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The 50 Best ‘Saturday Night Live’ Characters of All Time

Legends, obscurities, opera men: a look back at the funniest concoctions to grace Studio 8H

Saturday Night Live characters

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No comedy empire has ever given us as many unforgettable characters as Saturday Night Live. Fans develop an intense bond with their favorite SNL heroes — we love our Stefons, our Mr. Robinsons, our Roseanne Roseannadannas. So here’s a salute to our picks for the 50 best characters — not necessarily the most famous, just the funniest. Some are legendary, others are deep cuts. Some appeared week after week; others only showed up once or twice. (Better one dose of Gene Frenkle than a herd of Goat Boys.) There’s no celebrity impersonations here — that would be a whole other list. (Painful as it is to leave out Darrell Hammond’s Sean Connery or Tina Fey’s Sarah Palin.) But these unforgettable characters come from every era of SNL’s wild and crazy 50-year history. The one thing they have in common is that they’re classics. Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night.

2

Wayne and Garth

Mike Myers created the all-American party-commando hero. Wayne might be just a suburban metal kid hosting a public-access cable show in his mom’s basement, “Wayne’s World.” But he’s a rock star in his dreams. With him, as always, Dana Carvey as his loyal sidekick Garth. They were SNL at its best—the warmest, funniest, realest friendship in the show’s history, whether making out with Madonna or debating the future of socialism with Aerosmith. Coolest SNL spin-off movie ever, too. Party on, Wayne. Party on, Garth. Best line: “Garth, get it together, man. Because if you hurl, and I catch a whiff of it, I’m gonna spew. And if I blow chunks, chances are someone else is gonna honk, all right? And that’s gonna set off a peristaltic chain reaction, all right?”

1

Stefon

Oh Stefon—more fun than a date with Tranderson Cooper. Bill Hader created an SNL legend with Stefon, the dazed Chelsea club kid who raves about the latest parties, dropping names like Gaye Dunaway, Blowjay Simpson, or “lazily named drag queen Melvin in a Dress.” As Hader told Rolling Stone, he based Stefon on the zonked-out party monsters he saw on the L train every Sunday morning on his way home to Brooklyn after SNL cast parties. His friend John Mulaney famously loved to surprise him with new jokes on the cue cards, trying to make Hader crack up on the air. (It usually worked.) But Stefon is beloved for his unkillable child-like enthusiasm. No matter what kind of hellhole he’s in, Stefon always believes this party has everything. An inspiration to us all.Best line: “This place has everything: geeks, sherpas, a Jamaican nurse wearing a shower cap, room after room of broken mirrors. Look over there—is that Mick Jagger? No! It’s a fat kid on a Slip & Slide. His knees look like biscuits and he’s ready to party!”