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Heidi Gardner, Michael Longfellow Leaving Saturday Night Live

Heidi Gardner, Michael Longfellow Leaving Saturday Night Live thumbnail

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Heidi Gardner will no longer be live from New York.

After eight seasons as a Saturday Night Live mainstay where she popularized Weekend Update characters like Angel (a.k.a. “Every Boxer’s Girlfriend From Every Movie About Boxing Ever”), the 42-year-old is leaving Lorne Michaels’ longtime sketch series, according to multiple outlets.

E! News has reached out to a rep for Heidi for comment and has not yet heard back.

Similarly, cast member Michael Longfellow announced he will depart the NBC show after three seasons on the air.

“Will not be returning for a 4th season at SNL. Wish I was but, so it goes,” he wrote on Instagram Aug. 28. “It was the best three years of my life so far. I feel nothing but gratitude for the experience and everyone there. Lorne, you gave me the greatest job in the world and changed my life. You even put my mom on TV. Thank you doesnt begin to cover it, but thank you.”  

He added, “I’ll miss it all, but I’ll miss the friends I made and seeing them everyday the most.”

The pair join a growing list of SNL exits, including Devon Walker, who announced his departure on social media earlier this week. 

“Me and baby broke up,” the 34-year-old captioned his Aug. 25 Instagram post, which included behind-the-scenes pics from his time on the show. “Me and the show did three years together, and sometimes it was really cool. Sometimes it was toxic as hell. But we did what we made the most of what it was, even amidst all of the dysfunction. We made a f–ked up lil family.”

While describing his experience, Devon explained, “Jobs in this industry feel like a bunch of little marriages. Some of em last for a long time if we’re lucky, but most of them are fleeting.”

Newcomer Emil Wakim also announced he was leaving the show after one season as a featured player. 

Holland Rainwater/NBC

“I won’t be returning to snl next year,” the 36-year-old wrote on Instagram Aug. 27. “It was a gut punch of a call to get but i’m so grateful for my time there.”

“Every time i scanned into the building i would think how insane it is to get to work there,” he continued. “it was the most terrifying, thrilling, and rewarding experience of my life and i will miss it dearly and all the brilliant people that work there that made it feel like a home.”

With a note of gratitude, Emil concluded, “thank u to lorne for taking a chance on me and changing my life.”

Ahead of SNL’s season 51 premiere in October, keep reading to see more stars who got their start on the sketch series…

(E! and SNL are both part of the NBCUniversal family.)

Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

Robert Downey Jr.

Role: Cast member
Time on SNL: 1985-1986

Long before Robert Downey Jr. was in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, he was part of the Saturday Night Live universe.

The Iron Man star was on the show for only season 11, with him joining SNL the same year creator Lorne Michaels returned to the program after being away for five years. The Peacock documentary SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night called this period “The Weird Year” and described it as a tough time in which Lorne was trying to save the show from cancellation.

As Robert admitted on a 2016 episode of The Howard Stern Show, “It wasn’t like we were blowing everyone’s minds.”

However, the Oscar winner noted he looks back at that stretch “fondly” and that it provided “great training.” In fact, Robert, who returned to host SNL in 1996, told Howard Stern, “It is probably the most exciting week you can have on Earth.”

Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Rob Riggle

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: 2004 to 2005

If you ever need manifesting advice, maybe ask Rob Riggle. The Let’s Be Cops actor previously revealed how he went from training to become a pilot to setting his intentions to be on SNL.

“I hadn’t quit anything in my life,” he recalled on a 2024 episode of the Diggin’ Deep Podcast. “I said, ‘If I quit, it’s gotta matter. It’s gotta count. So what am I going to do?’ The first thing I wrote was ‘I’m going to get on Saturday Night Live’ in that book. Ten years later, two wars, a marriage, a child, in September of 2004—almost to the day—I got on Saturday Night Live. So you write your things down, you commit to them and you do them.”

In fact, it was how Rob got his start in show business.

“My first job ever was Saturday Night Live,” he added on a 2023 interview with The A.V. Club, “and I think that was a dream come true.”

Raymond Bonar/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

Ben Stiller

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: Less than a season in 1989

Ben Stiller had a short run on Saturday Night Live—like really short.

