Early career Michaels began his career as a writer and broadcaster for
CBC Radio, working with partner
Hart Pomerantz. He and Pomerantz moved to Los Angeles from Toronto in 1968 to work as writers for ''
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In and The Beautiful Phyllis Diller Show. They returned to Canada to star in The Hart and Lorne Terrific Hour'', a series of comedy specials that ran on
CBC in the early 1970s. Michaels returned to the United States in 1973 to write for
The Burns and Schreiber Comedy Hour. This brought him to the attention of
Lily Tomlin who hired him to produce a series of specials, the
first of which won an
Emmy. Michaels credits his work with Tomlin for giving him the credibility needed for NBC to hire him to create
Saturday Night Live.
Saturday Night Live In 1975, Michaels created (with fellow NBC employee
Dick Ebersol and president of the network
Herb Schlosser) the television show ''NBC's Saturday Night
, which in 1977 changed its name to Saturday Night Live (initially there was a name conflict with an ABC show titled Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell'', which debuted September 20, 1975, and was cancelled on January 17, 1976). The show, which is performed live in front of a studio audience, immediately established a reputation for being "cutting-edge" and "unpredictable." It became a vehicle for launching the careers of some of the most successful comedians in the United States. Originally the
producer of the show, Michaels was also a writer and later became
executive producer. He occasionally appears on-screen as well, where he is known for his
deadpan humor. Throughout the show's history,
SNL has been nominated for more than 156
Emmy Awards and has won 36. It has consistently been one of the highest-rated late-night television programs. Michaels has been with
SNL for all seasons except for his hiatus in the early 1980s (seasons 6–10). Michaels appeared in the show during the first season, where he offered
The Beatles $3000 to reunite on the show. He later increased his offer to $3200, but the money was never claimed. According to an interview with
John Lennon in
Playboy magazine, Lennon and
Paul McCartney were in New York City that night and happened to see the program. They contemplated going onto the show as a joke but decided against it though, as it was too late to get there in time, and they were both tired. This near-reunion was the basis for the television movie
Two of Us. On the episode airing November 20, 1976, musical guest
George Harrison appeared and attempted to collect the money, but Michaels told him the offer was conditional on all four members of the group showing up rather than just any Beatle.
Other work During the
1978–1979 season of
SNL, Michaels was offered a deal to produce nine features from
Paramount, but he turned it down to take a three-picture deal from
Warner Bros. The Warner Bros. deal didn't net any produced movies. In the early 80s, he subsequently had a deal to produce movies for
MGM and was developing a
Father Guido Sarducci movie written by
Don Novello, a spoof of
1984 called
1985 that was set in the future and written by
Al Franken,
Tom Davis, and
Jim Downey, and an adaptation of
Pride and Prejudice Michaels himself was co-writing with friend John Head. The only movie to be produced from Michaels's MGM deal was
Nothing Lasts Forever, a black-and-white surreal sci-fi comedy written and directed by longtime resident
SNL filmmaker
Tom Schiller. The movie featured appearances from
Bill Murray and
Dan Aykroyd, but the studio opted to never release it. In 1979, Michaels founded the production company
Broadway Video, which has produced
SNL since 1981 as well as other shows such as Canadian sketch-comedy
The Kids in the Hall which began airing in 1988 on
CBC in Canada, debuting in the U.S. market in 1989 on
cable television network
HBO until moving to
CBS in 1993. Whilst on his
SNL hiatus, Michaels created another sketch show titled
The New Show, which debuted on Friday nights in prime time on NBC in January 1984. The show failed to garner the same enthusiasm as
SNL and was cancelled after 9 episodes. . In the 1980s, Michaels appeared in an
HBO mockumentary titled
The Canadian Conspiracy about the supposed subversion of the United States by Canadian-born media personalities, with
Lorne Greene as the leader of the conspiracy. Michaels was identified as the anointed successor to Greene. Starting in the 1990s, Michaels has produced all of the movies that are based on SNL sketches, such as ''
Wayne's World,
A Night at the Roxbury,
Coneheads,
Stuart Saves His Family, and MacGruber
, to name a few. Many of his other production credits star former SNL cast members, such as Tommy Boy,
Mean Girls, and Will & Harper''. Michaels is also the executive producer of the
NBC show
Late Night, and was the executive producer of
30 Rock and
Up All Night during their runs. On April 3, 2013, it was announced that Michaels would be taking over as the executive producer for
The Tonight Show. Consequently,
The Tonight Show moved to New York in early 2014 as
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. On April 17, 2026,
Morgan Neville's biographical documentary
Lorne was released. The film includes interviews with previous
Saturday Night Live cast members and others. ==Personal life==