Saturday Night's Ella Hunt on Transforming Into Comedy Legend Gilda Radner


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Ella Hunt was at JFK Airport last December, heading home to England, when she got the call that she landed the role of comedy legend Gilda Radner in Jason Reitman’s upcoming film Saturday Night. She immediately burst into tears in a Hudson News bookstore. It was the perfect gift to kick off the holidays. After playing “miserable women” (her words, not ours) for the majority of her career, Hunt was ready to finally break free and show audiences a different side of herself. It’s the side her family knows best. When I got home [and told my family the news], my brothers were like, ‘Finally, you get to be goofy!'” Hunt tells us from her Harlem apartment. The actress would consider herself an emo on most days, but so much of Radner’s warmth and silliness did feel very familiar to her, and she’s grateful that Reitman noticed it in her.

Saturday Night is a biographical comedy about the chaotic lead-up to the premiere of Saturday Night Live on October 11, 1975. It’s 30 minutes before showtime, and tensions are high as producer Lorne Michaels and a troupe of writers and young comedians—called the Not Ready for Prime Time Players—prepare for their very first show. Among the original cast members portrayed in the film is Radner, who became known for her big personality and wacky characters, like personal advice expert Roseanne Roseannadanna.

If it were not for Hunt’s agent daring her to audition for the role of Radner, she wouldn’t have even considered going out for the project. “I remember thinking, ‘I’m not surprised I’m not getting an audition for this. Because why would I? I’m not a comedian. This is not in my world,'” she says. Comedy had always felt a little daunting to Hunt. She had been in comedies before but was always the straight man. With her team’s encouragement, she started researching Radner and fell in love with her pretty immediately. “I was so surprised by how quickly I felt so kindred with her,” Hunt says. She put herself on tape dressed in an orange knit T-shirt made by her mom with a picture of a cat on it (very Radner), and an hour after submitting her audition, Hunt got a call to meet with Reitman and executive producer JoAnn Perritano.

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While 26-year-old Hunt is familiar with recent generations of SNL—she credits Tina Fey, Maya Rudolph, and Kristen Wiig as big influences—she admits she knew nothing of Radner and the origins of SNL prior to this project. Reitman’s film changed that. In going down a rabbit hole of the comedian’s career, Hunt discovered a feast of iconic character sketches (“I love Gilda doing Patti Smith. I’m also a sucker for [her character] Judy Miller.”) and was especially struck by what Radner was doing for women in comedy at that time. “I don’t think they were aware of the strides they were making for women’s lib, but every single week, [Radner, Jane Curtin, and Laraine Newman] were upping the stakes of what a woman could be in that environment, and this is fucking awesome,” Hunt says.