Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Mayim Bialik Powerfully Calls Out 'SNL' For Once Parodying 'Blossom' Using Prosthetic Nose

Mayim Bialik
Jason Mendez/WireImage/Getty Images

The actor opened up in an essay for 'Variety' about the shame she felt as a teenager after 'SNL' used 'Jewface' to mock her in a 1994 sketch.

Actor and game show host Mayim Bialik opened up in an essay for Variety about the shame she felt as a teenager after Saturday Night Live used "Jewface" to mock her in a 1994 sketch that featured a performer who portrayed the character she played on the 1990s sitcom Blossom while wearing a prosthetic nose.

The article was published as part of Variety's "Hollywood and antisemitism" package, which gave her a platform to share her thoughts and experiences related to the sketch, which mocked her for her Jewish identity.


In 1994, during the height of her fame on Blossom, Bialik, then 19, became the subject of a parody sketch that primarily targeted the saccharine storylines of Blossom and the famous catchphrase "Whoa!" of her co-star Joey Lawrence.

However, the parody included an additional element that struck Bialik as odd and unnecessary: the use of a prosthetic nose to accentuate her Jewish features.

Melanie Hutsell, who portrayed Bialik in the sketch, donned a fake, larger nose to embody the character of Blossom. Bialik emphasized that while the parody was amusing and entertaining, the addition of the prosthetic nose stood out as peculiar and drew attention to her Jewish heritage.

You can see the sketch below.

Blossom - Saturday Night Live www.youtube.com

Bialik, a lifelong fan of SNL, eagerly anticipated the show's parody of her sitcom. However, when she saw the sketch, she was left confused by the prosthetic nose element.

She wrote:

"The actress portraying me was dancing and mugging for the camera and she was hilarious. But. She wore a prosthetic nose. In order to truly convey that she was “Blossom,” she wore a fake, big nose."
"I don’t know if it was significantly larger than my real nose and I don’t care to remember. I remember that it struck me as odd. And it confused me."
"No one else on the show was parodied for their features. In MAD magazine, everyone is caricatured, but in this rendition of parody, it was just me that was singled out. More specifically, it was my nose."

Bialik admitted that she felt "ashamed" when friends from high school watched the sketch, as they noticed the portrayal:

I never thought to talk about it and mostly I tried to forget it. I hoped no one noticed. All of my friends at high school watched 'SNL.' It wasn’t subtle. They would all see it and I felt ashamed."

Her reflections on the sketch resurfaced when actor Bradley Cooper was criticized for wearing a prosthetic nose to play legendary composer Leonard Bernstein, a controversy referred to as "Jewface." This prompted Bialik to scrutinize photos of Bradley and Leonard, which left her with mixed emotions.

Bialik expressed concern for the young girls who looked up to her during her Blossom days and felt pride in seeing a Jewish girl on TV. She wondered how they felt when they saw an actress playing her with a "comically prosthetic nose."

She wrote:

Girls all over the world used to tell me that they had never seen a Jewish girl like me on TV before they saw me on “Blossom.” Many said they knew I was Jewish and it made them proud to be. That was so touching to me, and it still is."
"I wonder how those girls felt when they saw an actress playing me with a comically prosthetic nose. I wonder if that’s different from Bradley Cooper playing a famous person. Does it matter?"
"I wonder what that critic thought when he saw the “SNL” parody. Did he feel vindicated? Did he know that by criticizing the features I inherited from my mixed Eastern European-Ashkenazi past that he was inadvertently accusing that admixture of creating something less than perfect?"

Bialik acknowledged that she hasn't always loved her nose but has never wanted to change it. She described her facial features as distinctly hers, a part of her identity inherited from her mixed Eastern European-Ashkenazi heritage.

She sees her Jewish heritage intertwined with her unique facial features, a testament to her family's history and the cultures that came together following the Holocaust.

