Oh no! She was hiding behind a tree and you surprised her maybe! But now that you can see Claudine, isn’t she pretty? And the thing is she also has a pretty voice. Yes, this pretty French lady has a pretty voice that she made with her pretty face, and she used that pretty voice to sing pretty songs about the prettier things in life, including but not limited to the different colors that love can be.
And that’s all interesting, sure, but the real capper for me is this bit, also from Wikipedia: A Racquel Welch-hosted episode from the first season of Saturday Night Live made fun of the incident with a sketch titled “The Claudine Longet Invitational,” which played gunshot sounds over stock footage of skiers wiping out. Bad taste, sure, but funny nonetheless. Shortly after, Longet’s attorney demanded that the show cease such mockeries, and Lorne Michaels himself apologized on the following episode. However, the strange part is that cease-and-desist letter notwithstanding, the sketch is still viewable — on Netflix or on Hulu Plus. I actually just watched it, and while I can’t embed Hulu Plus videos, I can at least offer you this:
You get the idea.
It’s an interesting measure of how much SNL’s edge has been nerfed since the show began. In 1976, SNL ran a sketch that just about everyone would admit is offensive, and while it offered an on-air apology for doing so, the sketch didn’t get excised from reruns. More recently, however, Abby Elliott’s impression of Brittany Murphy on “Weekend Update” — as borderline unemployable, dazed and under the incorrect impression that she’s hosting (“Ladies and gentleman, Sum 41 is here!”) — got yanked from reruns, Hulu, iTunes and anywhere else NBC can find it, even though it aired 15 days before Murphy died. No apology, and presumably no request on the part of Murphy’s family for one. Yet this is the only trace of it that I could find, and it’s only the first few seconds:
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ReplyDeleteI very fondly remember a bit (from the 12/10/94 episode hosted by Alec Baldwin and with musical guests the Beastie Boys) called "The Young and the Youthful," a riff on a soap opera wherein Alec played both the wealthy bigshot Pierce and his mentally challenged brother Petey. It was hilarious--and this is saying a lot for SNL, especially this particular episode. My family and I still quote it to this day.
ReplyDeleteBut it, too, has been carefully excised and dropped into the memory hole. It's not on Hulu, Netflix, any broadcast reruns, or Alec Baldwin's Best Of collection. I suppose it could have been offensive, but no more offensive than the skit that preceded it: ten minutes of extremely fake, extremely projectile vomiting. Yeah.
I don't remember that particular sketch. It would have aired about a year before I started watching SNL. But I have noticed some strangeness with when how SNL chooses what sketches get re-aired, sent to iTunes, sent to Hulu. I do know that music rights often get something nixed from everything but the initial airing, however. Maybe that had something to do with it?
ReplyDeleteBut how about this for something random and coincidental: Alec Baldwin just this Saturday hosted the opener to the new season of SNL, and he appeared in a sketch that was a soap opera parody. Funny, huh?
Coincidences abound! SNL likes to use Alec as a soap opera actor. I guess he looks the part.
ReplyDeleteClaudine wasn't as pretty as I remembered her being -- fairly ordinary but probably thought to be pretty because of her French accent.
ReplyDelete