The National Lampoon Show
The National Lampoon Show, a spinoff of the humor magazine National Lampoon, was a 1974–1976 stage show that helped launch the performing careers of John Belushi, Brian Doyle-Murray, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, and Harold Ramis. The company's stage successor to National Lampoon's Lemmings, some skits from the show made their way into the 1978 film National Lampoon's Animal House.
The show was produced by Ivan Reitman. It was mostly written improvisationally by its original cast.
The National Lampoon Show toured colleges in the U.S. in 1974, including Rider University, Slippery Rock University, and the University of Texas at Arlington, with those productions directed by cast member Belushi. It opened Off-Broadway in New York City at the New Palladium Club on February 17, 1975, directed by Martin Charnin. The original Off-Broadway cast starred Belushi, Doyle-Murray, Bill Murray, Radner, and Ramis. It ran for 180 performances, closing in July 1975. After closing in New York, it went on a second, nine-month-long, national tour.
Shortly after the show closed in New York, Belushi and Radner joined the original cast of Saturday Night Live, with the Murray brothers soon joining the SNL cast as well. Ramis, meanwhile, used some of the sketches from the show in the script of National Lampoon's first film production, Animal House, released in 1978.
Description
The National Lampoon Show was a satirical revue, mixing social and political satire. It was fueled by black comedy, frequently insulting and abusing the audience, with the cast openly expressing hatred for the crowd. The show was a mix of sadistic and masochistic elements, characterized by aggressive, juvenile, and controversial humor.One skit was a parody of a television fundraiser in which Patty Hearst, dressed in SLA garb, asked viewers for money to pay for weaponry. Another skit involved Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis being a panelist on a celebrity game show who is so startled by the sound of a starting pistol that she ducks under her seat. Songs included one about white-collar criminals living comfortably in prison and another being a manic celebration of New York City's mundane aspects.
Cast
The cast included:- John Belushi
- Joe Flaherty
- Brian Doyle-Murray
- Bill Murray
- Gilda Radner
- Harold Ramis
- Richard Belzer
- Barry Diamond
- Larry Dilg
- Ellen Foley
- Christopher Guest
- Carol Horne
- Jim Hosbein
- Paul Jacobs
- Meat Loaf
- Mimi Kennedy
Production
Writers
The writers included:- John Belushi
- Joe Flaherty
- Brian Doyle-Murray
- Bill Murray
- Gilda Radner
- Harold Ramis
- Janis Hirsch
Producers
- Ivan Reitman
- "Sean Kelly Production supervised by Dale Anglund"
Directors
- John Belushi
- Martin Charnin
Music
- Paul Jacobs
- Jim Steinman
Reception