Posted on 05/13/2026 6:27:29 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Barry Blaustein, the former Saturday Night Live writer who helped Eddie Murphy create some of the show’s most memorable characters, has died at the age of 71. Blaustein was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2017, and had recently been diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer.
Blaustein was hired for the famous sketch comedy show in 1980, during a tumultuous period in SNL history. Producer Jean Doumanian had taken over from show creator Lorne Michaels, resulting in extreme tension behind the scenes. Despite the circumstances, Blaustein clicked with another of the show’s new writers, David Sheffield. Together, the two became formidable creative partners.
“We were hired separately. We met on the show,” Blaustein recalled in the book Live From New York. “We were the last writers hired that year, as a matter of fact, and I think we both realized what a tremendous break and opportunity this was for us. We were surrounded by people going, ‘I don’t need this job! I don’t need this job! To hell with this!’ And I was thinking, ‘I do need this job. This is the big break. This is the big opportunity.’”
At the same time, another new face arrived on Saturday Night Live: Eddie Murphy, the show’s youngest cast member at just 19 years old. Blaustein and Sheffield began exclusively working with the young comedian, helping him become SNL’s biggest star.
Barry Blaustein Helped Eddie Murphy Become an 'SNL' Icon “What happened with our first Eddie Murphy piece was, my dad was always calling me up with ideas for sketches, and they were always terrible, but this was the one time he came up with an idea that was decent,” Blaustein recalled of the first time he worked with Murphy. “He’d read this article about a high school basketball team in Cleveland, where the court ruled that there had to be at least one white player on the team. We wrote something for Eddie based on that, showed it to him, and worked with him on it. It was his first piece. And you could tell the first minute he was on the air that whatever ‘it’ is, he had it. He completely connected with the audience. He just jumped off the screen.”
Together, the three men created such iconic SNL characters as Gumby, Buckwheat, Mr. Robinson and Velvet Jones. They also wrote memorable sketches utilizing Murphy’s impersonation talents, like James Brown’s Celebrity Hot Tub.
“Eddie would go full-out on all our stuff. I don’t think we ever wrote a sketch that didn’t make the air that we wanted, or had to say, ‘They should’ve used that,’” Blaustein later recalled. “The show’s at its very best when the writers and the actors are in a room together writing stuff, the way Eddie was with us. Eddie would come in and say, ‘Hey, what about this?’ and then we’d just start writing together. You can’t write in a total vacuum. Pretty good rule of thumb: If you’re laughing when you’re writing it, it will be funny. Eddie was up for everything. That was just one of the reasons for his success. In his stand-up, Eddie used to mention Buckwheat, from the old Our Gang comedies, and every time he did, he’d get a laugh. So we decided to do a tribute to Buckwheat—have Eddie impersonate him.”
Blaustein and Sheffield were promoted to head writers and then to supervising producers before both departing Saturday Night Live in 1983. A year later, Murphy would leave to focus on his film career. Again, Blaustein and Sheffield showed their creative chemistry with the comedian, writing the scripts for such notable Murphy movies as Coming to America (1988), Boomerang (1992), The Nutty Professor (1996), Nutty Professor II: The Klumps (2000) and, most recently, Coming 2 America (2021).
Blaustein’s non-Murphy projects included Police Academy 2 (1985), the Johnny Knoxville comedy The Ringer (2005) and the 1999 professional wrestling documentary, Beyond the Mat.
Dear FRiends,
We need your continuing support to keep FR funded. Your donations are our sole source of funding. No sugar daddies, no advertisers, no paid memberships, no commercial sales, no gimmicks, no tax subsidies. No spam, no pop-ups, no ad trackers.
If you enjoy using FR and agree it's a worthwhile endeavor, please consider making a contribution today:
Click here: to donate by Credit Card
Or here: to donate by PayPal
Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794
Thank you very much and God bless you,
Jim
Tyrone Green's Art Opening - SNL [Satire of Manhattan progressives.]
Frank Sinatra and Stevie Wonder Duet - SNL
Weekend Update: Eddie Murphy on the Draft - SNL
Kill my landlord!
Kill my landlord!.............
Don’t seem as funny now.
Which one? Seems funny to me.
“Talent Show” was the absolute best!!!
“Little Richard Simmons” was also fantastic but you can’t find the whole thing on the internet anymore...
Most of them are all here- you will pee in your pants..
Celebrity Hot Tub, Little Richard Simmons, Talent Show, Mr White, Mr Robinsons Neighborhood and a bunch more
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ix03e
Did he write Sammy Davis’ Hot Tub?
bkmk
“Buckwheat has been shot!”
I loved Coming to America, before the marvel big screen brought Wakanda, there was Zamunda.
“Buckwheat has been shot!”
And Texxon is there!

"I'm Gumby, dammit!....I'm show business!"
That was all some great stuff, way back when SNL was actually funny.
Eddie’s “Delirious” is still one of the funniest stand-up performances ever.
I can still laugh just as hard now as I did then.
Really enjoyed the commercial for Buckwheat’s tribute album. “Unce tice fee tines a mady”
Clarence- the 5th Beatle...
Condolences to family and friends of Barry Blaustein.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.