The master impressionist will surely be missed – especially after his great performance on Weekend Update Thursday just two days earlier.
“It will be very hard to follow last year,” said SNL Executive Producer Lorne Michaels to USA Today, and although he was referring to the fact that 2008 had a hugely publicized election, losing Hammond could add to the troubles.
First, SNL is notoriously quiet about cast movement – and no official statement has been released regarding Hammond (we’ve reached out to NBC for comment). Also, his bio still appears on the NBC.com site. But his absence from the opening credits is a glaring omission, and leads to the only logical conclusion that Hammond is gone.
Back in May I talked to Fred Armisen about what seemed to be
On one level, the show loses Hammond as a veteran presence. He is the longest tenured cast member in the show’s history, having completed 14 seasons. And on a year in which the show swapped out two female cast members for two new ones, a little experience could have gone a long way.
But also, Hammond’s impressions are as close to irreplaceable, and needed on the show, as anyone else’s. He’s got the perfected former Pres. Bill Clinton, which was on full display during Thursday’s prime time show. There’s also Sen. John McCain and former VP Al Gore. That’s just the tip of the iceberg – Donald Trump, Sean Connery, Rev. Jesse Jackson, the list goes on. The political impressions will be missed the most, though. How can Saturday Night Live exist without a go-to Bill Clinton or John McCain? They’re already without a Sec. Hillary Clinton, now that Amy Poehler has left the show.
There’s one major consolation – the eternal SNL fraternity. There’s a reason why Poehler guest-anchored the first two Weekend Update Thursdays. And apparently why Hammond was there at the update desk on Thursday, as Slick Willie looked for Megan Fox. And why
Here’s Hammond’s Weekend Update Thursday appearance last week as Clinton:
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