Jill Clayburgh Sexily Rockin' "Sea Cruise" on SNL 1976 (And More)
I caught this great "memory" on a look at an old SNL episode from its first season(1975-1976) on Hulu.
It had been in my head for years -- something about Jill Clayburgh singing with incredible sexuality the old time rocker "Sea Cruise" as a Navy chorus of men backed her and footage of a ship at sea being swamped by waves was shown. It was a memory that I always kept of early SNL...and I found the routine on Hulu.
Was it a bit less in the actual seeing than in memory...well, yes...and no.
Yes, it was a bit less...the production was cheap and shabby and a brief bit where a miniature cannon goes off literally "blanked out the screen"(old time TV soundstage cameras couldn't handle light flashes.)
But it was still great fun and Jill Clayburgh WAS incredibly sexy. That part I didn't get wrong at all.
Oh, it was the Coast Guard Men's Chorus("The Singing Idlers") and not Navy men who backed Clayburgh(along with that rockin' SNL band), but the effect was the same: Clayburgh (in halter-top/midriff baring Navy denim and a sailor cap) sexually "fronted" the song as a willing lady offering all men a "sea cruise" ("C'mon, baby , you got nuthin to lose...wontcha lemme take ya on a...SEA CRUISE?") and the manly chorus of men lustily backed her play("Ooo-wee, ooe-wee baby, ooo-wee, ooo-wee, baby..."). I found it delightful. And "Sea Cruise" is a GREAT rocker.
About Jill Clayburgh. She is a rather forgotten star of the 70's, when female stars were in short supply and it seemed that Faye Dunaway and Candice Bergen got all the roles. Clayburgh spent the front end of the 70's as "Al Pacino's girlfriend"(she's at the Godfather premiere) and as a stage actress, but came the late 70's, she broke through.
1976's "Silver Streak" did it -- she's Eva Marie Saint to Gene Wilder's Cary Grant in a "North by Northwest" spoof -- except Jill is even more direct than Eva Marie Saint was about what she's willing to do sexually RIGHT NOW to Gene.
1978's "An Unmarried Woman" sealed the deal -- Oscar-nominated, indie-film values, again with the sexuality.