Tracy Morgan Opened Up About What It Was Really Like Being A Black Cast Member On “Saturday Night Live” In The ‘90s
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Saturday Night Live, and, as part of the celebrations, fans have gotten a peak behind the scenes in a new Peacock docuseries, SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night.
The four-part show welcomes back a ton of current and former cast members, writers, and celebrity hosts to reflect on SNL’s monumental history and their experiences being a part of it.
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As well as telling stories behind the most infamous sketches, many of the returning cast members were asked to reflect on their auditions and early years on the show, leading to some revelations about what it’s really like to earn a coveted spot in the cast lineup.
And though SNL was a dream come true, Tracy Morgan got brutally honest about feeling “culturally isolated” when he first joined the predominantly white cast in the ‘90s.
“I wanted to show them my world, how funny it was. But the first three years, I felt like I was being culturally isolated sometimes,” he recalled in the docuseries. “I’m coming from a world of Blacks. I’m an inner-city kid. To be on the whitest show in America, I felt by myself.”
As he navigated his early years as a cast member, Tracy said he ultimately reached a turning point when he opened up to SNL creator Lorne Michaels about how he was really feeling.
Notably, Tracy isn’t the only Black cast member to have talked about experiencing cultural difficulties on SNL in its earlier seasons. In the docuseries, Damon Wayans also recalled “purposefully” getting himself fired from the show in 1985 after growing frustrated with the limiting material the writers were giving him each episode.
Damon said he often pushed back and eventually reached his breaking point when a sketch called “Mr. Monopoly” was chosen over one he’d written. So, as an act of rebellion during the live broadcast, Damon broke one of SNL’s golden rules and went off-script, delivering his lines “like a very effeminate gay guy.”
To hear more behind-the-scenes stories, you can watch SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night on Peacock now.
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