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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=90TT1319>
<title>
May 21, 1990: Saturday-Night Sizzle
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush's Bad Cop
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SHOW BUSINESS, Page 87
Saturday-Night Sizzle
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A raunchy comic's guest shot makes women see red
</p>
<p> He dresses in a rhinestone-studded leather jacket, fills his
routines with obscenities and has offended more people than any
other stand-up comic since Lenny Bruce. The perfect guest host
for NBC's cutting-edge comedy series Saturday Night Live? Well,
Andrew Dice Clay may have looked good on paper. But when the
Diceman cameth, two performers bowed out, and the show endured
perhaps the most tumultuous week in its controversy-filled
15-year history.
</p>
<p> The boycott began when Nora Dunn, a cast member since 1985,
announced she would not share the stage with Clay, in protest
against his foul-mouthed material denigrating women,
homosexuals and minority groups. Two days later, singer Sinead
O'Connor, whose song Nothing Compares 2 U is No. 1 on the
Billboard charts, backed out of her guest appearance. Said
O'Connor: "It shows disrespect to women that Saturday Night
Live expected me to perform on the same show as Andrew Dice
Clay."
</p>
<p> The show went on, but only after a hectic week of damage
control. Other musical guests, the Spanic Boys and Julee
Cruise, were hired to replace O'Connor. The writers pulled
all-nighters to come up with new material playing off the
controversy. Just before airtime on Saturday night, police had
to clear chanting protesters from the lobby of the NBC studios.
Clay, after fending off some hecklers during his opening
monologue, promised to mind his mouth: "What do I need--more
p.r.? I couldn't get more p.r. if I took out my penis and
wrapped it around a microphone stand." However, during one
sketch in which he played a father counseling his son about
sex, several words were bleeped out (the usually live show was
broadcast with a five-second delay).
</p>
<p> The thuggish comic has been filling arenas with his raunchy
stand-up routines. Last September, after a four-letter
appearance on the MTV Video Music Awards, he was banned from
the channel for life. He was tapped as SNL's guest host,
according to insiders, only after other candidates (including
Kyle MacLachlan of Twin Peaks) were not available. The
producers defend Clay's appearance, however, as being in SNL's
tradition of adventurous comedy. Says producer James Downey:
"We don't feel we're endorsing everything he's ever done by
having him on this show."
</p>
<p> While women's groups praised Dunn's protest, neither of the
show's other female performers, Victoria Jackson and Jan Hooks,
joined Dunn in walking out. "It was the unilateral manner in
which she did it that offended people," says executive producer
Lorne Michaels. (Dunn has only two shows left on her contract,
and is not expected to return next season.) But Dunn
emotionally defends her move. "I think it is morally wrong to
provide Andrew Dice Clay with a legitimate arena," she says.
"This man is a hatemonger."
</p>
<p> Throughout the brouhaha, Clay (who will star in the summer
film The Adventures of Ford Fairlane) maintained his customary
off-camera swagger. Commenting on Dunn's walkout, he told
Entertainment Tonight, "I think she's just doing this because
I am the hottest comic in the world today." Not true, but for
one week he came awfully close. Alas.
</p>
<p>By Richard Zoglin. Reported by Naushad S. Mehta and Stephen
Pomper/New York.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>