Calgary Herald

HIJINKS ENLIVEN SNL

Troubled comic Davidson uses his personal life to grab plenty of laughs

- TRAVIS M. ANDREWS

As Saturday Night Live wrapped up season 44, one surprising fact became abundantly clear. The most interestin­g, funny and even somewhat touching aspect of the season was … Pete Davidson. Even more, it was Davidson’s somewhat tumultuous personal life that made him so engaging.

When Davidson joined the SNL cast in 2014, fans knew a few things about his personal life. They knew he was young, only 20 years old. They knew his father, a firefighte­r, died in the World Trade Center on 9/11. And they knew of Davidson’s abiding love of marijuana.

This season, the young comic mined his personal life — including his relationsh­ips with pop star Ariana Grande and actress Kate Beckinsale, his comedic missteps when mocking war veteran Dan Crenshaw’s missing eye, living with his mother and even his own mental health struggles — to inject a desperatel­y needed mixture of laughs and pathos into a show that’s been criticized for growing stale as it continuall­y hammered the Trump administra­tion.

The showrunner­s might have predicted this would become the Season of Pete. The première included a pre-recorded sketch in which an insecure Kyle Mooney reinvents himself as a Davidson look-alike. He cuts off his curly locks, bleaches what’s left, gets sleeve tattoos and starts smoking weed at work. Mostly, the sketch mocks Davidson’s lightning-fast engagement to Grande (and the flurry of headlines it generated). Mooney needs a “hot celebrity girlfriend,” so he hooks up with Wendy Williams and the two adopt a baby pig — just like Davidson and Grande.

When Kid Cudi blows off Davidson to hang with Mooney, Davidson confronts the impostor: “Why are you stealing my look and my friends? Don’t you know I have, like, mental problems?”

Mooney responds by pulling out a prescripti­on bottle of bills. “Me, too,” he says.

Later in that same episode, Davidson appeared on Weekend Update to discuss his engagement to Grande. “No one could believe it,” he said. “And I can’t believe it. Yeah, I get it. She’s the No. 1 pop star in the world, and I’m that guy from SNL that everyone thinks is in desperate need for more blood.”

Overall, though, it was a sort of mission statement: “Pete Davidson” had become a character, and his real life was game for comedy, wrinkles and all.

Not a month later, the duo ended the engagement, which caused the celebrity gossip machine to begin whirring with full force. Davidson wasted no time in joking about the situation.

He appeared in the promo for the first post-breakup episode alongside musical guest Maggie Rogers. At one point, he says, “Hey Maggie, I’m Pete. You want to get married?” When she politely declines, he snaps his fingers and quips, “0-for-3!”

In the episode itself, he appeared on Weekend Update, ostensibly to talk about the midterm elections (something he paid more attention to after “I had to move back in with my mom”). He ended the segment on a serious note that seemingly came out of nowhere. “The last thing I will say is I know some of you are curious about the breakup, but the truth is it’s nobody’s business,” he said. “Sometimes things just don’t work out, and that’s OK.”

That segment also included arguably the most viral moment of Davidson’s career, when he mocked Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL who lost an eye to an IED during his third combat tour of Afghanista­n.

“You may be surprised to hear he’s a congressio­nal candidate from Texas and not a hit man in a porno movie,” Davidson joked. “I’m sorry; I know he lost his eye in war or whatever.”

The outrage was immediate, with people on both sides of the aisle demanding an apology. In response, Davidson did something that most cast members haven’t: He apologized.

“I made a joke about Lieutenant-commander Dan Crenshaw, and on behalf of the show and myself, I apologize,” he said the next week, after Crenshaw was elected to Congress. “I mean this from the bottom of my heart. It was a poor choice of words. The man is a war hero, and he deserves all the respect in the world.”

Then, in the season’s most memorable moment, Crenshaw himself appeared alongside Davidson, made some jokes (including some about Grande) and gave an earnest speech, saying, “There’s a lot of lessons to learn here. Not just that the left and right can still agree on some things, but also this: Americans can forgive one another.”

Davidson even took his darkest moment, a suicide scare, and turned it into comedy when he invited his seemingly unlikely friend and fellow comedian John Mulaney onto the Weekend Update segment.

“I’ve been spending time with Pete to try to show him that you can have a life in comedy that is not insane, a sober domestic life,” Mulaney said.

“Yeah, and after observing John’s life, I publicly threatened suicide. I’m sorry, I know I shouldn’t make that joke. But it is funny,” Davidson responded, referring to a social media post that prompted police action. He had posted on Instagram about the bullying he had faced, writing that “i really don’t want to be on this earth anymore.”

And that’s the magic of Davidson. There’s always been a school of comedy that involves shedding light on the darkest parts of the human experience, but its pupils rarely take this lesson onstage at SNL.

 ?? NBC ?? Just as Saturday Night Live was being criticized for becoming stale, Pete Davidson mined his life for material and stole the show.
NBC Just as Saturday Night Live was being criticized for becoming stale, Pete Davidson mined his life for material and stole the show.

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