Eddie Murphy reacts to watching David Spade make fun of him on “SNL”: 'You dirty motherf‑‑‑er' - MON SIX

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Eddie Murphy reacts to watching David Spade make fun of him on “SNL”: 'You dirty motherf‑‑‑er'

NBC David Spade on 'Saturday Night Live'

Key Points

  • Eddie Murphy revisits his feelings about Saturday Night Live taking a shot at him in the new documentary Being Eddie.

  • In a 1995 episode of SNL, David Spade made a joke about Murphy's "falling" career.

  • "How y'all gonna do this s‑‑‑?" he remembers thinking. "That's what y'all think of me?"

Eddie Murphyis revisiting the hurt he felt being the butt of a joke onSaturday Night Livea decade after he'd been a superstar on the show.

"It's like your alma mater taking a shot at you," the comedian says about the experience in the new Netflix documentaryBeing Eddie.

On the Dec. 9, 1995, episode of the sketch show, Spade appeared as himself telling jokes about pop culture during a "Spade in America" sketch. On screen next to an image of Murphy, whoseVampire in Brooklynhad just bombed at the box office, Spade joked: "Look, children, it's a falling star. Make a wish."

Murphy — who joined the cast ofSNLat just 19 years old in 1980 and whose popularity is largely credited with saving it from the verge of cancellation — was so offended by the joke that he cut ties with the show for decades over it.

"The audience there said 'boo,' and hissed him for saying it," theComing to Americastar recalls inBeing Eddie. "I was hurt. My feelings was hurt."

He muses that it was "all of those channels that the joke has to go through" before air that led him to really take it personally.

"If there was a joke like that right now, and it was about some otherSNLcast member, and it was about how f‑‑‑ed up their career was, it would get shot down," Murphy says in the doc. "The producers look at you, 'You can't, you're not saying that joke.'"

Al Levine/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty  Eddie Murphy during 'Mister Robinson's Neighborhood' sketch on 'SNL' on Feb. 6, 1982

Al Levine/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

Murphy, who has previously said hefelt the joke was racist, explains that he hadn't put the full blame on Spade, but on the show as an institution that would choose to mock one of its own.

"I wasn't like, f‑‑‑ David Spade. I was like, oh, f‑‑‑SNL. F‑‑‑ y'all. How y'all gonna do this s‑‑‑? That's what y'all think of me? Oh, you dirty motherf‑‑‑er," he describes. "And that's why I didn't go back for years."

Murphy finally made his return toSNLto host on Dec. 21, 2019 — 35 years after he'd last stepped on stage at Studio 8H.

"Going back toSaturday Night Livewas a great experience," Murphy says in the documentary. "My creative energy, everything had been turned back up to 10."

Dave Chappelle, who made a cameo in the episode, also reflects on the magnitude of the night inBeing Eddie."Seeing Eddie Murphy in Studio 8H, it's like I can't explain it. It's like being on safari and seeing a lion in the wild," Chappelle remarks. "Even being in the sketch, I thought, I can't believe this is happening."

Will Heath/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Eddie Murphy (center) hosts 'SNL' on Dec 21, 2019, joined by Tracy Morgan, Dave Chappelle, Chris Rock, and Kenan Thompson

Will Heath/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty

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The Oscar-nominatedDreamgirlsstar returned again during the show's50th anniversary specialthis past February, appearing in two sketches alongside a slew of past and present cast members.

Although they didn't appear on camera together, Spade revealed on hisFly on the Wallpodcast that heran into Murphy backstage. "We were friendly," Spade shared. "We should've taken a picture, 'cause it was fun to see him, and then there was no weird vibes at the show. It was all good."

Being Eddieis on Netflix now.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly