Chicago Sun-Times

‘Tonight Show’ head writer from Chicago leaves after seven months

- BY DAREL JEVENS, STAFF REPORTER djevens@suntimes.com | @djjevens

Second City alum Becky Drysdale, the head writer on “The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon,” has stepped down after seven months on the job.

The decision to part ways with the NBC late-night mainstay was mutual, she wrote in a post to her Facebook friends: “Theymade it clear that I was not a good fit for the show, and I did not disagree. I wish it had gone differentl­y and I had been able to be what they needed but that is not how it shook out.”

ATVcomedy veteranwit­h stints at “Key & Peele” and “All That” on her resume, Drysdale is taking the transition as an opportunit­y to swear off comedy about Donald Trump.

“I am making the decision formyself to never work on, write, or be involved with, another Trump sketch ever again,” she wrote. “I have landed in several jobs and situations over the last few years, not just ‘The Tonight Show,’ where the project ofmaking fun of Trump, or doing material about Trump, has led to divided creative teams, anxiety, tears and pain. I can’t decide the outcome of this election, but I can make the choice formyself, to vote him out ofmy creative life.”

She did not directly discuss “The Tonight Show’s” treatment of Trump, a frequent subject of jokes and sketches, and a figure often impersonat­ed by Fallon.

An Ohio native, Drysdale used to perform in Chicago with her friend Jordan Peele, the future “Get Out” and “Us” writerdire­ctor. They put on two acclaimed sketch shows as the duo Two White Guys, and Drysdale co-wrote and performed at Second City e.t.c. in the early 2000s.

She came aboard “The Tonight Show” in April, just as Fallon was beginning to host pandemic shows from his home. That required guests to patch in from their kitchens and crew members to contribute from severalmil­es or several states away, an obstacle Drysdale found sort of thrilling.

“I come from Chicago, where I was doing shows with two chairs and one light,” she told the Sun-Times in June. “So I don’t feel limited. I feel like it’s a fun opportunit­y to figure out, ‘What can we do with these limitation­s? What can we do that we couldn’t even do live?’ I think that’s a fun challenge.”

Fallon since has returned to his studio.

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Becky Drysdale

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