Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

‘SCTV’ reunion delights audience with hilarious quips, untold memories

Fans of SCTV were served a heaping dish of nostalgia on Sunday as cast members of the Canadian sketch comedy series gathered to share memories for an upcoming Netflix special.

Story continues below advertisement

Seemingly every popular character from the influential show – including Johnny La Rue, Alex Trebel and Edith Prickley – had a moment to shine during the three-hour live taping at Toronto’s Elgin Theatre. The conversation will be part of a larger production directed by Martin Scorsese for the streaming platform.

READ MORE: Martin Scorsese to direct ‘SCTV’ comedy special on Netflix

SCTV cast members Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Martin Short and Catherine O’Hara sat before a backdrop of photographs from the series as they recalled how the scrappy idea for a comedy show began on Global TV with a tight budget of $7,000 an episode.

Martin Scorsese (centre) will reunite comedy legends and former ‘SCTV’ co-stars (from right) Andrea Martin, Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Dave Thomas, Martin Short and Joe Flaherty. Cara Howe for Netflix

The show was recorded at the Global Edmonton studios, where photos of the cast still line the hallways, as well as in Toronto.

Story continues below advertisement

Other revealing moments included Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis reflecting on how seminal hosers Bob and Doug McKenzie were originally created as a way to inject more Canadian content into the series.

Rick Moranis (left) and Dave Thomas, are shown in this undated handout photo as the characters Bob and Doug McKenzie in this scene from the 80\’s SCTV comedy series. THE CANADIAN PRESS

It wasn’t always certain that Moranis — who has largely stepped away from his acting career since the late 1990s to raise his children after his wife died — would show up at the SCTV reunion.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

But he told the audience that he jumped at the chance to get together with old friends.

Story continues below advertisement

READ MORE: Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas are back for a Bob and Doug McKenzie reunion

SCTV ran from 1976 to 1984 and helped launch the careers of many famed international comic legends, including the late John Candy and Harold Ramis, who were both honoured during the taping.

Candy died in 1994 at the age of 43, after suffering a heart attack during filming of Wagons East! in Mexico. Ramis died in 2014 at the age of 69, of complications from autoimmune inflammatory vasculitis.

In an undated file photo, Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, center, and Harold Ramis, right, appear in a scene from the 1984 movie “Ghostbusters”. AP Photo, File

SCTV debuted in 1976 on Global, moved to CBC in 1980 and then to Superchannel in 1983.

Story continues below advertisement

Late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel, who served as moderator for the event, was quick to share how much of an impact SCTV had on his own comedic sensibilities as a teenager growing up in Las Vegas. The series aired on U.S. network NBC during its later seasons.

WATCH: John Candy’s widow shares video of ‘SCTV’ stars playing softball

“This show is the reason we’re not building a wall with the northern border,” he quipped at one point.

Kimmel told the audience he beat out all the other major late-night TV hosts for the moderator gig, coming in ahead of Conan O’Brien in a “to the wire” decision.

READ MORE: Tony Rosato, Canadian ‘Saturday Night Live’ and ‘SCTV’ alum, dead at 62

Costume designer Juul Haalmeyer said he was taking his own trip down memory lane as he watched the reunion from the audience. He dressed the SCTV cast as their distinctive characters throughout the show’s run.

Story continues below advertisement

“Some of these clips I haven’t ever seen,” he said during a break in the taping.

“It’s been a thrill.”

Haalmeyer occasionally starred in skits, including Perry Como: Still Alive, where he played the leader of the Juul Haalmeyer Dancers, despite his lack of professional dance experience.

“Every time they needed a bad singer, bad dancer or bad actor, they’d say, ‘Get that (guy) from over there,'” he said.

“It worked for the purposes of the show.”

READ MORE: John Candy’s daughter shares stories about family road trips

Other SCTV crew members sat in the audience, including make-up artist Beverly Schechtman and show producer Andrew Alexander.

Extended family of the stars were also in attendance, such as Eugene Levy’s son Dan and John Candy’s wife Rosemary Hobor and their two children, Jennifer and Christopher Candy.

Story continues below advertisement

Longtime viewer Kim Piche scored a ticket shortly before the taping from a friend, and said this offered a rare opportunity to revisit a program she felt rivalled Saturday Night Live in quality.

“They played it safe on ‘Saturday Night Live,'” Piche said. “I think that SCTV went above and beyond.”

Mary Dempster came to the taping to reminisce about growing up with SCTV, which she watched with her father as a child.

“Forget the cartoons,” she said. “Just go straight to the comedy.”

READ MORE: Martin Short opens up about ‘SCTV’ and hosting Canadian Screen Awards

Netflix hasn’t announced a release date for the SCTV special, but said it will air on Netflix in all territories, with the exception of Canada, where it will premiere exclusively on CTV.

Following CTV’s airing, the special will be available exclusively on Netflix in Canada and worldwide.

Advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article