Teyana Taylor showcases her talents on ‘SNL,’ days after her Oscar nod

Teyana Taylor showcases her talents on ‘SNL,’ days after her Oscar nod


Although the goal of โ€œSaturday Night Liveโ€ week after week is comedy (โ€œAllegedly!โ€ yells a heckler from the back row), not all guests hosts show up just to prove they can be hilarious.

Instead, some do the show to not only promote their latest project, but to introduce additional parts of themselves to what may be the biggest audience theyโ€™ve had to date.

That felt like the case with Teyana Taylor, who was nominated this week for a lead actress Oscar for โ€œOne Battle After Anotherโ€ after walking away with a Golden Globe earlier this month. In her first time hosting โ€œSNL,โ€ the goal seemed less to make her the funniest host than to show people who only know her from the Paul Thomas Anderson film that sheโ€™s incredibly talented in more ways than just acting.

After a charming monologue that included her young children, Taylor sang with cast member Kenan Thompson in an airport terminal sketch featuring Shrimp โ€˜nโ€™ Grits, two gate agents who make their flight delay announcements as R&B songs. Sure, cast member James Austin Johnson may have come in and stolen the sketch as a pilot whoโ€™s been drinking, but it was the first indication that Taylor could hold her own vocally with the longest-running cast member in โ€œSNLโ€ history, Thompson.

Later in the show, she dazzled in a dance performance as a surprisingly limber 87-year-old grandpa whoโ€™s brought to life by Earth, Wind & Fire songs at his grandsonโ€™s wedding. She co-hosted a news panel show in which the two Black hosts (Taylor and Thompson) wordlessly hum judgment on opinions spouted by their white panelists (Mikey Day and Chloe Fineman) and played her โ€œOne Battleโ€ character Perfidia Beverly Hills in a pitch-perfect Mattel toy commercial parody.

Taylor played smaller supporting parts such as sideline reporter Lisa Salters in an NFL report that turns into an extended promo for a lesbian culinary show called โ€œQuefs.โ€ โ€œQueer Chefs?โ€ Sportscasters Troy Aikman (Andrew Dismukes) and Joe Buck (Johnson) were afraid to guess. She also portrayed a confused contestant who is there to make friends on a โ€œSurvivorโ€/โ€Traitorsโ€-style reality competition show and a student in a confidence class taught by a wreck of a teacher (a fantastic Ashley Padilla).

Was Taylor the funniest host โ€œSNLโ€ has had this season? Not by a long shot. But she proved to be one of the most multi-talented.

Musical guests Geese performed โ€œAu Pays du Cocaineโ€ and โ€œTrinidad.โ€ Please Donโ€™t Destroyโ€™s Martin Herlihy wrote and directed a short film that closed the episode about techniques to get someone to break up with you.

In what may have been a missed opportunity, โ€œSNLโ€ wasnโ€™t able to pivot on short notice to address the dayโ€™s biggest national news in its cold open: the killing of an ICU nurse by federal agents in Minneapolis. The incident was alluded to on โ€œWeekend Update,โ€ and egregiously missing from a news panel sketch that specifically talked about incidents in Minneapolis. Instead, perhaps to the showโ€™s detriment, it was another week of Johnsonโ€™s President Trump impression, this time as host of the Trumps, an award show for the president and members of his administration. There were jokes at the expense of J.D. Vance (Jeremy Culhane) and Kristi Noem (Padilla); for the former it was a dig on his sexuality while Noem was honored for sucking up to Trump before the president stole her award, Kanye West-style. Mike Myers returned as twitchy, unfunny Elon Musk, there to introduce a memorial segment and accompanying song eulogizing the things the Trump administration has taken down including the East Wing, D.E.I., civil rights and Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Taylorโ€™s monologue focused on the other interests and pursuits she has apart from acting in Oscar-nominated films, like directing and going to culinary school. She showed a clip of herself dancing in MTVโ€™s โ€œMy Super Sweet 16,โ€ a real thing that happened in her life, and mentioned winning โ€œThe Masked Singerโ€ (also true). But the monologue ended with Taylor discussing being a mother and how her big moment at the Golden Globes was undercut by her kids playing on their phones during her speech. Cut to her kids in the โ€œSNLโ€ audience, looking at their phones. Any parent could relate.

Best sketch of the night: This could be better than Mattelโ€™s โ€˜Boogie Nightsโ€™ playsets

You may think that the only movie kids care about at the Academy Awards this year is โ€œKPop Demon Hunters,โ€ but according to this ad from Mattel, itโ€™s toys based on โ€œOne Battle After Anotherโ€ that they really want. The movieโ€™s main characters get action figures with accessories like a battle robe for Leonardo DiCaprioโ€™s character Bob and a pregnant belly add-on for Taylorโ€™s. The parents in the ad (Padilla and Mikey Day) donโ€™t love their kids acting out the lives of toys with names like Junglepussy or reenacting a motel sex scene between Taylor and Sean Pennโ€™s characters. Great conclusion to the piece: the promise of toys based on other Anderson films including โ€œThere Will Be Blood.โ€ โ€œIโ€™ve abandoned my boy!โ€ a kid cries, a clever shoutout to an all-but-forgotten Bill Hader sketch.

Also good: Grandpa Jackson probably dances so well because he has no bones

Wedding sketches are a staple on โ€œSNL,โ€ but there probably has never been a guest host who danced the hell out of one the way Taylor did as Grandpa Jackson, who takes to the dance floor to celebrate the bride and groom (Padilla and Kam Patterson). Even with the sketch threatening to go off the rails as Taylorโ€™s bald cap started peeling off, she never missed a step and her dance moves were astonishing. Johnson appeared as a sort-of doctor to help the grandfather after he finally collapses to put a nice capper on the basic, but very effective sketch.

โ€˜Weekend Updateโ€™ winner: Thatโ€™s a wrap for โ€˜capโ€™

New featured cast member Culhane debuted on โ€œUpdateโ€ as Mr. On Blast, a roasting commentator with very light roasts and a lot of body language. But it was Marcello Hernรกndez who won the week with helpful translations of Gen Z expressions including โ€œchopped,โ€ โ€œfahhhโ€ and โ€œglo-up.โ€ Hernรกndez teased โ€œUpdateโ€ co-host Colin Jost for being out of the loop, declaring terms such as โ€œcapโ€ dead the moment Jost used them (with a gravestone for emphasis). As Hernรกndez explained, Gen Z slang is just Black slang adopted by young people before it gets used by white people. โ€œOnce Elon Musk says it, itโ€™s dead,โ€ he declared.



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