Thứ Ba, Tháng 6 17, 2025

Sheryl Lee Ralph’s SNL misfire: “There was none!”

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She’s a Tony-nominated Broadway star, an Emmy-winning television actress, and a beloved figure on Abbott Elementary. But Sheryl Lee Ralph, like many of Hollywood’s most seasoned talents, still remembers one professional low point with vivid detail: her disastrous audition for Saturday Night Live. In a recent roundtable with Entertainment Weekly, Ralph shared the story with candor and humor — and joined a long list of iconic performers who’ve stumbled in Studio 8H.

When the dream goes silent

Sheryl Lee Ralph for EW's Emmys Roundtable 2025

In the vibrant swirl of the 1980s entertainment world, Sheryl Lee Ralph was riding high. Fresh off her Tony-nominated performance in Dreamgirls, she was poised to showcase her comedy chops on one of the biggest stages in television: Saturday Night Live. It was a moment filled with promise — and ultimately, profound embarrassment.

“This was in the ’80s. This is Saturday Night Live,” Ralph told fellow actors Uzo Aduba, Liza Colón-Zayas, David Alan Grier, Nathan Lane, and Michael Urie during EW’s Awardist Comedy Actors Roundtable. The setup alone was enough to spark laughter from the group. Ralph, recalling the moment with both theatrical flair and self-deprecating honesty, explained how much the audition meant to her — not just professionally, but culturally.

“They are going to add gender and color — they’re gonna add a Black girl!” she said, emphasizing how significant that opportunity felt at the time. “And I am so excited to get this audition. I go in there, and I’m ready to show this side of my talent— and there was none. There was none!”

The silence that still echoes

What makes Ralph’s story all the more painful — and relatable — is how clearly she remembers every humiliating second. “I can see me. I can see what I had on, I can see the camera in front of me. Nothing. Nothing at all,” she said, miming the blank stare of a performer caught in a complete freeze.

The stage set of Saturday Night Live with lighting and musical equipment displayed

In a final flourish of theatrical poise, she recalled turning to SNL creator Lorne Michaels at the end of the debacle and simply saying, “Wow. Thank you very much.” She added, with perfect comedic timing: “And that was that. There’s nothing like a bad audition.”

The table of actors — no strangers to their own career curveballs — erupted in laughter, a mix of sympathy and shared understanding. After all, the annals of SNL are packed with future legends who didn’t make the cut.

Hollywood’s hall of failed SNL auditions

Ralph joins a growing list of prominent performers whose SNL dreams never quite materialized — and who, like her, later found major success on other stages and screens. John Goodman, now synonymous with the phrase “SNL host,” once tried out for the cast in the 1980s and has never forgotten the sting of failure.

“It’s the worst thing I’ve ever done in front of people in my life,” Goodman admitted to Jimmy Fallon in 2022. “I wrote something about 15 minutes before I went over there and… oh, God, it was awful.” Goodman, of course, went on to host SNL a staggering 13 times. But like Ralph, he vividly recalls the sheer awkwardness of walking into a room expecting greatness and delivering something else entirely.

James Marsden, the affable star of Jury Duty, also took an unconventional approach to his SNL tryout — and immediately regretted it. Given the vague prompt to “do whatever silly thing you want to do,” Marsden and a friend chose to cluck like chickens while circling each other.“It was a bad choice,” he later conceded with a laugh.

Lessons from the misfires

What emerges from these stories — Ralph’s included — isn’t just a reminder that even stars fail. It’s a portrait of perseverance. Of finding your voice in the silence. Of becoming an icon in one lane, even after swerving off-course in another.

For Ralph, SNL was not the stage where she would shine. That stage would come later: in Moesha, in Broadway revivals, in the role of Barbara Howard on Abbott Elementary, and in her 2022 Emmy win that included a soul-shaking rendition of Dianne Reeves’ “Endangered Species.” The comedy chops may not have landed in Studio 8H, but Ralph’s talent has never been in question. “There’s nothing like a bad audition,” she said, now laughing at the memory. But there’s also nothing like turning that failure into fuel — and proving, time and again, that talent always finds its stage.

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