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Patrick Weathers

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Patrick Weathers is an American musician, actor and comedian, who appeared as a cast member on season 6 of Saturday Night Live from 1980 to 1981.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Key Information

After college, Weathers moved to New Orleans, where he began working with The Meters. Moving to New York City, he performed alongside Run DMC before getting a job at Studio 54 which led to an audition for Saturday Night Live.[7]

Among the characters Weathers played was Bob Dylan.[8] He also played Ravi Shankar, the musician who introduced The Beatles to Indian music. Weathers was friends with David Sheffield, who became a prominent writer on the show then collaborator on many Eddie Murphy comedies.

Weathers had a successful musical career, prior to his year on SNL, and returned to music afterwards, releasing three albums, and settling in New Orleans.[1][9][10] He owns several art galleries there, and appeared in the Will Ferrell comedy The Campaign.[11]

References

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from Grokipedia
Patrick Weathers is an American actor, comedian, and musician known for his stint as a featured player on Saturday Night Live during its sixth season (1980–1981). [1] [2] Born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, he has maintained a multifaceted career spanning comedy sketches, film and television roles, and music performance and recording. [3] Weathers joined SNL amid a turbulent period for the show under producer Jean Doumanian, contributing to sketches including a notable appearance as Ravi Shankar in a parody commercial. [2] Prior to SNL, he had moved to New Orleans after college and worked with the band The Meters, blending his interests in music and performance. [3] In the decades since, Weathers has appeared in supporting roles in films such as Wall Street (1987) and The Campaign (2012), as well as television series including Preacher and Roots. [1] He continues an active music career, with recent releases including his fifth album No End to the End in 2025. [4]

Early life

Background and education

Patrick Weathers was born on January 22, 1954, in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.[1] He grew up in nearby Laurel, Mississippi, where he attended junior high and high school.[5] As an only child, he entertained himself and friends by playing guitar and doing impressions of performers such as Elvis Presley and Hank Williams, often adding humorous twists to capture attention.[5] Weathers attended the University of Southern Mississippi near his Laurel hometown, earning a degree in theater arts with an emphasis on stage performance while also taking some film courses.[2][5] This formal training in performance laid the groundwork for his later pursuits in music and comedy.

Career beginnings

Music career in New Orleans

After college, Patrick Weathers relocated to New Orleans to pursue a career as a musician and comedian. [2] He performed on the Bourbon Street club circuit and associated with prominent local musicians including The Meters, Professor Longhair, and Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown. [2] Brown invited Weathers to join his tour as an opening act in the late 1970s, where Weathers performed his impersonations of Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, and Elvis. [2] Following the end of the tour in the late 1970s, Weathers briefly returned to New Orleans and worked as an Elvis impersonator at the Playboy Club in the French Quarter. [2] Frustration with being typecast in the Elvis routine eventually led him to relocate to New York City. [2]

Move to New York City

Following the conclusion of his touring commitments in the late 1970s and a brief return to New Orleans, Patrick Weathers relocated to New York City seeking broader opportunities in performance and music. [2] In Manhattan, he performed at various clubs while also contributing writing to National Lampoon Magazine. [2] He briefly worked as a bathroom attendant at Studio 54, collecting tips during the club's notorious disco era. [2] During this time in New York, Weathers auditioned for Saturday Night Live and was hired as a featured player for the 1980–1981 season under producer Jean Doumanian. [2] He has described arriving in the city amid the dominance of disco, performing in the local music scene, and eventually securing an agent through his Studio 54 experiences, which prompted his pursuit of the SNL opportunity. [5]

Saturday Night Live

Tenure on season 6

Patrick Weathers served as a featured player during the sixth season of Saturday Night Live, which aired from November 1980 to April 1981 under producer Jean Doumanian. [2] He appeared in 10 episodes and took on various small roles, including Hoodlum, Principal, and Waiter. [1] Among his more notable contributions were impressions of Bob Dylan in the sketch “Dylan & Guthrie,” where he portrayed Dylan visiting a dying Woody Guthrie on his deathbed alongside host David Carradine in an attempt to steal song ideas, and Ravi Shankar in the parody commercial “Ravi Sings,” a satirical ad featuring Shankar (performed in brownface) selling an album of American pop love songs. [2] Despite these appearances, Weathers generally had limited screen time and was mostly relegated to background roles amid the season's poor reception and significant backstage turmoil. [2] Season 6 is widely regarded as one of the weakest in Saturday Night Live history. [2] In a 2003 interview, Weathers reflected on the challenges, saying, “It was a really bad season. We were trying to replace these icons – these gods! Nothing we could do was going to be good enough. It was kind of like replacing Goldie Hawn on Laugh-In without the blonde hair and the figure.” [2] The season concluded in April 1981, and Weathers was not invited to return for the following season. [2]

