Making the right impression
Jim Carrey as Joe Biden? Alrighty then.
The comedian will spoof the Democratic U.S. presidential nominee on the upcoming season of Saturday Night Live, Lorne Michaels, the show's longtime executive producer, told Vulture.
Michaels also confirmed that Alec Baldwin will return as
U.S. President Donald Trump — despite the actor's repeated insistence he hates the gig — and Maya Rudolph will reprise her impression of vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris.
This week's announcement continues the sketch comedy's relatively new tradition of inviting non-SNL cast members to regularly portray political figures. Here's a look at some of the show's most memorable impressions, ranked from good to great: 8.
Alec Baldwin as Donald Trump Baldwin may hate parodying Trump on SNL, but viewers love it. When Baldwin hosted the show toward the end of Trump's first year as president, the show earned its biggest ratings in six years.
7.
Maya Rudolph as Kamala Harris Many SNL fans had Rudolph in mind to play Harris long before the SNL alum made her debut as the U.S. senator from California. When she appeared last September, in a spoof of a CNN Town Hall, Rudolph nailed Harris's cadence. Viewers loved Rudolph's take on Harris so much that the comedian's name started trending after Biden named Harris as his running-mate. Rudolph, who happened to be taping an Entertainment Weekly panel at the time, declared the choice as “spicy.”
6.
Matt Damon as Brett Kavanaugh Damon first appeared as the now Supreme Court justice on SNL's season première in September 2018. It was a surprise, and you could hear the audience's shock when Damon first appeared, but it quickly turned to excitement as Damon made a few Kavanaugh-esque facial expressions. And when the actor started talking in a volatile baritone (“I'm a keg-half-full kind of guy!”) the audience was fully on board.
5.
Amy Poehler as Hillary Clinton We're used to Kate McKinnon's gold-star impression of Clinton, but it was Poehler who first captured the role during her time on SNL. She has returned a few times since leaving the show in 2008 — most notably, appearing opposite McKinnon's Clinton in a sketch that found Clinton talking to a younger version of herself. 4.
Larry David as Bernie Sanders Who better to play the delightfully cranky Brooklyn native than another delightfully cranky Brooklyn native who happens to bear a passing resemblance to the U.S. senator from Vermont? After David began parodying Sanders on the show, the two found out — via Henry Louis Gates Jr. — that they are distant cousins.
3.
Melissa McCarthy as Sean Spicer
When SNL needed someone to portray the bumbling White House press secretary, McCarthy stepped into the role. Trump reportedly loathed the impression — largely because Spicer was being played by a woman. It probably didn't help that the Emmy-winning portrayal often found McCarthy referring to herself as “Spicey.”
2.
Will Ferrell as George W. Bush Like Poehler, Ferrell first tackled playing the 43rd president while a cast member on SNL. But he has reprised the role several times since leaving the show in 2002. In 2018, as Bush's approval rating soared, he returned to Saturday Night Live to remind his “fellow Americans” that he had been “really bad, like, historically not good” as president. Ferrell also made the character the centre of a Broadway play called You're Welcome, America. A Final Night with George W. Bush. 1.
Tina Fey as Sarah Palin
How good was Tina Fey as Sarah Palin? Well, Palin never actually said “I can see Russia from my house,” but a fair amount of people thought she did. No, that would be her SNL doppelgänger, who returned to her old stomping grounds at the request of the internet, basically. Fey signed on after a number of people noted the physical resemblance between her and Palin.
The Washington Post