Lorne Michaels has donated a collection of his work on Saturday Night Live and more to the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas.
Collection features "rehearsal notes and sketches to annotated scripts and personal correspondence" and provides behind-the-scenes history of SNL
Lorne Michaels donates his "Saturday Night Live" archive to UT Austin's Harry Ransom Center, showcasing nearly 50 years of TV history.
Lorne Michaels has built up a ton of grudges over 50 years of running "Saturday Night Live," perhaps none more infamous than his animus toward Sinead O'Connor. O'Connor tore a photo of Pope John ...
Saturday Night Live boss Lorne Michaels has changed his tune about Sinead O’Connor’s pope-trashing stunt on the show—which he once called “selfish” and “dishonest.” In the new documentary Ladies & Gentleman… 50 Years of SNL Music premiering ...
Chevy Chase is revealing what Lorne Michaels could have done to make him stay on Saturday Night Live. As longtime viewers of the sketch comedy show may remember — long before its landmark 50th season — Chase, 81, was a breakthrough cast member of SNL's ...
The Tonight Show bandleader also managed to persuade Lorne Michaels, a man not known for nostalgia, to talk. RELATED: ‘Sly Lives! (AKA The Burden Of Black Genius)’ Review: Questlove’s ...
This quartet join the distinguished company of previous inductees that includes Oscar winners like Shirley MacLaine, Renée Zellweger, and Matthew McConaughey, directors like Jeff Nichols ( The Bikeriders) and Tobe Hooper ( The Texas Chain Saw Massacre ), comedy legend Carol Burnett, TV icon Larry Hagman, and more.
Bernal served in the state House and Senate from 1964 to 1972, where he fought for bills that ended de jure segregation in Texas and the creation of the University of Texas at San Antonio and the UT Health Science Center.
To recognize John Chase and his achievements, the UT Austin School of Architecture library is now named after him. The John S. Chase Architecture and Planning Library was made possible thanks to a generous gift and pledge from Chase’s son,
John Chase was the first Black person to graduate from the University of Texas at Austin's School of Architecture and to become a licensed architect in the South.
Record funding supports breakthroughs in semiconductor technology, health care, energy and sustainability, positioning UTA as a leader in research