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‘Saturday Night Live’ hits Tribeca

‘Live From New York!’ follows the sketch show’s electric birth in the ’70s, its influence and struggles with diversity

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The Tribeca Film Festival kicked off on Wednesday night with a celebratio­n of another, older New York institutio­n. Live From New York!, a documentar­y on the cultural impact of Saturday Night Live by Bao Nguyen, opened the 14th Tribeca, the downtown film festival that aspires to be the kind of Manhattan mainstay Lorne Michael’s SNL has been for 40 years.

The opening gala was held at the Beacon Theatre, a bit uptown from the festival’s namesake neighbourh­ood, but a sign of the festival’s ambitions. The Beacon is owned by the Madison Square Garden Company, which last year bought half of Tribeca Enterprise­s, the festival’s producer.

In his opening remarks with cofounder Jane Rosenthal, Robert De Niro thanked the Madison Square Garden Company for not turning the grand old theatre into a multiplex.

Current SNL cast members such as Kate McKinnon and Bobby Moynihan showed up for the premiere, as did some of the political figures, like former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who have sometimes been skewered by SNL.

There has often been overlap between SNL and Tribeca. The show’s cast members have frequently premiered films at the festival, and Live From New York! is actually the second SNL documentar­y to debut there, following James Franco’s Saturday Night Live, which in 2010 offered a backstage view of the show’s weekly rituals from Tuesday table read to Saturday night performanc­e.

De Niro has hosted SNL three times, all of which, he joked, were times when the show couldn’t book Alec Baldwin.

Live From New York!, which was made with Michaels’ sanction, is a broad view of SNL, looking across its four decades as both a fun-house mirror reflection of America and a significan­t force of its own, capable of not just star-making but possibly election-swinging. It follows the sketch show’s electric birth in the ’70s, its influentia­l political satire in presidenti­al campaigns and its frequent struggles with diversity.

The film, which will open in cinemas in June, is populated by cast members and hosts who describe the show’s unique perch in media. Will Ferrell calls it “a living, breathing time capsule”. Amy Poehler says it’s “a mishmash of America right now”.

While warmly received, Live From New York! perhaps suffers from some SNL-feting fatigue: NBC hosted a three-hour primetime anniversar­y special in February.

The documentar­y leads a number of films at this year’s festival that document comedy from behind-thescenes, including documentar­ies on the National Lampoon (Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon) and New Yorker cartoons (Very Semi-Serious). A Monty Python reunion is also planned to coincide with screenings of the British troupe’s films, as well a documentar­y on their 2014 reunion shows.

This year’s Tribeca is also chock full of off-screen performanc­es and conversati­ons, including a Mary J. Blige concert, and talks with George Lucas, Courtney Love and Amy Schumer. Wednesday night’s premiere was followed by a performanc­e by rapper Chris “Ludacris” Bridges.

 ?? AP ?? Aidy Bryant, Leslie Jones
and Sasheer Zamata
AP Aidy Bryant, Leslie Jones and Sasheer Zamata
 ??  ?? Bobby Moynihan, Kate McKinnon and Beck
Bennett
Bobby Moynihan, Kate McKinnon and Beck Bennett
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Ludacris
 ??  ?? Robert De Niro
Robert De Niro

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