Showing posts with label Chevy Chase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chevy Chase. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

HOLLYWOOD FEUDS: CHEVY CHASE AND BILL MURRAY

Their animosity began in the chill backstage corridors of Saturday Night Live in February 1978. Chevy Chase, having risen to instant fame as SNL's original "Weekend Update" anchor, had departed after season two, confident his movie career awaited. Bill Murray, brought on in the next season, was dubbed the “new Chevy,” a tag that felt more like a weight than an honor to the quieter performer.

When Chevy returned to host the 11th episode of the third season, the air was already thick with tension. John Belushi, a close friend of Murray's, had been spreading veiled critiques of Chase to stir the pot. Things reached a boiling point one afternoon when Murray confronted Chase, accusing him of being universally disliked by the cast and crew. Their argument ignited with Murray mocking Chase’s personal life—“Go f**k your wife, she needs it”—to which Chase retorted with a biting insult about Murray’s appearance, likening it to lunar terrain.

Moments before airtime, the verbal rigmarole escalated into shoving and wild slaps in the hallway. Bill Murray cursed out Chevy as SNL writers and even Belushi intervened to pull them apart. Filmmaker John Landis later described them slapping and screaming, with Murray calling Chase a “medium talent,” evidence that their feud carried raw emotions and barbed humor.

In reflecting on the clash, Murray would later call it a “Hollywood fight,” a melodramatic eruption driven by shifting seasons, wounded pride, and collective resentment over Chase’s departure. He said it represented an “Oedipal thing”—a symbolic betrayal where he became the avenging voice for the ensemble.

Despite the heat of the moment, neither emerged with serious injuries. Chevy later shrugged, “Billy Murray and I came to fisticuffs, but we never really ended up hitting each other... we tried, but Belushi got in the middle and we both ended up hitting John”. The fight subsided under a flurry of intervention—John Belushi, Brian Doyle‑Murray, writers Michael O’Donoghue and Tom Davis—restoring pre-show calm and ensuring the broadcast proceeded as planned.

 
Time, oddly enough, became the balm. In 1979, at a party, Chevy delivered one of the wildest peace offerings in comedy lore: he drunkenly approached Murray, unzipped his fly, and mimed an oral gesture. Both burst into laughter, and just like that, the ice cracked. Their subsequent friendship was sealed on the set of Caddyshack (1980), where their camaraderie on-screen—smoking pot together—mirrored the thawing of their earlier hostilities.

Over the decades, their relationship transformed from fiery rivalry to mutual respect. Bill would later acknowledge that Weekend Update wouldn’t exist without Chevy, ranking him a worthy fourth among its anchors—humble praise tucked into a tribute that concluded with warm acknowledgment. Chevy, for his part, would lean on Murray’s subtle kindness even during tense moments, paying homage at SNL’s 50th anniversary with genuine picture-posting camaraderie.

Their feud, once a product of wounded egos and high-stakes comedy, ultimately became a testament to reconciliation. A loud hallway fight fades into the lore of showbiz; their later friendship, captured in film and shared history, reminds us that even the bitterest clashes can give way to something deeper and enduring...



Friday, January 2, 2026

RECENTLY VIEWED: I'M CHEVY CHASE AND YOU'RE NOT

I just watched the interesting documentary on comedican Chevy Chase. CNN’s new documentary focused on longtime Hollywood funny man Chevy Chase, has arrived with renewed attention on the comedian’s legacy and the long-running controversies that have followed him for decades.

Titled I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not, the 97-minute film premiered Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CNN. From his Saturday Night Live beginnings to a string of classic comedies, Chevy Chase has always had huge comedic range. He is also a complex and contradictory human being. Featuring revealing interviews with those closest to him, this documentary digs into the talent, flaws, and humanity that shaped an icon. 

In the days leading up to its release, the film drew attention for revisiting an SNL-era dispute involving Terry Sweeney and for prompting a public statement from former Community co-star Yvette Nicole Brown.

