Jr. or one of David S. Pumpkins' skeletons -- but like Phil Hartman 20 years before him, some of his most important work on the show is in that thankless, seemingly unremarkable glue role that holds everything together.

Read this next: All 10 Chris Farley Movies, Ranked Worst To Best

The post Phil Hartman Was The 'Glue' That Held Together The Cast Of Saturday Night Live appeared first on /Film.

/Film https://ift.tt/CPp4JeU January 28, 2023 at 01:00PM

Комментарии

Популярные сообщения из этого блога

These pants are made with the world’s strongest material woven into its fabric – Graphene

There’s a high chance that the Omega pants will outlive the human race. Now I’m not being a pessimist, I’m just stating that these all-purpose pants come with the toughest ever material known to man woven into its fabric. With a lifetime warranty that should last long enough for it to be passed down multiple generations, the Omega pants were built to literally be worn forever, or quite possibly until the end-times… a little too stark? Maybe, but it drives the point home! Designed for practically any activity that requires pants, the Omega pants by Graphene-X come with a 3-layer fabric that isn’t just destruction-proof, it’s stretchable, waterproof, and has the ability to regulate your body’s temperature so you could potentially wear the same pair of pants while rock-climbing in the sun or on a skiing trip to a snow-capped peak. The pants’ fabric as well as its construction together help it juggle its different roles. Styled like a pair of all-purpose pants with removable leg-pieces, ...

A lounge chair you can ‘lean on’

Remember the Ovini Balance Stool from last year? The Sway Chair is the Ovini’s bigger brother with a backrest! Designed to be a lounging chair that has the flexibility of perhaps the beanbag, KI’s Sway Chair comes with a hemispherical base that rests on a freely rotating and swiveling base that has 4 legs. The contact points between the seating area and the base have ball bearings concealed within them that allow you to lean forwards, backwards, or even sideways in the chair, choosing a position that’s comfortable for you. With a simple physical action, you can change the chair from a work-chair to a lounger to lean back and relax in. There’s a certain bit of resistance/friction too, which means the chair retains the position you set it in, rather than swinging willy-nilly. Oh, and this one, unlike the Ovini, also comes with a rather nifty backrest as well as an adjustable foot-stool! Designer: KI Yanko Design https://ift.tt/2y1jNWK September 28, 2018 at 09:02PM

Contemporary Chinese Cinema: Shunji Iwai’s Letters from Shanghai

Contemporary Chinese Cinema  is a column devoted to exploring contemporary Chinese-language cinema primarily as it is revealed to us at North American multiplexes. The sneakiest major release of the year is surely the latest from Japanese director Shunji Iwai, whose new movie opens this Friday at a dozen multiplexes around North America courtesy of the distributor China Lion Film. Last Letter is Iwai’s first film made in China, and stars Zhou Xun, who starred in one of last year’s best films, Ann Hui’s Our Time Will Come , which was also distributed here by China Lion. That he would be working in a new country is no surprise: Iwai is one of the more eclectic filmmakers of his generation: having started in TV and video in the early 90s before moving into film, he’s since made documentaries and music videos, science fiction films and anime, epics of modern alienation and ravishingly romantic odes to the wonders of youth and love. His last film, Chang-ok’s Letter , was an hour-long...