Saturday Night Live UK is here - but can it make you laugh?
Saturday Night Live UK is here - but can it make you laugh? 5 hours ago Annabel RackhamCulture reporter Walking into the Saturday Night Live UK studios for the first time, it's clear much time and money has been pumped into helping this show succeed. A hubbub of energy fills every corridor - from the extensive costume and wig department, to the huge team building pop-up sets around the show's main stage.
And the cast of British comedians and writers have huge shoes to fill as they try to create a transatlantic success story. An early promotional teaser has met with mixed reception online.
"We're not going out there saying, 'Let's make this show really British for British people'," SNL UK cast member Annabel Marlow tells the BBC. "We're basically writing what we all find really funny. "
Her co-star Ayoade Bamgboye says making sketches feel distinctly British has been her "North Star from the very beginning" - and it feels like "there's always someone to catch you" on the team.
Marlow, 24, has a background in musical comedy and previously starred in Six The Musical.
Bamgboye, 31, is a stand-up who won best newcomer at the 2025 Edinburgh Comedy Awards.
They're joined by nine other cast members from around the UK - Hammed Animashaun, Larry Dean, Celeste Dring, George Fouracres, Ania Magliano, Al Nash, Jack Shep, Emma Sidi and Paddy Young.
"There is a blueprint and foundation that works so they haven't guarded that stuff," Bamgboye says.
"They've been so open with what works. "
"We're not taking it for granted," Bamgboye says. "As female comedians, especially if you've been performing on stage, we just have to be so prepared and it's been glorious to watch her be so prepared even at this stage of her career. " Lead producer Andy Charles Smith says SNL UK will follow the same structure as its huge US counterpart - two songs from a musical guest (this week it's indie rock band Wet Leg, who are setting up as I look round), two pre-recorded sketches and four live ones.
"It's funny first," she says.
"Wally came over for three weeks to teach the whole team how to use cue cards," Marlow says.
"We did loads of workshops on how to read them during a sketch and where your eye line should be. "
Given it's a live show, things are bound to go wrong, but Marlow says she isn't worried.
"Either the audience don't know and it's fun for us to be like, 'That went a bit wrong but we all caught it'. Or they do know and it makes everyone go 'Oh great, they're human' - and people like to see that on stage," she says
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