The film is directed by Marina Zenovich, an Emmy-winning documentarian known for high-profile celebrity portraits, including Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired and Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind. Zenovich’s approach typically blends first-person interviews with archival material and third-party accounts, and early descriptions suggest a similar structure here.

 I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not features interviews with Chase, members of his family, and a range of colleagues who worked with him over the course of his decades-long career. The documentary traces Chase’s rise as one of the most recognizable comedy stars of the 1970s and 1980s, from Saturday Night Live and National Lampoon to major film successes like Caddyshack and National Lampoon’s Vacation.

The film also revisits Chase’s later career and the reputation he developed behind the scenes, including long-standing claims from former collaborators who have described him as difficult or confrontational to work with. Several of those accounts have circulated publicly for years, but the documentary places them alongside Chase’s own recollections and responses.


One of the most discussed segments of the film involves Terry Sweeney, who joined Saturday Night Live during the 1985–86 season as the show’s first openly gay cast member. The documentary revisits Sweeney’s account of an AIDS-related joke Chase allegedly proposed during that period. In the film, Zenovich recounts the incident to Chase, quoting from Live From New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live. According to Sweeney’s recollection, Chase suggested a sketch that mocked the AIDS epidemic and singled out Sweeney.

Chase disputes Sweeney’s version of events in the documentary and claims he does not remember the incident as described. In the film, he also makes an incorrect remark about Sweeney’s status, prompting Sweeney to respond publicly after the documentary’s details became known. Sweeney later told The Hollywood Reporter that he found Chase’s comments offensive and inaccurate.

The documentary has also prompted public reaction from Yvette Nicole Brown, Chase’s former Community co-star. Brown did not participate in the film, but addressed it directly on social media in the days leading up to its premiere.

In a statement posted on Threads and later shared on Instagram, Brown criticized unnamed individuals for speaking “for” or “about” her without consulting her directly. She emphasized that people claiming to have insight into her experiences were doing so without her consent or involvement, and asked that her name not be used in connection with the documentary.

Brown added that she would not be offering further comment on the situation and described the renewed discussion as “beneath” her. Her remarks followed reports that the documentary revisits Chase’s firing from Community, which stemmed from a series of on-set conflicts, including an incident involving racial language.


Although none of Chase’s Community co-stars appear in the documentary, the show figures prominently in the narrative. Director Jay Chandrasekhar, who worked on the series, appears in the film and recounts the events surrounding Chase’s departure. According to Chandrasekhar’s account, tensions escalated during a production dispute involving a scripted storyline that Chase reportedly objected to. The documentary includes recollections of the aftermath, including Chase’s reaction and how production leadership handled the situation. Chase has previously acknowledged being unhappy with his character’s trajectory on Community, and the documentary presents his perspective alongside those of other participants.

The documentary was not a tribute to Chevy Chase, and I am not sure what I think of him after watching it. There are some touching moments with his wife and children, but then some of his comments are just horrible. I don't like him more but I don't hate him more either. I wish the documentary would have dug deeper. It skimmed the surface of why people who have worked with Chevy hate him so much. The documentary was good but compared to other ones of celebrities, this one left me wanting more...

MY RATING: 7 OUT OF 10



Monday, January 27, 2025

RECENTLY VIEWED: SATURDAY NIGHT

 

Wow, I just had the opportunity to watch the excellent film Saturday Night on Netflix. What a great movie! Saturday Night is a 2024 American biographical comedy-drama film directed by Jason Reitman, about the night of the 1975 premiere of NBC's Saturday Night, later known as Saturday Night Live. The film stars an ensemble cast portraying the various Saturday Night cast and crew, led by Gabriel LaBelle as the show's creator and producer, Lorne Michaels. Rachel Sennott, Cory Michael Smith, Ella Hunt, Dylan O'Brien, Emily Fairn, Matt Wood, Lamorne Morris, Kim Matula, Finn Wolfhard, Nicholas Braun, Cooper Hoffman, Andrew Barth Feldman, Kaia Gerber, Tommy Dewey, Willem Dafoe, Matthew Rhys, and J. K. Simmons also star.