In fact, according to The New York Times, the Zoolander star was on the sketch comedy series for only four episodes. And he still remembers Lorne’s reaction when he quit.

“He was like, ‘OK. Ben’s going to do what Ben’s going to do,'” he said in his best Lorne voice during a January 2025 episode of The New York TimesThe Interview podcast. “It wasn’t great, but I knew that I couldn’t do well there because I wasn’t great at live performing.”

Ben added he “got too nervous” on the show, “didn’t enjoy it” and wanted to make short films instead. Plus, he was interested in doing 1990’s The Ben Stiller Show on MTV.

“It had been my dream to be on Saturday Night Live,” the Severance director continued while reflecting on his decision to leave, “but looking back on it, I don’t remember exactly how I had the gumption, but for whatever reason, I followed that instinct.”

Still, Ben  has occasionally  returned—hosting in 1998 and 2011 as well as making surprise cameos over the years.

Raymond Bonar/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

Bob Odenkirk

Role: Writer
Time on SNL: 1987 – 1995

You better call your friends and tell them Bob Odenkirk was once a writer on Saturday Night Live. In fact, the Better Call Saul star wrote the famous sketch in which the late Chris Farley played Matt Foley—a motivational speaker who lived in a van down by the river.

“I wrote that alone in my apartment in Chicago when we were doing Second City together,” Bob recalled on a 2021 episode of The Howard Stern Show. “It’s one of the few sketches—and I’ve written thousands of sketches—but not many of them are done the way you wrote them when you sat down and wrote them. And that’s one of them. That motivational speaker came out just like that, perfect. And of course, Chris elevates it to a whole other place.”

The actor even won an Emmy for his writing on SNL. However, he’s expressed regret over how he behaved at the time.

“I wish I wasn’t such a stuck-up young man,” Bob admitted on a 2021 episode of PeopleTV’s Couch Surfing. “I wish I was a sweeter fellow because I had a great opportunity there. I made the most of it. I learned a lot about comedy writing and I made some great friends for life at that show, but I still wish I’d just handled it better. But don’t you always wish that about your young self?”

Saturday Night Live/YouTube

Laurie Metcalf

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: Two cameos, one in 1981 and one in 1988

If you don’t remember seeing Laurie Metcalf on Saturday Night Live, it’s probably because she had only two brief appearances. As she once recalled on Late Night with SNL alum Seth Meyers, the first was in 1981 when she did a “man on the street” bit, and the second was in 1988 when she starred in “Laurie Has a Story” with Catherine O’Hara.

“You know, it seems like a dream because it was so long ago and it was a whirlwind five days I spent in New York,” the Lady Bird actress also told Vulture in 2019. “I think it was my first trip to New York ever. I didn’t know anybody and I was put up in a hotel. They put me in a business suit and sent me out on the street with a little mini–camera crew. I was so out of my element; I had no idea what I was doing. But I know that I did it because there is proof, there is footage. When I see that, I realize I was very naïve and brave about it in a way. Like, Okay, you want me to do this? Okay, let’s go.

Will Heath/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Larry David

Role: Writer
Time on SNL: 1984-1985

The story of how Larry David quit his job as a Saturday Night Live writer will leave audiences laughing.

“My sketches would do very well at the readthrough, and then they would invariably get cut week after week after week,” the Curb Your Enthusiasm star explained on a 2015 episode of The Howard Stern Show. “And then one night, before the show, another sketch of mine was cut at 11:25—five minutes before the show was to start. I had enough.”

So, Larry continued, he walked over to executive producer Dick Ebersol and said, “This f–king show stinks. It stinks! It’s s–t! I’m done! I’m gone! F–k this! I’m out!”

As he walked home in the cold, he added, he realized what he had done and how much money he would lose. So, Larry returned the next week as if nothing had happened.

“There’s a writers’ meeting every Monday morning, and I walk into the meeting,” he continued. “The writers had heard the outburst, and I sat down. And then he would go around and ask everybody what they were working on for the week. And I was about the fifth one on the couch. And then he got to me and I was like, ‘Well, I’m thinking of doing this circus sketch.'”

