By Scottie Andrew, CNN
(CNN) — Fifty years ago, weeks before the premiere of the show that would become “Saturday Night Live,” Chevy Chase had a camera test.
NBC execs wanted to see how the untested cast of the late-night series looked onscreen. Many of them were nervous. But Chase knew how he looked.
The disarmingly handsome comic adopted the delivery of a smarmy newsman and deadpanned a joke about the hatching of a baby sandpiper, a triumph for the zoo where it was born, until the bird was stomped to death by a baby hippo born a day earlier. He ended with “Good night, and have a pleasant tomorrow.”
That’s how “Weekend Update” came to be. Chase’s version of events has changed over the years (the camera test anecdote comes from the oral history “Live From New York”; this year, he told Vanity Fair that it happened at a table read). But every retelling of that moment features Chase as a news anchor and a poor baby sandpiper meeting an untimely end.
That anchorman was inspired by local TV journalist Roger Grimsby, but with “Weekend Update,” Chase really invented an outsized version of himself. At once arrogant and idiotic, Chase found a charming cocktail that would make him the breakout star of the nascent “Saturday Night” –– and made “Weekend Update” the show’s signature segment.
‘Weekend Update’ was the show’s first hit
“Weekend Update” typically lands shortly after midnight, after the first musical performance and most of the topical, political sketches. In the capable but predictable hands of current anchors Michael Che and Colin Jost, it’s more of a showcase for other cast members who appear as quirky correspondents. In his sole season as an “SNL” cast member, Chase made it must-see TV that he owned.
Chase was originally hired as a writer, winning a place in the cast after torpedoing himself into a pothole in the pouring rain after dinner with “SNL” creator Lorne Michaels and NBC executive Dick Ebersol. He sold himself then and there, Ebersol said in “Live From New York.”
The very first “Weekend Update” segment was just over three minutes long, complete with a fake advertisement for arthritis medication and a cutaway segment to Laraine Newman on the scene of a fictional hotel homicide. Chase was self-assured throughout, talking a mile a minute in a plain gray suit and red tie, even though he almost stumbled over the first few words of a now-classic joke: “The Post Office announced today that it is commemorating prostitution in the United States –– it’s a 10-cent stamp, but if you wanna lick it, it’s a quarter.”
Michaels told the New York Times earlier this year that sticking a news parody in around midnight was purposeful: Some stations around the US didn’t start airing the show until around that time, after local 11:30 p.m. news broadcasts had ended. Audiences would join the show in progress, see Chase as a fast-talking anchor and fall right in.
The segment grew in popularity week-to-week. A few weeks into his run, he started saying, “I’m Chevy Chase, and you’re not.” He’d reliably skewer politicians and public figures (his favorite target was President Gerald Ford, who Chase joked “tied his shoe to his hairblower and inadvertently pardoned Richard Nixon”) and make fake ri