NBC’s celebration of “Saturday Night Live’s” 50-year history will continues this week with a new 3-hour documentary titled “Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of SNL Music.”
The celebration of SNL’s 50th anniversary continues with a look at their iconic music performances in a feature doc directed by Questlove.
The highly entertaining Ladies and Gentlemen gets into the best and most controversial musical moments from 50 years of SNL history. But what about the dregs?
Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music premieres Monday, January 27 on NBC, streaming next-day on Peacock.
Live is going big in celebration of its 50th anniversary, and part of that effort was announced last month, when it was revealed Questlove and Oz Rodriguez co-directed a new documentary, Ladies &
For 50 years, music has been a big part of the history of “Saturday Night Live.” A new documentary by Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson richly brings some of that history to light, with artists who do the rite of passage by performing on the show,
I think live music on TV is important.” He’s not wrong! And Ladies & Gentlemen…50 Years of SNL Music proves it.
Questlove's documentary, Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music, highlights the show's most iconic musical performances and comedy sketches — and addresses the show's "unhummable" theme song.
The sketch comedy show is celebrating 50 seasons with two documentaries and an upcoming prime-time special that reflect on its standing as an American institution.
This week in Philly music is packed with cool shows in small- to medium-sized spaces around town that underscore the richness of the city’s music scene, even on weeks that are short on big names. These shows include a whistling woman at World Cafe Live,
Martha Stewart could’ve hosted Saturday Night Live after she spent time behind bars. The entrepreneur and television host said that she was invited to host SNL in 2005 after spending give months in prison for lying about a stock trade but her parole officer stopped her from doing the show.