Steve Martin Explains Why He Won't Play Tim Walz on 'SNL'

Comedian Steve Martin says he's not the right fit for the guest role.

Despite fans calling for Steve Martin to play Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz in the upcoming season of Saturday Night Live, it looks like that's not going to happen.

As soon as the democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, named Walz as her running mate, the internet went into a fervor over how perfect Martin would be to play the 60-year-old politician on the long-running sketch comedy series.

However, Martin has revealed that, although producer Lorne Michaels did get in touch with him about the possibility, he declined the offer.

"I wanted to say no and, by the way, he wanted me to say no," Martin told the L.A. Times on Wednesday. "I said, 'Lorne, I'm not an impressionist. You need someone who can really nail the guy.' I was picked because I have gray hair and glasses."

Comedian Steve Martin (left) and Gov. Tim Walz (right). - Monica Schipper; Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

For Martin, one major issue with taking on the role is that the impression would be an "ongoing" role throughout the election and potentially beyond, depending on the outcome of the election.

"It's not like you do it once and get applause and never do it again," Martin said. "They need a real impressionist to do that... I'd be struggling."

Maya Rudolph has already signed on to reprise her role as Harris for the show's upcoming 50th season. Deadline reports that the comic actress has pushed back production on the third season of her Apple TV+ series Loot so she can fit SNL into her schedule.

Martin is inarguably correct, however, about how much effort can go into guest starring as a political figure on SNL. Alec Baldwin famously portrayed Donald Trump for the first time in October 2016, and went on to appear as Trump 46 more times over the following four years.

Maya Rudolph as Kamala Harris on 'Saturday Night Live.' - NBC via Getty Images

ET spoke with Rudolph back in 2020, and she opened up about getting the chance to play Harris during that election season.

"It's really such an honor to be involved in any presidential race, and this one is a real doozy. So it is really an honor," Rudolph shared. "I got to meet her, and she is so fantastic. She is so incredible, she is so energizing and I just feel so good to be associated with someone so positive."

"I definitely tried to make her fun because I do feel that when I see her. You can tell she loves life and she is real and she is honest and she has no problem speaking her mind and being forthright about it, which I think is so important right now," the comedian shared at the time. "But she is also so joyful and you see her dancing in the room and all this stuff. She is just a great human, and I forgot what it felt like to see that and to see something so positive. It feels so good to see her out there." 

The milestone 50th season of Saturday Night Live kicks off Sept. 28.

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