Biography
Fired in bitter haste from
Saturday Night Live and following up with two career-crippling film credits, Norm Macdonald's career has been spiraling into disaster since 1997 -- "or so the Germans would have us believe." Though he began his career as a stand-up comedian in Ottawa, most people's familiarity with MacDonald derives from his three-year stint as Weekend Update anchor on the ever-enduring
Saturday Night Live. Realizing that a change in location was the key to success, MacDonald packed his bags and took his routine to L.A, where he continued to refine his specific brand of acerbic wit through his stand-up act. In addition, MacDonald became a writer for the popular sitcom
Roseanne, as well as
The Dennis Miller Show.
It was a long road to following in the footsteps of
Chevy Chase and Dennis Miller in dragging the current headlines through the mud (and a not so happy ending to cap it off). Beginning his
SNL career as a bit player in the 1993, the torch was passed from
Kevin Nealon to Norm MacDonald in the beginning of the show's 1994 season. After an exhausting barrage of O.J. Simpson and
Frank Stallone jokes, however, NBC president Don Ohlmeyer pulled the plug on MacDonald's Weekend Update career, citing that the anchor was simply "not funny."
After taking small roles in
Adam Sandler comedies and bit parts on
The Drew Carey Show, MacDonald continued the cursed
SNL tradition of tackling feature films. MacDonald's awkward attempts at feature-film stardom in
Dirty Work and
Screwed did little to please mainstream audiences (
Screwed failed even to recuperate its 10-million-dollar production costs) but pleased his loyal fans nonetheless. In early 1999, Norm MacDonald became the star of his very own television sitcom, The Norm Show. Cast as a scheming ex-hockey star-turned-social worker who never fails to get himself into constant mischief, The Norm Show -- later shortened to just
Norm) -- co-starred
Laurie Metcalf, Ian Gomez, and former
Dirty Work co-star Artie Lang. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide