Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Phil Hartman was the first cast member to portray Bill Clinton and did so until he left the show in 1994. Among his 18 appearances as Clinton, [5] a December 1992 sketch, in which Clinton enters a McDonald's and eats customers' food while talking about politics, has been noted as a successful one.
“President Bill Clinton at McDonald’s”: From 1993, this sketch of Bill Clinton jogging into McDonald's and eating customers’ food. I love it most because Phil Hartman looked and sounded ...
Hartman designed album covers for bands such as Poco. Phil Hartman was born Philip Edward Hartmann (later dropping one "n") [2] on September 24, 1948, in Brantford, Ontario. [3] [4] He was the fourth of eight children of Doris Marguerite (née Wardell; July 17, 1919 – April 15, 2001) and Rupert Loebig Hartmann (November 8, 1914 – April 30, 1998), [5] who sold building materials. [6]
Phil Hartman played Russell Clark, editor of Sassy Magazine, who interviewed young, male celebrities of the day, and incessantly repeated the term "Sassy!", or variations of it ("The French have a word for it: Sassé!" or "Looks like someone stepped in a big pile of Sassy!") after each guest's response.
Another showed people manning phones taking donations to preserve Saturday Night Live, in a spoof of PBS fundraisers, with Phil Hartman promising a "Captain Jim & Pedro" tote bag to anyone who pledged. Debuted April 9, 1994.
Phil Hartman, Melanie Hutsell, Rob Schneider, Sarah Silverman and Julia Sweeney's final episode as cast members. Hartman was presented with a bronzed stick of glue, symbolizing how he had become "The Glue" of the show, a term coined by Adam Sandler .
McDonald's has long found itself in the middle of presidential politics, from former President Bill Clinton's frequent pit stops to Donald Trump serving up Big Macs at the White House. But this ...
Phil Hartman narrates, explaining to the audience that Opera Man has just filled up his car at a gas station and included a New Hampshire Lottery scratch ticket with his purchase. Opera Man gets more excited as every box he scratches off reveal a million dollar prize, until the last one, at which he prays to God , "Opera Man promiso--no more ...