Here’s a friendship with a former, to release it in the first monologue for your first hosting of “Saturday Night Live”.
The bravest Natasha Lyon picked the latter last weekend when Fred Armisen, whom she had known for seven years before the final split, joined her on stage with “SNL” compatriot Maya Rudolph last week.
“The people here are my chosen family in my real life,” Lyon said after a statement he made about “Space Union” on a late night sketch show.
“I came here as a teenager,” he continued. I made a “Russian Doll” with Amy Pohler and had great friends from the show.
It was then that both Armisen and Rudolph came out on stage to share their impressions with the actress, whose calling card was her exciting voice and strong New York accent.
“We leave a good impression on you, when you’re just outside,” Rudolph said.
“Congratulations, ipso facto,” Armisen said, staring and taking a picture of Lyon’s signature, before Rudolph followed, and added: It’s a dynamite sweater … dollars.
As soon as the two of them came out on stage, Lyon joked, “You know, Freddie and I have been dating for seven years. “We’re the only couple with sex tapes that no one wants to buy.”
The album “Orange is New Black” last month confirmed their separation in an unconventional way and revealed that they both left due to a pool dispute.
“I honestly think we broke up because I wanted a swimming pool,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “We love each other just like two people can fall in love and we keep talking constantly, but Freddy doesn’t like to swim. This may seem like a small reason to distance yourself, but during this pandemic, you have to cross your circle – I’m a swimmer like Bert Lancaster.
Lyon and Armisen first interacted with each other in 2014 before appearing on the first red carpet at the Emmy Awards the following year.
Rudolph played a very important role in their love story, which the duo presented for the first time in Lyon. It has since been described as a “rocky road” due to the fight against drug addiction.
Later in his opening monologue, Lyon said he went “to hell and back” after becoming a child star, gaining fame in his early years and then developing an addiction.
“I took it off and went back to wearing it. “Here I am now,” Lyon continued. “Okay, so I’m confused by events that span decades. But here I am and I will tell you what I found. “There’s always hope in despair and there’s always a reason to go back in the ring and fight the next day.”
Lyon was accompanied by a musical guest for the closing episode of the 47th season of the Japanese Breakfast Show.
The season finale was also a swan song for several longtime actors, including Eddie Bryant, Kyle Moon, Pete Davidson and Kate McKinnon, who greeted the series during the emotional chill of the episode.
See Lyon’s monologue below.
Source: Huffpost
