Recurring Saturday Night Live characters and sketches introduced 1984–85 explained

The tenth season of Saturday Night Live ran from October 6, 1984, to April 13, 1985, and introduced several new recurring characters and sketches.

Ed Grimley

See main article: Ed Grimley. Martin Short played a hyperactive nerd. Ed originally appeared as a recurring character in the Canadian series SCTV. Debuted on SNL October 6, 1984.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
October 6, 1984 none
October 20, 1984
November 17, 1984
December 8, 1984
February 2, 1985
April 13, 1985
December 6, 1986
December 7, 1996
November 7, 2015

Rich Hall's Election Report

A Rich Hall sketch.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
October 6, 1984 none
October 20, 1984
November 10, 1984

Lawrence Orbach

A Martin Short character, Lawrence was awkward and child-like. Lawrence also originally appeared in the Canadian series SCTV, as a contestant in the game show parody "Half-Wits". Debuted on SNL October 6, 1984.

Lew Goldman

Goldman was a stereotypical elderly Jewish man played by Billy Crystal. He was prone to commenting on his disrespectful family while doing various commentaries. He also coughed and cleared his throat frequently, due to an apparent excess of phlegm. One of his most memorable insults was: "I have coughed up things that were more interesting than you!" Debuted October 13, 1984.

Tippi Turtle

A Christopher Guest animated short. Debuted October 13, 1984.[1] [2]

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
October 13, 1984
October 20, 1984
November 17, 1984

Willie and Frankie ("Don't ya hate it when...?")

A Billy Crystal and Christopher Guest sketch. Two good friends have meandering discussions in a variety of settings that inevitably drift into detailed anecdotes of grotesquely painful self-abuse. The men each complete the other's statements, correctly assuming increasingly outlandish scenarios. The characters periodically made some version of the remark "Don't ya hate it when that happens?" as though the pain they inflicted on themselves was a matter of bad luck. Debuted October 20, 1984.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
October 20, 1984
November 10, 1984
December 8, 1984
January 12, 1985
February 16, 1985
April 13, 1985

Buddy Young, Jr.

Buddy Young, Jr. was a Las Vegas lounge comedian played by Billy Crystal. This is a rare example of a little-known character spinning off into a feature film. Although Buddy Young, Jr. appeared only four times on SNL, he was the principal character in the 1992 film, Mr. Saturday Night. Debuted October 20, 1984.

Fernando's Hideaway

Billy Crystal played a parody of Fernando Lamas as the character Fernando, who would interview various celebrities, often confusing them with someone else (e.g. confusing actor Johnny Yune for football player Johnny Unitas). During each interview he would say, "You look mahvelous", and frequently the sketch would end with, "It's better to look good than to feel good." Debuted November 3, 1984.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
November 3, 1984 "Barry Manilow" (Bobby Fraraccio)
December 8, 1984
March 2, 1985 SNL Film Festival Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert
March 30, 1985
April 13, 1985

The Joe Franklin Show

A parody of The Joe Franklin Show, with Billy Crystal impersonating host Joe Franklin. Debuted November 10, 1984.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
November 10, 1984
January 12, 1985
February 16, 1985
March 30, 1985

Jackie Rogers Jr.

A Martin Short character. Debuted November 10, 1984.

Chi Chi & Consuela

A Mary Gross and Julia Louis-Dreyfus sketch. Debuted November 10, 1984.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
November 10, 1984
December 1, 1984
January 19, 1985

Nathan Thurm

A shady lawyer, Thurm was a chain-smoker (often letting his cigarette burn to the point of becoming mostly ashes), quite paranoid, and constantly in denial about his paranoia. "I'm not being defensive. You're the one who's being defensive." When questioned, his response often included, "It's so funny to me that you would think..." He would break the fourth wall, looking into the camera and expressing his puzzlement at the questioner by asking, "Is it me, or is it him? It's him, right?" Other times, he would deny an accusation, then immediately reverse his position when the accuser reaffirmed the statement. "No, it isn't!" ("Yes it is.") "I know that! Why wouldn't I know that? I'm well aware of that!" Debuted November 17, 1984, and played by Martin Short.

Perhaps the best known appearance of Thurm was in a 1984 SNL sketch that was a send-up of 60 Minutes. Harry Shearer played Mike Wallace, accusing Thurm of being involved in corporate corruption. Thurm of course denied everything and nervously tried to turn the tables on Wallace.

Thurm was later reprised in 1990's The Earth Day Special and 2005's Earth to America, as well as on Martin Short's short-lived talk show in 1999–2000. In his book I Must Say: My Life As A Humble Comedy Legend, Short revealed that the character was based on a makeup artist who worked at SNL.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
November 17, 1984
December 1, 1984 Saturday Night News
February 2, 1985 Saturday Night News
March 30, 1985
April 13, 1985 Saturday Night News

Paul Harvey

Rich Hall impersonates Paul Harvey on Saturday Night News.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
November 17, 1984
December 15, 1984
January 19, 1985
April 6, 1985

Strictly From Blackwell

A Harry Shearer sketch. Debuted December 8, 1984.

Ricky & Phil

A Billy Crystal and Christopher Guest sketch. Debuted January 19, 1985.

That White Guy

A James Belushi sketch. Debuted February 2, 1985.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
February 2, 1985
February 16, 1985
April 13, 1985 That Russian Guy

Robert Latta

A Rich Hall sketch based on a man who was caught trespassing at the White House in 1985. Debuted February 2, 1985.

Appearances:
SeasonEpisodeHostNotes
February 2, 1985 Saturday Night News
February 9, 1985
February 16, 1985
April 13, 1985 Saturday Night News

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20120719183529/http://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/Other_Studios/Z/Zander_s_Animation_Parlour/Tippi_Turtle Tippi Turtle
  2. http://snl.jt.org/skit.php?i=56 Tippi Turtle at SNL Archives