Acting career

Film and television roles

Patrick Weathers has appeared in a variety of supporting and guest roles in film and television since the mid-1980s, following his early television exposure. [1] His film credits include a role in the short Fast Hearts (1984), a bit part as Trader - Office in Wall Street (1987), Kirkland in Troma's War (1988), Mr. Merriman in Grand Isle (1991), Disc Jockey in Riding with James Dean (1998), Uncle Pat in the short The Grapevine (2008), Charles Stoddard in Leonie (2010), Old Councilman in The Campaign (2012), Remy in Woman Thou Art Loosed: On the 7th Day (2012), Jerry Cleveland in Pawn Shop Chronicles (2013), Judge Matthews in Inventing Adam (2013), and Hayden in Sex Guaranteed (2017). [1] On television, Weathers guest-starred as Singing Accountant in one episode of Murphy Brown (1994), Ed in one episode of Memphis Beat (2011), Sofia's Probation Officer in one episode of Treme (2012), County Barker in one episode of Roots (2016), Postmaster in one episode of Underground (2016), Pete in one episode of Preacher (2017), and Spencer's Father in one episode of The First (2018). [1] In addition to acting, Weathers contributed as composer of additional music on Riding with James Dean (1998), Them (1996, uncredited), and one episode of Second Noah (1996). [1]

Music career

Post-SNL albums and performances

Following his departure from Saturday Night Live in 1981, Patrick Weathers returned to performing music on stage. He appeared in the Broadway musical revue Rock and Roll: The First 5000 Years in 1982, where he performed in a rotating cast that allowed him to draw on his impersonation skills. [2] [6] He later joined the cast of the national tour of Elvis: An American Musical, appearing from 1988 to 1989 as an ensemble member and understudy for the lead role of Elvis. [7] [6] Weathers subsequently focused on recording and releasing original music independently. His albums include The Queen of Tupelo (2001), Hound Dog Diaries (2005), and Quantum Entanglement (2012). [4] [8] [9] He later released the EP The Deplorables in 2022, the singles Rhythm & Blues and Long Tall Wall in 2024, and the album No End To The End in 2025. [10] These works are available on streaming platforms and reflect his continued activity as a singer-songwriter in later decades. [10]

Art galleries

Ownership and work in New Orleans

Patrick Weathers returned to New Orleans and has established a prominent presence in the French Quarter art scene through ownership and leadership roles in multiple galleries. [11] [12] He previously served as Managing Director and Vice President at Bryant Galleries of New Orleans, where he contributed to advancing the careers of artists such as surrealist Augustine Ubeda, watercolorist Dean Mitchell, abstract expressionist Leonardo Nierman, and PSA Master Pastelist Alan Flattmann. [11] Following Hurricane Katrina, Weathers began working with longtime mentor Jacob Vincent Manguno and became the first and only Director of The Vincent Mann Gallery on Royal Street, where he hired and trained staff, implemented operational processes, and collaborated on relocating and reopening the gallery by appointment in 2008 with a focus on Françoise Gilot exhibitions. [11] [12] After Manguno's death in 2017, Françoise Gilot invited Weathers to serve as private dealer for her collection privé, leading to the establishment of Galerie Patrick as his ongoing dealership specializing in her works. [11] He continues to reside and work in New Orleans as a gallery owner, director, and private dealer. [11]

Personal life

Residence and later activities

Patrick Weathers resides in New Orleans, Louisiana. [4] [13] After pursuing film opportunities in Los Angeles following his time on Saturday Night Live, he returned to New Orleans, where he has lived since at least the early 2010s. [2] In 2025, Weathers appeared as an audience member at SNL50: The Homecoming Concert, part of the Saturday Night Live 50th anniversary celebrations. [14] [15]
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