She wrote:

"I’ve had many conversations with myself about my nose in the past 40 years. I have not always loved it, but I also have never wanted to change it. The fact that I live with it publicly makes it no less complicated when I compare it to girls whose nose at 9 is their nose at 19 and 29 and 39." …
""I have come to see my face as distinctly mine as given to me from God. My genetic makeup is mine alone, and also, it is the combination of cultures shoved together after the Holocaust spilled so many of us out on the shores of Ellis Island."
"My nose is undeniably Jewish, and I am as well. Is it because of my nose? Perhaps. But I don’t have to know because we will always be one and the same."

Many have praised Bialik's candor and criticized SNL for airing the sketch in the first place.




Bialik has largely embraced her Jewish background in the years since the sketch aired including marrying her husband Michael Stone in a Victorian-themed ceremony that included traditional Jewish wedding customs.

She has advocated on behalf of Israel, collaborating with the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) to pay for their armored vests during the 2014 Gaza conflict. She has also vocally condemned Hamas, the terrorist group whose attack earlier this month killed thousands of Israelis and launched the 2023 Israel-Hamas war.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Jacob Elordi; Margot Robbie
Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images; MICHAEL TRAN/AFP/Getty Images

'Wuthering Heights' Film Casting Director Irks Fans After Justifying Casting Decisions By Claiming 'It's Just A Book'

It was recently announced that Wuthering Heights, the 1847 novel by Emily Brontë, is being adapted for the screen at Warner Bros. Pictures. The leading director is Emerald Fennell, and the casting director is Kharmel Cochrane, who was involved in the award-winning Nosferatu and Saltburn.

For those who got through high school and college without having to read the novel, it's a dark, psychological thriller with Gothic horror undertones—and also a love story. That's the power of Emily Brontë, who published just one novel in her lifetime.

Keep Reading Show less
Terrence Howard; Marvin Gaye
Chris Haston/WBTV via Getty Images; Kypros/Getty Images

Terrence Howard Shares Homophobic Reason He Turned Down Marvin Gaye Biopic Role—And Yikes

Actor Terrence Howard may have an Oscar nomination for his no holds barred approach to roles, but it turns out there is a limit to what he'll do onscreen, and kissing a man is beyond that limit.

Howard told Bill Maher that he turned down the role of a lifetime, playing legendary musician Marvin Gaye in a biopic by director Lee Daniels, once he learned of Gaye's sexuality.

Keep Reading Show less
Lindsey Graham; Donald Trump
Amir Levy/Getty Images; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Lindsey Graham Sparks Fury After Suggesting That Trump Could Be The Next Pope

After President Donald Trump jokingly told reporters that he'd "like to be pope" following the death of Pope Francis, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham threw himself behind Trump's remarks, which came after Trump already raised the ire of critics for seemingly falling asleep at the Pope's funeral.

Trump said that he himself "would be my number one choice" to be the next pope after he was asked who he’d like to see become the next pontiff. That would never, ever happen—and disrespects the billions of Catholics around the world who are in mourning—but Graham suggested it was a good idea in a post on X.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Scott Olson/Getty Images

Fox News Just Listed Off Trump's 'Accomplishments' So Far—And They're Completely Bananas

As shown during coverage of a cabinet meeting when members spent time telling the President how great he is, MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's biggest priority is Donald Trump's image and ego.

Also caught on video was Trump telling a Fox News correspondent to make sure the network praised his cabinet meeting.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Donald Trump and Terry Moran
ABC News

Trump Bizarrely Clashes With Reporter Over Photoshopped 'Tattoo' On Abrego Garcia's Knuckles

President Donald Trump sparked criticism after claiming during an interview with ABC News’ Terry Moran that an edited photo depicting tattoos of wrongly-deported Maryland father Kilmar Abrego Garcia showed that he has an alleged connection to the MS-13 gang.

Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national who arrived in the U.S. in 2012, was labeled a threat in 2019 due to an alleged connection to MS-13. He spent months in detention before an immigration judge found he had a credible fear of persecution—not from MS-13, but from a rival group, Barrio 18, which he said had been extorting his family.

Keep Reading Show less