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On 'SNL,' Fey as Palin, and Palin as Palin
Republican VP nominee shows a lighter side in sketch with Lorne Michaels, Alec Baldwin
Sarah Palin
Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin leaves NBC studios Sunday, Oct. 19, 2008 after an appearance on "Saturday Night Live," in New York. (AP Photo/David Karp)
APPublished: Sunday, October 19, 2008 at 4:46 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, October 19, 2008 at 11:33 a.m.
NEW YORK -- Politics and parody collided Saturday as Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin made a self-deprecating appearance on "Saturday Night Live" in which she critiqued the performance of her comic doppelganger.
The Republican vice presidential candidate endured a diatribe from actor Alec Baldwin, who pretended to mistake her for comedian Tina Fey, before opening the program with the signature line, "Live From New York, it's 'Saturday Night!'"
Fey's impersonation of Palin as a clueless but perky candidate has become a pop culture phenomenon and has helped lift "Saturday Night Live's" ratings to their highest level in seven years.
On Saturday, the program opened with a skit in which Fey blithely fielded questions in what was billed as the governor's first news conference.
The camera then cut to the real Palin, standing in a hallway with executive producer Lorne Michaels, watching the bit on a TV monitor.
"Yeah, Lorne, you know, I just didn't think it was a realistic depiction of the way my press conferences would have gone," she said, shaking her head disapprovingly.
"Yes, but it's obviously a heightened reality," Michael replied.
"Why couldn't we have done the '30 Rock' sketch that I wrote?" the governor asked, referring to Fey's critically acclaimed but low-rated comedy.
"Honestly, not enough people know that show," he responded.
For Palin, the cameo offered a chance to demonstrate a lighter side in the midst of a hard-edged campaign.
"I just want to be there to show Americans that we'll rise above the political shots that we take, because we're in this doing serious business for serious challenges that are facing good American people right now," she told radio host Neal Boortz on Friday.
She was forced to field some more shots on the program. In Fey's sketch, the comedian offered to entertain reporters with "some fancy pageant walking," a jibe at Palin's beauty queen days.
Then Baldwin rushed up to Palin and Michaels in the hallway, greeting them as "Lorne" and "Tina."
"You can't let Tina go out there with that woman," he told Michaels as Palin listened, her lips pressed tightly together. "She goes against everything we stand for. . . . This is the most important election in our nation's history, and you want our Tina to go out there and stand there with that horrible woman?"
When informed that he was standing next to the governor, Baldwin drew himself back. "I see," he said. "Forgive me, I feel I must say this: You are way hotter in person."
The bit ended with Baldwin whispering in Fey's ear as she stood at the lectern addressing the media.
"What?" she asked with alarm. "The real one? By-uh!"
Fey quickly walked off stage, passing Palin as she came in. The two women -- wearing identical red jackets -- exchanged curt nods of recognition.
Some Republicans have decried Fey's impersonation as sexist and belittling. At a rally in Virginia on Saturday, the crowd booed when Sen. John McCain mentioned that Palin would be appearing with Fey that night, according to CBS News.
But Palin herself has sought to make light of the parody. She told Fox News' Sean Hannity last month that she thought Fey's first sketch was "hilarious" and "spot on" (although she said she watched it with the volume off).
The Alaska governor noted that people have told her for years that she looks like Fey, adding that she dressed up like the comedian once for Halloween.
Fey no longer works on the late-night variety program. But she returned this season as a guest performer to play Palin between her work as an executive producer and star of "30 Rock," which makes its season premiere Oct. 30.
The comedian may continue portraying the Republican candidate through the election, but "if she wins, I'm done," Fey told TV Guide. "I can't do that for four years. And by 'I'm done,' I mean I'm leaving Earth."
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