Norm MacDonald dies at 61
Former âSaturday Night Liveâ star Norm Macdonald has died, according to his management team.
The former âWeekend Updateâ anchor was 61.
According to Lori Jo Hoekstra, his producing partner, Mr. Macdonald died after a nine-year cancer battle that he chose to keep private.
âHe was most proud of his comedy,â said Ms. Hoekstra, who was with him when he died. âHe never wanted the diagnosis to affect the way the audience or any of his loved ones saw him.â
Mr. Macdonald had been a member of the âSNLâ cast from 1993 to 1998, one of the showâs most influential periods â" Dana Carvey, Chris Farley, Phil Hartman, Mike Myers and Adam Sandler were among his castmates at one time or another.
He anchored the showâs âWeekend Updateâ ânewsâ segment for three seasons, which fit well his droll, observational style of humor.
âNorm was a pure comic. He once wrote that âa joke should catch someone by surprise, it should never pander.â He certainly never pandered. Norm will be missed terribly,â Ms. Hoekstra said in a statement Tuesday.
As âWeekend Updateâ anchorman, Mr. Macdonald would often make jokes â" often little more than asides â" about Germans and âBaywatch,â prison rape, âcrack whoresâ and football star-turned-murder suspect O.J. Simpson.
His well-known âSaturday Night Liveâ impressions included Bob Dole, Larry King, David Letterman, Burt Reynolds and Quentin Tarantino.
Mr. Macdonaldâs post-âSNLâ career included several films including âThe People Vs. Larry Flyntâ and the âDr. Doolittleâ movies, the special âMe Doing Stand-Up,â and the three-season ABC sitcom âThe Norm Showâ (later just âNormâ).
He was also one of the first major stars to turn to podcasting and streaming with âNorm Macdonald Liveâ premiering in 2013 and also running for three seasons.
The Canadian-born comic was a regular on the talk-show circuit, frequently appearing on shows hosted by Conan OâBrien, David Letterman and Howard Stern.
âI am absolutely devastated about Norm Macdonald. Norm had the most unique comedic voice I have ever encountered and he was so relentlessly and uncompromisingly funny. I will never laugh that hard again. Iâm so sad for all of us today,â Mr. OâBrien said Tuesday on Twitter.
Mr. Macdonald was one of the first victims of both contemporary âcancel cultureâ and a predecessor form â" celebrity pandering.
He maintained he had been fired from âSNLâ for continually ridiculing O.J. Simpson as a murderer, despite the former football starâs acquittal in a criminal trial. He said Don Ohlmeyer, president of NBCâs West Coast division, was a friend of Mr. Simpson.
More recently, he had a 2018 appearance on âThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallonâ canceled because of skeptical remarks he had made about the #MeToo movement and its demand that women who charge sexual misconduct simply be believed.
He had told the Hollywood Reporter he was âhappy the #MeToo movement has slowed down a little bit.â
I am not a conservative and have never been a conservative in my life. But I do know this. Everyone is lying.
â" Norm Macdonald (@normmacdonald) March 15, 2017âIt used to be, âOne hundred women canât be lying.â And then it became, âOne woman canât lie.â And that became, âI believe all women.â And then youâre like, âWhat?ââ Mr. Macdonald said.
He also said Roseanne Barr and Louis C.K. had been treated excessively harshly by the regnant Hollywood climate toward comedy.
Despite an apology, âThe Tonight Showâ canceled his appearance.
âOut of sensitivity to our audience and in light of Norm Macdonaldâs comments in the press today, âThe Tonight Showâ has decided to cancel his appearance on Tuesdayâs telecast,â NBC said then in a statement.
At the time, he was promoting a new Netflix series âNorm Macdonald Has a Show,â of which the streaming giant had ordered a 10-episode season. It was not picked up for a second.
In 2017, despite his increasingly running afoul of the entertainment industryâs liberal mainstream, he wrote on Twitter that âI am not a conservative and have never been a conservative in my life.â
âBut I do know this. Everyone is lying,â he concluded.
Several times in talk-show appearances and stand-up, he would joke about bowel cancer, specifically. âI get concerned,â he told Mr. Letterman, before assuring the CBS host he had looked it up and it doesnât exist.âIn the old days, a man could get sick and die. Now they have to âwage a battle,ââ he joked in a stand-up routine, going to mention his âUncle Bert.â
He said he watched that manâs âcourageous battle.â
âThis is the battle. He is lying in a hospital bed, with a thing in his arm, watching âMatlockâ on the TV,â the comedian said. âItâs not his fault. What the fâ" is he supposed to do.â
In that routine, which was being widely shared Tuesday, he applied his observational style to the language of death.
âIn the old days, theyâd go âhey, that old man died.â Now they go, âhey, he lost his battle.â Thatâs no way to end your life. âWhat a loser that guy was. The last thing he did was lose,ââ Mr. Macdonald said, going on to wonder whether someone loses his battle because he got cowardly or the cancer was braver.
He ended that segment philosophically.
âIâm not a doctor, but ⦠if you die, the cancer also dies at exactly the same time. That to me is not a loss, thatâs a draw,â he said.
Sign up for Daily Newsletters
0 Response to "Norm MacDonald dies at 61"
Post a Comment