On October 11, 1975, up-and-coming producer Lorne Michaels arrives at NBC Studios in New York City to prepare for the airing of the first episode of NBC's Saturday Night.

The evening is fraught with accidents and a dysfunctional cast and crew. Michaels' boss, Dick Ebersol, warns him that David Tebet has brought executives from across the country to come and view the broadcast. Despite Tebet giving encouraging words to Michaels, Ebersol makes it known that Tebet has no faith in the show and is ready to replay a taping of an episode of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson to fill in the time.


Garrett Morris, who has a background in operatic theater, ponders his place among a cast of comedic performers; John Belushi remains detached from everyone and constantly initiates fights; Jim Henson complains over how his Muppets segment is being treated by the writers; the writers themselves are at war with censor Joan Carbunkle and her demands; host George Carlin thinks the whole show is a sham; and everyone is trying to figure out what exactly the show is about. Meanwhile, Chevy Chase confronts Milton Berle when he begins to hit on his girlfriend, Jacqueline, gets told off and is warned that he will become nothing. Michaels soon receives a call from Johnny Carson himself, who gives a very unsupportive warning.


Despite Michaels warning him not to, Ebersol attempts to sell the idea of performing a sketch with a Polaroid camera for product placement purposes. Belushi becomes enraged and storms off set with the intention of quitting. As everyone looks for him, assistant Neil Levy is given a joint by Paul Shaffer and panics, locking himself in a closet. He is eventually coaxed out by the cast. To ease the stress, Michaels heads to a local bar, where he comes across comedy writer Alan Zweibel and hires him on the spot to become a writer on the show. He, along with Gilda Radner, later find Belushi ice skating and convince him to return to the show and sign his contract. Michaels is further motivated to continue with the show after having a brief chat with Henson.


Tebet arrives, demanding that the show be shut down unless Michaels shows him exactly what it entails. Andy Kaufman performs his Mighty Mouse skit, which makes everyone laugh. Michaels then tells Chase to take over Weekend Update, which he had planned to host himself. Chase does an impromptu version of Weekend Update using Zweibel's newly written material, which lands. The audience arrives and fills the venue as cast and crew finish all the sets and get into place. Tebet allows the live show to proceed on air. Michael O'Donoghue and Belushi perform the Wolverine sketch, which is well received by the audience. In the film’s final moments, Chase enters the scene and announces, "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!"

Nicholas Braun amazed me in a dual role as Jim Henson AND Andy Kaufman. He gained fame on the HBO series "Succession". The real scene stealer for me was J.K. Simmons as Milton Berle. He not only captured how Berle acted but he looked so much like him. The whole cast did well, and while they were not the famous first season cast, they all resembled and acted like the original stars enough that you forgot for a moment this was a bio film and not a documentary. I recommend this movie for anyone who was a fan of the early Saturday Night Live, and also just a fan of a good biographical film...

MY RATING: 9 OUT OF 10




Tuesday, December 10, 2024

HEALTHWATCH: CHEVY CHASE

Comedian Chevy Chase has had his share of health in recent years with a near fatal heart failure in 2021. In the below picture, it shows Chevy with his new grandchild. Unfortunately, he has a bad bruise on his eye. Sources close to Chevy say that it is from a fall in a hotel room. The Christmas vacation actor, who is 81 years old now, rarely makes movies these days and travels throughout the country doing Q&A showings and meet and greets...




Thursday, March 5, 2015

HEALTHWATCH: CHEVY CHASE

Chevy Chase’s health is being questioned by fans after the legendary comedian and movie star made an appearance at the SNL 40 event, which celebrated Saturday Night Live‘s 40th anniversary.

According to the Associated Press, fans first began to question Chevy Chase’s health during his appearance on the red carpet before the event. Chase, who was a part of the original Saturday Night Live cast, stopped to do a quick interview with Carson Daly when viewers immediately took notice of his very much altered voice.

