Al Franken is an American satirist,
comedian, bestselling author, and radio host with a
predominantly liberal point of view. Franken was half
of the comedy duo "Franken & Davis" which
wrote for and performed for NBC’s Saturday Night
Live. Along with The Daily Show host Jon Stewart, he
is considered to be one of the most popular liberal
commentators.
Franken was born in New York City and grew up in
St. Louis Park, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis.
He graduated from The Blake School in 1969, and Harvard
University in 1973. He and his wife, Franni Franken
have a son, Joe, and daughter, Thomasin. They currently
reside in New York City but are in the process of moving
to Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Franken's writing and performing career began at
Dudley Riggs' Brave New Workshop in Minneapolis where
he worked with Tom Davis (the comedian, not the politician).
He and Davis were two of the original writers on
Saturday Night Live. Franken was awarded three Emmy
Awards and seven Emmy nominations for his television
writing and production. He created characters such
as self-help guru Stuart Smalley and schticks such
as proclaiming the 1980s to be the "Al Franken
Decade"1. Franken was associated with SNL for
more than 15 years and in 2002 interviewed former Vice
President Al Gore while in character as Smalley. Al
Franken and Tom Davis wrote the script to the 1986
comedy film One More Saturday Night and they both starred
in the film as rock singers in a band called Bad Mouth.
Franken's most notorious SNL sketch may have been "A
Limo for the Lamo," a commentary delivered by
Franken near the end of the 1979–80 season. Franken
mocked the controversial president of NBC, Fred Silverman,
describing him as "a total unequivocal failure" and
displayed a chart showing the poor ratings of NBC programs.
According to some associates of the show, Silverman's
anger over the sketch prompted him to abandon negotiations
with the show's creator Lorne Michaels and seek a different
producer for the sixth season of SNL.
Besides having written numerous books (including
Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations),
Franken co-wrote (with his former partner Tom Davis)
the screenplay for The Coneheads TV show. He also wrote
the original screenplay and starred in the theatrical
flop, Stuart Saves His Family and the hit film When
A Man Loves A Woman. He co-created and co-starred in
the NBC sitcom LateLine, but low ratings led to its
cancellation halfway through the second season, with
only twelve of the nineteen episodes airing. |