NBC
Mick Jagger and Kristen Wiig shared the spotlight on "Saturday Night Live."
âSaturday Night Liveâ bid a poignant, emotional farewell to its 37th season, sending off cast member Kristen Wiig with a sing-along led by the weekendâs host, Rolling Stones front man Mick Jagger.
Wiig started crying during the final skit, a graduation ceremony featuring cast mates, old friends and SNL creator Lorne Michaels.
âMany of you are moving onto college, but Iâd like to take a moment to say goodbye to one particular student who is leaving this summer ⦠to become a nun,â Jagger said, calling Kristen to the stage.
Wiig ditched the cap and gown to reveal a beige dress. Backing band Arcade Fire began playing the Rolling Stones hit âSheâs a Rainbow,â and Wiig danced with a cavalcade of cast mates, her expression a mix of smiles and tears.
Andy Samberg spun Wiig around ⦠a funny, happy moment, but nearly a wardrobe disaster due to Wiigâs skirt.
Michaels appeared for Wiigâs final dance, then Mick led the group in âRuby Tuesday.â Somewhere along the way, former SNL stars Amy Poehler, Rachel Dratch, Chris Parnell and Chris Kattan emerged onstage with perennial guest Steve Martin and âMad Menâ actor Jon Hamm (who played Wiigâs jerky boytoy in her hit movie âBridesmaidsâ).
Wiig blew kisses to the crowd, bowed and waved â" an end to seven seasons of quirkiness and heart.
Sure, some of her characters made your skin crawl (Gillyâs classroom antics became a one-note comedy flat liner). But Wiig brought something special to the show, steering SNL through lean seasons and intertwining herself with the showâs tapestry.
SNLâs most powerful moments donât always involve laugh-out-loud humor. John Belushi proved that by dancing on graves. Phil Hartman and Gilda Radner understood that, too. The showâs post-9/11 episode served as a tribute to tragedy.
At its best, âSaturday Night Liveâ makes you feel something, makes you say âwowâ every once and again. This weekendâs episode carried a few âwowâ moments because it allowed its host and outgoing star to shine.
Mick provided an early highlight by crooning a melancholy â(I Can't Get No) Satisfactionâ after being ditched at the karaoke bar by his life insurance chums. The song feels so different when itâs stripped of brash and brass â" a lovelorn, sadsack quality matched in the skit by Jaggerâs undone tie and shattered ego.
Jagger showed off his comedy chops later in the show with a blues song about the presidential race.
âYouâre going to have to raise about $100 million or youâll end down deep in the sâ",â he sang.
His other performances included âThe Last Timeâ with Arcade Fire, and âItâs Only Rock ân Roll (But I Like It)â with the Foo Fighters.
Mickâs strongest laughs came during a âSo You Think You Can Dance at an Outdoor Music Festivalâ skit, with the Rolling Stones singer raiding the womenâs clothing counter (and plugging Burger King) in his portrayal of Aerosmithâs Steven Tyler.
The episode also featured a digital short, âLazy Sunday 2.â No Magnolia cupcakes this time â" the line at the bakery is too long. Instead, Parnell and Samberg sip mimosas and catch âSister Actâ on Broadway.
âCause once you buy âem, you canât get your tickets back,â the pair raps.
The show rallied with another installment of the addictive âCalifornians,â a travel-conscious mock soap opera that features wine, dusted off âValley Girlâ accents and group mirror stare-offs.
And then it was onto the final skit, with Wiig graduating with honors.
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