Chevy’s voice was once one of the most recognizable in Hollywood, and yet on Sunday night at the live event in New York City to commemorate SNL‘s long history, he sounded nothing like his former self, but that wasn’t all. The report claims that Chase also rambled on during the red carpet interview and made little sense when he was asked about his time on the show:

“I left after the first year because I thought this isn’t going anywhere… I liked [hosting]. I liked it. But I missed it more for not being a part of the cast because I left after one year, I had reasons to leave. I’m sorry if I’m perspiring, but I just had to run through a gauntlet. But I liked it a lot, and I still like it. I love Lorne. We’re like brothers now.”

The Internet Business Times reports that Twitter began to blow up with tweets about Chevy Chase’s possible health problems after his red carpet appearance and then again when he was front and center during the show’s life anniversary special. Most fans seemed worried for Chase’s health and well being.

The 71-year-old Hollywood legend appeared nervous and confused when interviewed by SNL host Carson Daly. While answering questions, Chevy wiped sweat from his brow as he apologised for sweating.

Chase was previously regarded as one of Hollywood’s finest comic talents, commanding a fee of €8 million per film in the 1980s.

There have been former rumors that Chase’s health has been failing, but after Sunday’s SNL 40 special, it seems more and more fans may believe the stories...


Friday, August 12, 2011

TCM CELEBRATES THE HOLIDAYS

Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will celebrate Halloween and Christmas this year with two all-new specials produced by DreamWorks Television and award-winning filmmaker and author Laurent Bouzereau and presented as part of TCM’s ongoing A Night at the Movies documentary series.

In October, TCM will premiere A Night at the Movies: The Horrors of Stephen King, with the master storyteller himself discussing the classic horror films that influenced him the most. And in December, A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas! will take viewers on a magical journey through some of the greatest holiday films ever made.

TCM’s A Night at the Movies specials are written, produced and directed by Bouzereau, who has been directing documentaries on the films of Steven Spielberg and other directors since 1994. Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey (TNT’s Falling Skies) serve as executive producers. The series began in October 2009 with A Night at the Movies: The Suspenseful World of Thrillers, followed in December 2009 with A Night at the Movies: The Gigantic World of Epics.

In A Night at the Movies: The Horrors of Stephen King, which premieres on TCM Monday, Oct. 3, at 8 p.m. (ET), Stephen King discusses how he discovered terror at the movies. The best-selling author and filmmaker takes viewers on a journey through many aspects of the horror genre, including vampires, zombies, demons and ghosts. He also examines the fundamental reasons behind moviegoers’ incessant craving for being frightened. Along the way, he discusses the movies that have had a real impact on his writing, including Freaks (1932), Cat People (1942), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), Night of the Living Dead (1968), The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), Jaws (1975), Halloween (1978) and The Changeling (1980), to name a few.


A Night at the Movies: The Horrors of Stephen King will kick off an entire month of classic horror on TCM, with each Monday night’s lineup packed with memorable chillers. The offerings include Universal classics like Frankenstein (1931) and The Wolf Man (1941), Val Lewton thrillers like Cat People (1942) and I Walked with a Zombie (1943), Hammer classics like Horror of Dracula (1958) and cult favorites from William Castle and Roger Corman, to name a few.


Premiering Tuesday, Dec. 6, at 8 p.m. A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas! will be a tinsel-filled journey through the most iconic holiday films of all time, including perennial favorites It’s A Wonderful Life (1946) and Miracle on 34th Street (1947). The special will look at variations within the genre, such as holiday romances, family movies and even thrillers. A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas will feature behind-the-scenes stories and personal Hollywood Christmas memories from the likes of Chevy Chase, Margaret O’Brien, Chazz Palminteri, Deborah Raffin, Karolyn Grimes, Zack Ward, Brian Henson, Joe Dante, Petrine Day Mitchum, authors Julie Salamon and Alonso Duralde, A Christmas Carol expert Michael Patrick Hearn and many more.


A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas! will be accompanied by an entire month of great holiday films on TCM, including A Christmas Carol (1938), Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) and both the 1933 and 1949 versions of Little Women.

SOURCE