Larry got to keep his job, but stayed for only about a year. But it was here the Seinfeld creator met his sitcom’s star Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Over the years, Larry has hosted SNL twice and made many guest appearances, including playing Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Role: Cast member
Time on SNL: 1982-1985

While many know Julia Louis-Dreyfus for her roles on Seinfeld and Veep, not everyone may remember that she was a cast member on SNL for three years. In fact, she was hired to join the show while she was still in college.

Still, the actress—whose husband Brad Hall was also on SNL—admits she didn’t love her experience on Saturday Night Live.

“I didn’t have tons of fun,” she told Andy Cohen on a 2020 episode of Radio Andy. “No, but I did learn a ton. I was really super young. I was 21. I went into it very naively. So I learned a lot really quickly.”

In fact, Julia likened SNL to “grad school” for comedy and said it helped influence which opportunities she took on in the future.

“I set my priorities straight for starters,” she added. “I came out of that thinking, ‘This wasn’t as fun as I’ve had doing improv shows and Second City and all that kind of stuff back in Chicago. And I need to find that. And if I can’t find that, if it doesn’t exist, I’m not gonna do this.'”

Still, Julia has returned to SNL many times—making history in 2006 as the first female former cast member to host and taking on the role two more times.

M. Lewis Jr./NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Damon Wayans

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: Less than a season in 1986.

Damon Wayans‘ time on Saturday Night Live was also brief. In fact, he once revealed he got fired after seven shows.

Eddie Murphy had just left,” the My Wife and Kids star explained on a 2020 episode of The Breakfast Club. “So Lorne Michaels was trying, he thought, [to] protect me from being compared to Eddie Murphy. I was like, ‘Look, give me the ball or let me go. Fire me from the team.’ So, he wouldn’t give me the ball, so I just switched characters during a live taping. I wanted to get fired.”

Damon said he changed his character to be a “super, super flamboyant gay cop” in a sketch that was a spoof on Miami Vice called Mr. Monopoly.

“I did it with the wrong spirit,” he continued, “and he was right to let me go. He was right to fire me. He fired me on the spot.”

However, it seems that everything worked out in the end.

“He actually brought me back to host once, and that’s cool,” the actor added. “For me, I had to do that to do In Living Color. All the stuff I was trying to do on Saturday Night Live was actually stuff that I was able to do In Living Color.”

Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Jenny Slate

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: 2009 – 2010

Jenny Slate didn’t have the best time on Saturday Night Live.

“I got on SNL, and then that experience was very intense—like just really disappointing,” the actress said on Off Camera with Sam Jones in 2017. “Although it was also good. Everyone was really nice to me, but I was incredibly disappointed in myself. It was one of my childhood dreams. When I got there, I was not suited to the environment, I didn’t like it, I was really uncomfortable, and I never expected the environment to be so risk-averse. Like I thought, Belushi, Gilda Radner, these people are going to be crazy. No, this is a television show.”

Ultimately, Jenny was on the show for one season.

“After I got fired, I was so humiliated in every way,” she continued, “humiliated by how I behaved—that I wasn’t a strong person, I wasn’t joyful—and I thought that everybody cared. And nobody f–ing cares at all.”

The I Want You Back star said she “couldn’t get over it” and developed a case of stage fright—leading her to temporarily stop doing stand-up. However, she decided to not give up on her passion and told Sam Jones she got hypnotized to cure her stage fright.

“I do not need to let that experience take this thing away from me,” she added, “the one thing that I do on my own.”

Al Levine/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Sarah Silverman

Role: Featured performer
Time on SNL: 1993-1994

While Sarah Silverman was there for only one season, she’ll never forget her year on Saturday Night Live.

“I had a great time,” the comedian recalled on a January 2025 episode of The Tonight Show starring fellow SNL alum Jimmy Fallon. “I got along with everybody and I was scrappy. I just remember being shocked how grown-ups behaved. ‘Cause I was a kid. I was just like, ‘I can’t believe grown-ups are acting this way.’ People would have big fights. Back then, there were like fist fights when I was there. But it was awesome.”

And she still remembers an activity she used to do in her office.

“I had figured out a craft where you can take tampons, like a box of tampons, dip them in water and then whip them against a wall and they just splat and stay,” Sarah added. “They’ll stay forever.”

Or at least a decade. 

“I came back to SNL 10 or 15 years later,” she continued, “and I saw [producer] Mike Shoemaker and he goes, ‘Guess what’s still in your office?’ It was there!”

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