
When Saturday Night Live premiered in 1975, it introduced a new kind of comedy to America — smart, strange, character-driven, and fearless. At the heart of it were two original cast members who redefined what funny looked like: Gilda Radner and Laraine Newman.
Gilda was Lorne Michaels’ very first hire. Her comedic instincts were unmatched — raw, expressive, and deeply human.
She gave us unforgettable characters like Roseanne Roseannadanna, Emily Litella, and Baba Wawa, all delivered with heart and a wink of chaos.
Whether she was playing loud or subtle, Gilda made us feel every moment.
“Comedy is very controlling—you are making people laugh.” — Gilda Radner

Gilda Radner and Jane Curtin: The Original Women of SNL Who Changed Comedy Forever
Laraine, just 23 years old and fresh from The Groundlings, brought a sharp, offbeat brilliance. She embodied Connie Conehead, valley girls, and an array of wonderfully weird roles that made her a standout. Her dry wit and unique voice gave her sketches a rhythm all their own.
“I felt like I was part of something brand new — and we were inventing it as we went.” — Laraine Newman

Together, Gilda and Laraine weren’t just castmates — they were anchors of the original SNL spirit: full of range, risk, and rhythm. Their chemistry with each other and with the rest of the cast helped set the tone for the show’s golden era.
They paved the way for the generations that followed, not by breaking rules, but by making people laugh — in unforgettable, original ways.

Decades later, they’re still quoted, watched, and loved. Their voices still echo through late-night sketches, comedy classes, and every performer who grew up with a dream and a punchline.

When the Coneheads first appeared on Saturday Night Live in 1977, no one had seen anything like it: a suburban alien family with elongated skulls, robotic voices, and an obsession with beer, fried eggs, and mass consumption.
Beldar. Prymaat. Connie.
Played brilliantly by Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin, and Laraine Newman, the Coneheads weren’t just a weird visual gag — they were a perfect satire of American suburbia, immigration, and awkward assimilation.

They smoked cigarettes through their cones.
They ordered “mass quantities” of food.
They blended in terribly — and that’s what made them unforgettable. From sketch to cultural phenomenon (and eventually their own 1993 movie), the Coneheads are pure SNL history: bizarre, brilliant, and totally original.

It is still one of the most recognizable and beloved sketches to ever beam down to Studio 8H.
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By award-winning Texas author Cynthia Leal Massey.

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SNL would not be around now if it weren’t for the solid foundation its original actors-like Radner- established. Viewers just keep hoping it will be reinvented somehow. I haven’t watched it for years. 🙂
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Agreed ~ It hasn’t been worth watching in years! 💯
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Ahhh, she was so much fun! I miss her.
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No party or date with a boy was worth missing that show back in the day. Since it was live, a rerun wasn’t an option. Once you missed it, it was gone. The invention of the Sony Betamax was also several years down the road (if I remember right.)
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You are right on!!!
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I enjoyed the early days of SNL, Gilda Radner in particular.
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Oh, Gilda was outstanding. Could you just imagine her household with Gene Wilder?!!
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I’ve actually tried to imagine that household several times over the years. Two amazing comedic talents gone too soon. I miss them both. 💜💚
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I don’t think Wilder ever got over Gilda’s death.
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Agreed ~ I don’t think he ever did either. I admired him for building a Cancer Treatment Center in Gilda’s honor. Still watch reruns of the Mel Brooks movies he starred in ~ Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein, High Anxiety. They’ll always be some of my favorites. 💗
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Agreed! They are hilarious!!
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Gilda and Akroyd, my two favorites from the old days. I stopped watching it in the mid-90s and recently gave it another shot, and it wasn’t very pleasant. I don’t know how the show stays on the air, there is no comedy, just politics.
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100% agree.
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they use to be funny way back when, until they became to left
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Agree. Can’t even recall the last time I have seen it.
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